Why Saudi Companies Are Replacing Legacy Systems Right Now


Saudi government entities and their enterprise suppliers are under explicit mandates to digitise and interconnect their operations. Legacy systems that can't expose APIs or integrate with government platforms like Absher are being flagged as blockers. Saudi Arabia's PDPL came into full enforcement in 2024, with fines exceeding SAR 5 million for violations.
Maintenance overhead: 60–80% of IT budget consumed by keeping old systems running. Security incidents: Legacy systems account for 67% of reported Saudi enterprise breaches. Integration cost: Custom middleware for each new tool adds up to SAR 500K+ annually.
Phase 1 — Audit and Prioritise: Map all legacy systems, identify the highest-risk and highest-value components first. Phase 2 — Strangler Fig Pattern: Build new microservices alongside existing systems, gradually routing traffic to the new components. Phase 3 — API Layer: Wrap legacy systems in REST or GraphQL APIs to enable modern integration without full replacement.
Yes — with proper planning. The key is running legacy and modern systems in parallel during transition periods, with automated data synchronisation between the two. We've executed zero-downtime migrations for Saudi logistics and healthcare clients where the business literally cannot afford a single hour of system unavailability.

Full-Stack Developer with 3+ years of experience delivering SEO-ranked, high-performance web architectures and enterprise SaaS, FinTech & PropTech applications. Full-Stack Developer at Hamrix.
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