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This course explains how construction law works in Saudi Arabia for civil engineers, quantity surveyors, contractors, consultants, project managers, and Gulf construction professionals. It covers legal framework, contracts, Saudi Building Code compliance, risk, disputes, payment issues, public sector contracts, force majeure, insurance, labour law, sustainability, international contractors, and final project drafting.
Civil engineers, quantity surveyors, contract administrators, project managers, planning engineers, claims professionals, consultants, contractors, and Gulf construction professionals can join this course.
Yes. Civil engineers working in Saudi Arabia need to understand contracts, approvals, compliance, payment terms, claims, delay issues, risk allocation, and dispute procedures. This course gives that practical legal understanding.
No. It is not only for lawyers. It is designed for construction professionals who deal with contracts, site issues, payments, delays, claims, variations, approvals, and compliance.
Yes. Quantity surveyors can benefit a lot because the course covers payment disputes, claims, variation orders, contract clauses, dispute records, final settlement, and project compliance.
Yes. Professionals working in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait, or planning to work in Saudi projects can use this course to understand Saudi construction legal practice.
The course language is English.
The course validity shown is 365 days.
The course page shows ₹12,500 after discount. It is better to check the course page before joining because the displayed price may change.
The course includes 15 modules plus a final project.
The course includes 73 sessions.
The total course duration shown is 4 hours, 37 minutes, and 43 seconds.
Yes. It is an online course. After purchase, it is added to your course library and can be accessed after login.
Yes. You can access the course from a computer after successful login.
Yes. You can access your course library through a browser on other devices also.
Yes. The first module introduces the legal framework used in Saudi construction projects, including the Saudi Building Code, tender law, Sharia principles, and regulatory bodies.
Module 1 covers the introduction to Saudi Arabia’s legal framework, including SBC, NCTL, Sharia law, regulatory bodies, and a practical case of non-compliance in a Riyadh high-rise project.
Yes. The course explains how the Saudi Building Code affects construction projects, approvals, fire safety, structural safety, energy conservation, and green building compliance.
It is important because non-compliance can lead to fines, delays, suspension, rework, and approval problems. Contractors must understand the requirements before and during construction.
Yes. Fire protection compliance is covered through Saudi Building Code requirements and project examples such as high-rise and hospital projects.
Yes. The course explains the role of Sharia principles in contracts, obligations, disputes, and claim handling in Saudi Arabia.
Yes. The course discusses key authorities and regulatory bodies such as MoMRAH, SCA, and SASO in relation to construction compliance.
Module 2 covers contract types and structures, including international contract forms, local changes, public and private sector contracts, lump-sum contracts, and cost-plus contracts.
Yes. The course covers FIDIC contract forms such as Red Book and Yellow Book, along with how they may be adapted for Saudi Arabia projects.
Yes. It explains the difference between public and private sector contracts and how legal requirements may change depending on the employer and project type.
Yes. Lump-sum contracts are covered, including risk points, payment structure, scope clarity, and variation-related concerns.
Yes. Cost-plus contracts are also discussed so learners can understand how payment and cost responsibility may work under this contract type.
Yes. Variation clauses are explained with scenarios where unclear clauses can create rejection of claims or disputes between employer and contractor.
Because one unclear clause can affect variation payment, time extension, delay cost, defect responsibility, and dispute outcome. Reading the contract properly is not optional in major projects.
Module 3 covers compliance with the Saudi Building Code, including structural requirements, fire safety, building services requirements, green building requirements, and energy efficiency.
Yes. Structural compliance is discussed as part of Saudi Building Code requirements, project approvals, and technical responsibility.
Yes. Energy conservation is covered through Saudi Building Code requirements and project examples where non-compliance can delay approvals.
Yes. Green building requirements are covered through Saudi Building Code sustainability provisions and Vision 2030-related project expectations.
Module 4 covers risk allocation and mitigation, including force majeure, liability caps, exclusions, unforeseen ground conditions, delay responsibility, and contract risk planning.
Yes. Force majeure is covered with practical examples such as sandstorms, pandemic-related disruption, material shortages, and other unforeseen project impacts.
It is important because unexpected events can affect time, cost, procurement, manpower, and contract obligations. A weak clause can create serious disputes later.
Yes. Liability caps and exclusions are covered so learners can understand how contract risk is limited, shared, or negotiated.
Yes. It discusses situations where unexpected ground conditions affect project progress, cost, and delay responsibility.
Module 5 covers dispute resolution mechanisms, including arbitration, litigation, Dispute Adjudication Boards, unpaid invoice disputes, and contract-based dispute routes.
Yes. The course discusses arbitration, including the role of the Saudi Center for Commercial Arbitration in construction disputes.
Yes. Litigation is discussed as one of the formal dispute routes, along with its difference from arbitration.
Yes. Dispute Adjudication Boards are covered in the context of FIDIC-based construction contracts.
Yes. The course includes scenarios where subcontractors raise disputes against main contractors for unpaid invoices or other contractual issues.
Module 6 covers decennial liability and defect management, including 10-year liability, structural failure, designer responsibility, contractor responsibility, and defect claims.
Decennial liability means long-term liability for serious structural defects or failures. In construction, this can create responsibility for designers, contractors, or other responsible parties.
Yes. The course explains the 10-year liability concept under Saudi construction practice and how it applies to serious structural defects.
Yes. Defect management is covered, including how defects are identified, recorded, notified, corrected, and connected to liability.
Because poor design, poor execution, weak records, or ignored defects can lead to serious legal and financial consequences even after project completion.
Module 7 covers payment disputes and recovery, including interim payments, final payments, delayed payments, payment certification, and financing charges.
Yes. Interim payment certification is covered so learners can understand how monthly or periodic payment claims are reviewed and certified.
Yes. Final payment is discussed with close-out, certification, deductions, disputed amounts, and settlement records.
Yes. Delayed payment claims are included, especially where contract clauses allow recovery of financing charges or other payment-related relief.
Yes. The course discusses delayed payment situations using FIDIC Clause 14.8 as a practical learning point.
Payment disputes usually happen because of unclear scope, unsupported claims, delayed approvals, disputed measurements, missing records, rejected variations, or weak contract understanding.
Module 8 covers public sector contracts and GTPL compliance, including tender procedures, procurement rules, approval requirements, unauthorized subcontracting, and termination risk.
Yes. The course explains public tendering procedures and how construction professionals should understand compliance requirements in government projects.
GTPL compliance relates to government tendering and procurement requirements. The course explains how these requirements affect public sector construction contracts.
Yes. It includes a scenario where a contract is terminated because subcontracting was done without approval.
Because many public sector and major project contracts require approval before subcontracting. Ignoring this can lead to penalties, rejection, or termination.
Module 9 covers force majeure and pandemic clauses, including COVID-19 impacts, material shortages, time extensions, geopolitical disruption, and clause drafting.
Yes. Pandemic-related delay is discussed as part of force majeure and disruption planning.
Yes. Material shortages are discussed through project scenarios where supply problems affect time, cost, and contract obligations.
Yes. The course explains how force majeure clauses should be drafted clearly, especially in line with Saudi legal and contractual expectations.
Module 10 covers insurance and bonding requirements, including CAR insurance, liability insurance, decennial insurance, performance guarantees, and advance payment guarantees.
Yes. CAR insurance is covered with project examples where claims can be accepted or denied depending on risk assessment and policy conditions.
Yes. Performance guarantees are discussed as a key requirement in many construction contracts.
Yes. Advance payment guarantees are covered so learners can understand how employers protect advance payments given to contractors.
Insurance protects against financial loss, accidents, damage, liability, defects, and unexpected project risks. But the policy must be understood properly before relying on it.
Module 11 covers environmental and sustainability compliance, including green building rules, Vision 2030 expectations, waste management, carbon reduction, and penalties for poor disposal.
Yes. Waste management is covered, including improper disposal, site responsibility, fines, and compliance planning.
Yes. The course connects sustainability and construction compliance with Saudi Vision 2030 project expectations.
Yes. Carbon reduction and sustainable construction practices are discussed as part of environmental compliance.
Module 12 covers employment and labour law, including Saudization, Nitaqat, wage protection, safety standards, and workforce compliance.
Yes. Saudization is covered through construction project examples where companies must comply with workforce ratio requirements.
Yes. Nitaqat is discussed as part of Saudi labour compliance for construction companies.
Yes. Wage protection is covered so professionals can understand the importance of timely and compliant labour payment records.
Yes. Worker safety requirements are discussed as part of labour and construction compliance.
Because manpower compliance affects project continuity, approvals, penalties, company reputation, and contract performance.
Module 13 covers technology and smart contracts, including digital contract management, secure payment records, project information accuracy, and disputes caused by incorrect project data.
Yes. Smart contracts are discussed from a construction contract management point of view, especially for payment security and record clarity.
Yes. The course includes project scenarios where inaccurate digital project information can lead to disagreement between parties.
Because contract decisions, claims, payments, approvals, and disputes often depend on records. If records are wrong, the dispute becomes harder to manage.
Module 14 covers international contractors and local partnerships, including joint venture requirements, Saudi partners, cultural expectations, legal challenges, and cross-border contracts.
Yes. It helps international contractors understand local partnership expectations, contract risks, cultural differences, and legal challenges in Saudi projects.
Yes. Joint venture requirements and local partnerships are included, especially for foreign firms working with Saudi partners.
Yes. The course discusses how cultural and legal expectations can affect communication, contract execution, decisions, and project timelines.
Delays may happen because of approval procedures, local partner issues, contract misunderstanding, workforce compliance, design changes, payment processes, or regulatory gaps.
Module 15 covers recent legal reforms and future trends, including Saudi Building Code amendments, tender law changes, dispute timeline improvements, and new claim handling approaches.
Yes. The course includes legal reform topics and explains how changing rules may affect construction contracts, claims, disputes, and project compliance.
Yes. The course includes 2024 Saudi Building Code amendment topics, including seismic design-related updates for steel structures.
Yes. The course explains how NCTL provisions may affect dispute resolution timelines and claim handling in public projects.
The final project requires learners to draft a compliant construction contract for a hypothetical mega-project, applying the course learning in a practical way.
Yes. The course includes sample claims, variation orders, arbitration notices, and other practical formats that construction professionals can understand and adapt.
Yes. It includes interactive workshop-style learning such as mock negotiations for contract clauses.
Yes. Scenario-based assessments are included, especially for Saudi Building Code compliance and contract understanding.
Yes. Claims professionals can benefit from topics such as variations, delay, force majeure, payment disputes, records, arbitration, and contract clause interpretation.
Yes. Contract administrators can use this course to understand contract structure, notices, payment certification, variations, compliance, disputes, and close-out records.
No. This course is for professional learning and practical construction understanding. For an active legal dispute or formal legal opinion, a qualified legal professional should be consulted.
This course is focused on real construction situations in Saudi Arabia. It is useful for professionals who want to understand contracts, compliance, payment issues, risk, claims, disputes, and legal responsibilities in a clear construction-focused way.
You can join the course from the official BHADANIS course page here: