Saudi Arabia Defamation Laws: Criminal & Sharia

Defamation in Saudi Arabia is treated mainly as a criminal matter. The Kingdom has no general codified penal code, so reputation offences are judged under Islamic law (Sharia) as discretionary ta'zir offences, while defamation committed online falls squarely under the Anti-Cyber Crime Law issued by Royal Decree No. M/17 of 2007.
What counts as defamation in Saudi Arabia
Because Saudi Arabia applies Islamic law rather than a single codified penal code, defamation is not defined by one statutory section the way it is in many countries. In broad terms, harming another person's honour or reputation by attributing to them something false or disgraceful can be treated as a punishable wrong. Saudi law recognises a specific fixed-penalty (hadd) offence known as qadhf, the false accusation of unlawful sexual conduct against a chaste person, which is regarded as one of the most serious reputation offences. Most other reputational harm, including general insult and slander, is handled as a discretionary ta'zir offence, where the judge determines both whether an offence occurred and what punishment to impose within the limits set by Sharia and any applicable statute.
Criminal defamation and penalties
The clearest written rule on defamation in Saudi Arabia applies to statements made online. Article 3 of the Anti-Cyber Crime Law, issued by Royal Decree No. M/17 dated 8 Rabi I 1428 (26 March 2007), criminalises, among other acts, defamation and the infliction of damage upon others through the use of information technology devices. A person convicted under this provision faces imprisonment for a period not exceeding one year, a fine not exceeding SR 500,000, or both. Defamation committed offline, by spoken word or in print, is generally punished as a ta'zir offence under Sharia, where the judge sets the penalty. Press-freedom monitors have repeatedly noted that these provisions are used against critics and online commentators.

Watch out: The one-year, SR 500,000 ceiling in the Anti-Cyber Crime Law applies to online defamation. Offline insult or slander is punished as a discretionary ta'zir offence, so the penalty depends heavily on the judge.
The qadhf (false accusation) offence
Qadhf is a distinct and serious offence in Islamic law. It refers to falsely accusing a chaste person of zina (unlawful sexual relations) or related conduct. Because it is classed as a hadd offence, with a punishment regarded as fixed in scripture, the prescribed penalty is flogging, traditionally eighty lashes, unless the accuser produces the required witnesses to prove the accusation. Qadhf sits apart from ordinary defamation precisely because the penalty is not left to judicial discretion. For everyday reputational disputes that do not involve such an accusation, the matter is treated as ta'zir rather than qadhf.
Defences
Saudi Arabia does not have a codified list of defamation defences comparable to common-law justification or fair comment. In practice, a defendant may argue that the statement was true, that it was made in good faith, or that it concerned a matter of legitimate public concern, and the court will weigh these arguments under Sharia principles. Because outcomes in ta'zir matters rest on judicial discretion, the success of any defence is harder to predict than under a statutory scheme. Consent of the person concerned and the absence of intent to harm may also be relevant. There is no public-figure or actual-malice standard of the kind found in some Western systems.
| Point | Position in Saudi Arabia |
|---|---|
| Primary nature | Criminal (Sharia ta'zir; online via 2007 law) |
| Online defamation penalty | Up to 1 year prison and/or SR 500,000 |
| Fixed (hadd) reputation offence | Qadhf (false accusation of unchastity) |
| Codified defences | None; truth/good faith weighed at discretion |
| Civil damages | Limited, usually alongside criminal process |
Remedies and damages
The dominant remedy for defamation in Saudi Arabia is criminal: imprisonment and a fine under the Anti-Cyber Crime Law for online conduct, or a discretionary ta'zir penalty for other reputational harm. Separate civil compensation for moral and material harm can be pursued, but it is generally tied to the criminal or Sharia proceedings rather than brought as an independent libel action of the kind common in the United States or United Kingdom. A court may also order removal of offending online content. Because there is no statutory damages tariff for reputation, any compensation awarded is set at the court's discretion based on the harm shown.

Online defamation
Online defamation is the most clearly regulated form in Saudi Arabia. Article 3 of the Anti-Cyber Crime Law expressly covers defamation and harm inflicted through information technology, which courts have applied to social media posts, messaging, and other electronic communications. The same one-year imprisonment and SR 500,000 fine ceiling applies. The law also addresses related conduct such as producing or transmitting material that harms public order or values, which can overlap with reputational claims. Given the breadth of the wording and the discretion involved, conduct that might be a private civil dispute elsewhere can become a criminal cybercrime matter in the Kingdom.
Watch out: Treating a social-media post as a criminal cybercrime is routine in Saudi Arabia. Sharing, forwarding, or republishing another person's defamatory content online can itself attract liability under the 2007 law.
How a defamation claim is brought
A person who believes they have been defamed in Saudi Arabia generally files a complaint with the police or the Public Prosecution rather than starting a private lawsuit. For online matters, the complaint is investigated under the Anti-Cyber Crime Law and referred to the competent criminal court, which decides guilt and sets the penalty. For offline insult or slander, the matter proceeds before the courts as a ta'zir question under Sharia. Any associated claim for compensation is typically dealt with in connection with those proceedings. Because the system is prosecution-led and discretionary, the process and outcome differ significantly from the civil-claim model used in many other countries.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Saudi Arabia?
Yes. Defamation in Saudi Arabia is treated primarily as a criminal matter. Offline it is punished as a discretionary ta'zir offence under Islamic law, and online it falls under Article 3 of the Anti-Cyber Crime Law (Royal Decree No. M/17, 2007), which allows up to one year in prison, a fine of up to SR 500,000, or both.
Does Saudi Arabia have a penal code for defamation?
No general codified penal code. Saudi Arabia applies Islamic law (Sharia), so most defamation is judged as a discretionary ta'zir offence with the penalty set by the judge. The main written rule is the Anti-Cyber Crime Law of 2007, which covers defamation committed through information technology.
What is the penalty for online defamation in Saudi Arabia?
Under Article 3 of the Anti-Cyber Crime Law (Royal Decree No. M/17, 2007), defamation and harm inflicted through information technology is punishable by imprisonment of up to one year, a fine of up to SR 500,000, or both.
What is qadhf in Saudi law?
Qadhf is a fixed (hadd) offence under Islamic law for falsely accusing a chaste person of unlawful sexual conduct. Unlike ordinary defamation, its punishment is regarded as fixed in scripture, traditionally flogging, unless the accuser can prove the accusation with the required witnesses.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Saudi Arabia?
There is no codified truth defence. A defendant may argue that a statement was true, made in good faith, or in the public interest, and the court weighs these arguments under Sharia principles. Because ta'zir outcomes rest on judicial discretion, the success of any defence is difficult to predict.
Can you sue for defamation damages in Saudi Arabia?
Civil compensation for reputational harm exists but is limited and is usually pursued alongside or after the criminal or Sharia process rather than as a standalone libel suit. There is no statutory damages tariff, so any award is set at the court's discretion based on the proven harm.
How do you report defamation in Saudi Arabia?
A complaint is generally filed with the police or the Public Prosecution. Online defamation is investigated under the Anti-Cyber Crime Law and referred to the criminal court, while offline insult or slander is heard as a ta'zir matter under Sharia.
Saudi Arabia libel law: is sharing a defamatory post illegal?
It can be. Article 3 of the Anti-Cyber Crime Law covers defamation and harm through information technology, and courts have applied it to social-media activity. Sharing, forwarding, or republishing defamatory content online can itself attract liability under the 2007 law.
Sources and References
- Anti-Cyber Crime Law, Royal Decree No. M/17 (26 March 2007), official English text(mcit.gov.sa).gov
- Anti-Cyber Crime Law of Saudi Arabia (Article 2 objectives, Article 3(5) defamation)(dig.watch)
- Library of Congress: Saudi Arabia Cyber-Crime Conviction (defamation under the 2007 law)(loc.gov).gov
- Amnesty International: Saudi Arabia draft penal code (ta'zir vs hadd/qisas, no codified code)(amnesty.org)
- Office of Justice Programs: Sharia penalties (hudud and ta'zir) in Saudi Arabia(ojp.gov).gov
- University of Minnesota Human Rights Library: Saudi Arabia Law of Criminal Procedure(hrlibrary.umn.edu)