15 Best Oracle Fusion Partners in Saudi Arabia (2026)
These are 15 Oracle Fusion partners active in Saudi Arabia, spanning large Riyadh-headquartered specialists with named enterprise clients to boutique Al Khobar and Dammam firms. Numbering reflects research order, not ranking. Most are genuinely Saudi-headquartered and checked against actual corporate registration rather than just a regional office listing.
Why This List
Saudi Arabia is the most active Oracle Fusion market in the Middle East right now. Vision 2030, the PIF giga-project pipeline (NEOM, The Line, Qiddiya, Diriyah Gate, Red Sea Project), and ZATCA e-invoicing requirements have pushed real-time financial reporting and workforce systems to the top of the CFO agenda. But the delivery landscape here is dominated by global system integrators. Independent research on the Kingdom's ERP market confirms Tech Mahindra, Mastek, Accenture, Deloitte, IBM, PwC, EY, KPMG, Wipro, and HCL all run dedicated Oracle Cloud practices in Saudi Arabia, and Riyadh Air's own Oracle Fusion rollout went to Tech Mahindra, not a domestic firm. This list deliberately excludes those global names to focus on Saudi-headquartered or Saudi-rooted specialists. Full methodology below, including the entries flagged for a thinner or mixed evidence base.
1. Ejada Systems
Ejada is the standout pick for large-scale, named Oracle Fusion telecom and public sector work. Headquartered in Riyadh since 2005 with 1,000 to 5,000 employees, Ejada delivered what it calls the first-ever Oracle Fusion deployment in Middle East telecom, a full HCM, SCM, and Finance rollout for Etihad Etisalat (Mobily), later extended with Oracle Cloud EPM Financial Consolidation (FCCS) and Enterprise Performance Reporting across six subsidiaries. Strengths: enterprise scale, a genuinely landmark named case study, and government trust. Best for: large telecom, government, and healthcare organizations wanting a big, credentialed local partner. Watch out for: Oracle is one of several practice areas alongside cybersecurity and AI partnerships, confirm dedicated Fusion bench depth for your specific modules.
2. Zone
Zone is a strong fit for public sector organizations wanting a dedicated Oracle Fusion specialist with a real named reference. Founded in Riyadh in 2003, Zone runs its own branded "Bitaqati Fusion" offering and completed an Oracle ERP Fusion digital transformation with the Agricultural Development Fund (ADF), publicly credited alongside Oracle at LEAP24. Strengths: Oracle-focused practice, a concrete named government client, and 20-plus years in the Saudi market. Best for: public sector and government-adjacent entities wanting a smaller, Oracle-dedicated partner. Watch out for: company size is modest relative to the larger names on this list, confirm bench depth for multi-entity programs.
3. IT-RANKS
IT-RANKS is worth shortlisting when the buyer is in banking or financial services. Riyadh-headquartered, IT-RANKS has named work with Al Rajhi Takaful (Oracle Cloud Infrastructure) and Alinma Bank (ERP upgrade). Strengths: named bank clients, a real financial services track record. Best for: banks and insurers needing Oracle Cloud or ERP work delivered by a partner who understands SAMA-regulated environments. Watch out for: their public materials lean toward Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and ERP upgrades rather than a full Fusion applications suite, confirm scope fit before a greenfield HCM or SCM project.
4. TeleNoc Group
TeleNoc is a solid choice for organizations wanting a broad, established Oracle Fusion Cloud practice with a long client list. Operating from Riyadh, Dammam, Jeddah, and Madina, TeleNoc's named clients span McDonald's, NEOM, NADEC, IKEA, NAQEL, STC, SAMI, Saudi Naval Forces, MAERSK, Formula One, and Al Bawani. Strengths: broad Fusion Cloud coverage (ERP, HCM, EPM, CX, SCM), Oracle EBS lifecycle work, and one of the longer named-client rosters among domestic KSA partners. Best for: organizations wanting a full-suite Oracle Fusion partner with proven delivery across retail, government, defense, and logistics. Watch out for: with such a broad client base across sectors, ask for references specific to your industry.
5. Altraize
Altraize is a fit for organizations that specifically need deep, hands-on Oracle Fusion ERP support rather than a generalist IT vendor. Based in Riyadh, Altraize's public hiring for senior Oracle Fusion (Cloud) ERP roles calls for 7 to 10 years of functional experience and 2 to 3 end-to-end implementations with strong post-go-live support, and the firm is independently named as one of Saudi Arabia's specialist Oracle firms. Strengths: a clearly Oracle Fusion-first practice rather than a broad multi-platform shop. Best for: organizations wanting focused Fusion ERP implementation and post-go-live support. Watch out for: Altraize keeps a lower public profile than the other names here, verify current scale and references directly before engaging.
6. The Cloudors
The Cloudors is the pick for organizations wanting an Oracle-only specialist with delivery on both sides of the Red Sea. It runs dual hubs, Cairo as its largest delivery center and Riyadh for Saudi Arabia and the Gulf, and works exclusively on Oracle Cloud ERP, HCM, CX, and EPM/BI. Named clients include Al Balad Development (Heritage Development, KSA), and the firm reports 80-plus enterprise clients regionally. Strengths: deliberately Oracle-only positioning, a real estate and construction specialty, and a managed-support model (MUCS) built around unlimited requests rather than per-ticket billing. Best for: real estate, construction, and automotive sector businesses wanting a regionally anchored, Oracle-dedicated partner. Watch out for: their largest delivery hub is Cairo, not Riyadh, worth confirming local KSA presence for your specific project.
7. DSC (Development Services Company)
DSC is a fit for organizations in oil and gas, utilities, or government that want Oracle implementation bundled with staff augmentation and broader IT services. Headquartered in Al-Khobar/Dammam since 2011, DSC is ISO 9001 and 27001 certified and lists Oracle Implementation as a core IT solutions service line alongside SAP implementation. Strengths: genuine Eastern Province presence, certified quality management, and a broader staffing and consultancy capability. Best for: oil and gas, power and utilities, and government entities wanting Oracle delivered alongside flexible staff augmentation. Watch out for: SAP sits alongside Oracle in their service lineup, confirm the Oracle-specific team size before committing.
8. Inspirenet
Inspirenet is a reasonable option for growth-stage and mid-market Saudi businesses evaluating Oracle NetSuite alongside Fusion ERP. Riyadh-headquartered as an ISP and ICT solutions provider, Inspirenet positions itself around Vision 2030 alignment and localizing Oracle ERP for Saudi regulatory and cultural requirements. Strengths: dual NetSuite and Fusion capability under one roof. Best for: startups and mid-market companies in manufacturing, distribution, government, or retail comparing NetSuite against Fusion. Watch out for: Inspirenet's core business is ISP and general ICT services, Oracle ERP is a newer, smaller practice area.
9. Sohob
Sohob is worth a look for organizations wanting Oracle Cloud delivered as part of a broader multi-cloud, multi-platform relationship. A Saudi consulting and technology company, Sohob's public materials list Oracle Cloud alongside SAP, Microsoft, Google, Salesforce, and AWS practices. Strengths: genuine Saudi HQ, broad cloud and platform coverage. Best for: organizations that want one vendor-agnostic partner managing Oracle plus other platforms. Watch out for: with six-plus platform practices listed, Oracle Fusion specifically may not be their deepest bench.
10. Sejel Technology
Sejel is a fit for government and enterprise clients wanting Oracle infrastructure and cybersecurity work bundled with management consulting. A Riyadh-based limited liability company, Sejel publicly uses the #Oracle hashtag alongside #Cloud, #Cybersecurity, and #infrastructure in its marketing, and has co-hosted GenAI events with Incorta in Riyadh. Strengths: real Saudi LLC registration, a management consulting layer on top of technical delivery. Best for: government and enterprise clients wanting Oracle infrastructure work as part of a wider digital transformation and BOT engagement model. Watch out for: public evidence points to Oracle infrastructure and database work rather than a confirmed Fusion applications practice specifically.
11. Saudi Systems Corporation (Al-Masdar)
Saudi Systems Corporation is the right call specifically for Oracle Primavera project management work, not core Fusion ERP. Established in Riyadh in 1990 as Al-Masdar, SSC is a certified Oracle Primavera partner serving construction, energy, IT, and manufacturing clients, with 400-plus clients and 33-plus years in the Saudi market. Strengths: long-established Saudi systems integrator, deep project management tooling expertise. Best for: construction, energy, and infrastructure organizations needing Oracle Primavera for project scheduling. Watch out for: this is a Primavera specialist, not a Fusion ERP, HCM, or EPM implementer.
12. NATCOM
NATCOM is an option when Oracle is one piece of a broader multi-vendor infrastructure relationship rather than the primary need. National Computer System Company, Riyadh-headquartered, lists Oracle among a long roster of technology partners including AWS, VMware, HPE, Microsoft, Cisco, Fortinet, and Palo Alto Networks. Strengths: broad multi-vendor technology relationships, ISO 27001, 9001, and 20000-1 certified. Best for: organizations that want Oracle delivered alongside a wide bench of infrastructure, security, and cloud vendors. Watch out for: Oracle is one of roughly 20 listed technology partners here, not a standalone specialization.
13. Naizak Global Engineering Systems
Naizak is named directly by independent Saudi ERP market research as one of the Kingdom's specialist Oracle firms, though the company's own public materials emphasize its oil and gas, laboratory, and industrial manufacturing work more than Oracle applications specifically. Headquartered in Al Khobar since 1998, Naizak holds a multi-million dollar Saudi Aramco contract and reports 1,000-plus employees. Strengths: deep oil and gas sector relationships, Saudi Aramco-scale delivery credibility. Best for: oil and gas and industrial clients already working with Naizak on lab systems or automation. Watch out for: primary source evidence for Oracle Fusion specifically is thinner than for the other entries here.
14. Cloudserv
Cloudserv is a real option for Oracle ERP, HCM, SCM, and EPM/Hyperion work, but with an important disclosure: their own site lists a New Jersey, US address before Dubai and Riyadh, suggesting the corporate HQ sits outside Saudi Arabia even though they maintain a genuine Riyadh office. Strengths: confirmed Oracle EPM, Hyperion, Essbase, and DBaaS capability, a real regional presence. Best for: organizations comfortable working with a US-headquartered group that has genuine GCC delivery. Watch out for: not a Saudi-headquartered firm in the way most other entries on this list are.
15. MIS (Al Moammar Information Systems)
MIS is worth including for its sheer scale and Saudi pedigree, with a clear caveat: no confirmed Oracle Fusion applications practice was found in public materials. Established in 1979 and Riyadh-headquartered, MIS is a Saudi Tadawul-listed joint-stock company with 45-plus years in market, named clients including Aramco, Saudi Arabia Railways, and Zain. Strengths: exceptional scale, public listing (financial transparency), and decades of enterprise and government trust. Best for: organizations that already work with MIS on infrastructure or security and want to explore whether Oracle applications fit within that relationship. Watch out for: MIS's public materials do not clearly confirm a dedicated Oracle Fusion applications practice.
How We Evaluated These Partners
Every partner passed three checks. First, corporate registration: verified against company websites, LinkedIn pages, and third-party business data, not just a regional office listing. Cloudserv is flagged because its own site lists a US address before its Saudi office. Second, Oracle relevance: checked whether each firm's Oracle partnership covers Fusion Cloud applications specifically versus a narrower specialty (Primavera, infrastructure, multi-vendor reselling), noted transparently in each profile. Third, evidence: named client references, Oracle Partner Network status where published, and independent third-party corroboration, including Azdan's KSA ERP directory, which explicitly names TeleNoc, Altraize, Inspirenet, Naizak, and NATCOM as specialist Saudi-headquartered Oracle firms. This is not an official Oracle ranking.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an Oracle Fusion partner? A company certified by Oracle to implement Oracle Fusion Cloud applications: configuration, migration, customization, training, and support.
How much does an Oracle Fusion implementation cost in Saudi Arabia? Large enterprise programs often exceed SAR 2 to 5 million in year one, with ongoing managed services on top.
How long does a Fusion implementation take? A phased rollout starting with Financials can go live in a few months. A complex multi-entity program can take a year or more.
What industries use Oracle Fusion most in Saudi Arabia? Oil and gas, banking, government, aviation, and large PIF-backed giga-projects.
How do I choose an Oracle Fusion consultant? Prioritize industry expertise, named case studies, local compliance knowledge (ZATCA, GOSI, Nitaqat), and a clear post-go-live support model.
Do I need an official Oracle partner? Yes for mission-critical rollouts, official partners get direct Oracle support escalation.
Why does Saudi Arabia lean so heavily on global system integrators? Fusion's licensing economics concentrate it in large enterprises and PIF subsidiaries, a segment global integrators dominate.
How do I avoid a failed Fusion implementation? Define scope tightly, clean legacy data early, invest in change management, and resist heavy customization.
Conclusion
These 15 partners span a wide range in Saudi Arabia's Oracle Fusion market, from Ejada's landmark telecom-scale deployment to boutique, infrastructure-adjacent shops like Sejel and NATCOM. Several entries (Saudi Systems, NATCOM, Naizak, MIS) carry clear caveats about how directly their evidence points to Fusion applications versus a broader Oracle or IT relationship. Match the profile to what you actually need, shortlist three to five, give each the same brief, and compare how they scope the work.




