The year 2025 will be remembered as the moment the GCC decoupled from global venture capital volatility. While other regions struggled with high interest rates, the Gulf’s entrepreneurship scene flourished, fueled by the aggressive implementation of Saudi Vision 2030, the UAE’s “We the UAE 2031“ vision, and Qatar’s National Vision 2030.
1. The Funding Shift: Quality Over Quantity
In 2025, the “growth at all costs” model was replaced by “profitable scale.” Venture Capital (VC) Maturity: Total funding in the GCC crossed the $6 billion mark this year. Saudi Arabia led the charge, accounting for nearly 52% of all VC volume in the region, followed closely by the UAE.
- The Rise of “Sovereign Wealth Founders”: We saw an unprecedented trend of the Public Investment Fund (PIF) and Mubadala not just investing in funds, but directly incubating startups in deep-tech, AI, and green energy.


2. The AI Integration Wave
As we discussed earlier with models like K2 Think and Allam, 2025 was the year every GCC startup became an “AI startup.”
- B2B Transformation: Startups in logistics (like TruKKer) and Fintech (like Tamara and Tabby) successfully integrated generative AI to automate credit scoring and route optimization, leading to record-breaking revenue efficiency.



- Deep-Tech Emergence: For the first time, we saw a surge in “hard tech” startups emerging from KAUST and Hub71, focusing on desalination tech and carbon capture.
3. Major Exits and IPOs
2025 provided the “liquidity events” that investors had been waiting for.
- Tadawul Dominance: The Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul) and its parallel market, Nomu, became the go-to exit strategy for regional unicorns. We saw at least four major tech IPOs this year, providing a clear path for early-stage investors to exit.
- Global Acquisitions: Regional champions began to buy global players. We saw a notable increase in UAE-based firms acquiring European and Asian fintech startups to expand their geographic footprint.
4. The “Second City” Boom
While Riyadh and Dubai remained the primary hubs, 2025 saw the rise of secondary entrepreneurship cities:
- NEOM (Saudi Arabia): Became a living laboratory for construction-tech and renewable energy startups.
- Abu Dhabi (UAE): Cemented itself as the “Deep Tech” capital through the expansion of Masdar City and Hub71.
- Lusail (Qatar): Attracted a significant cluster of Sports-Tech and EdTech startups following the momentum of major global sporting events.
5. Looking Ahead to 2026: The “Agentic” Era
The momentum of 2025 is setting the stage for a 2026 dominated by Agentic Workforces. Entrepreneurs are now building companies that utilize “AI Agents” to handle 70% of operational tasks, allowing small teams to manage billion-dollar valuations.







