The Al-Khafji crossing moved 10,437 trucks into Saudi Arabia in 25 days during March–April 2026 alone. With the Red Sea still rerouting half the world's eastbound boxes and the Hormuz situation never fully off the worry list, the Saudi corridor isn't a backup anymore — it's becoming Kuwait's working second leg. Here's what changed and how to use it this quarter.
What actually changed in Saudi this spring
In late March 2026 the Saudi transport minister rolled out a package of GCC-focused reforms. The four that matter most to Kuwait importers:
- Bank guarantee dropped for transhipment cargo. Loads moving Jeddah → Kuwait via Saudi territory no longer need a guarantee covering hypothetical Saudi import duties. That removes a finance line item that used to add ~1.5–3% to the all-in cost for high-value cargo.
- Port storage extended by 30 days. King Abdulaziz Port (Dammam) and Jeddah Islamic Port now hold transit boxes longer without penalty — useful when you want to stage cargo and split-truck it into Kuwait.
- GCC imports and exports exempt from storage fees for up to 60 days. Real impact for anyone using Saudi ports as a hub.
- Truck operational age raised to 22 years for GCC-flagged trucks. Older fleets that were ageing out can keep working the corridor.
Saudi also formally allowed GCC-flagged refrigerated and dry trucks to enter empty to pick up Kuwait-destined cargo from any Saudi point. That fixed the deadhead problem that used to make Kuwait–Jeddah return trips uneconomic.
The two crossings — what they're actually doing
Al-Khafji (Saudi) ↔ Al-Nuwaiseeb (Kuwait) is the primary truck crossing. Open 24/7. 10,437 trucks across in late March–early April 2026. Cargo-truck wait at the gate runs 30 minutes on a quiet weekday morning and 3–4 hours on Thursday and Friday evenings, holiday eves, and sandstorm days.
Al-Raq'e (Al-Ruqai), on the Saudi side near Hafar Al-Batin, handled 5,255 trucks in the same window. ~120 km longer detour from Kuwait City, but lighter queue. Worth knowing the moment Khafji backs up.
The TIR Carnet movement is now live between Saudi and Kuwait — the first TIR shipment ran in 2024 and it's now routine. If your forwarder isn't using TIR for transit cargo, ask why. A TIR-sealed truck passes through Saudi without cross-loading and skips several signatures along the route.
What it does to your lane economics
Real numbers from Q2 2026:
- Jeddah → Kuwait by truck, 40' container equivalent: roughly $1,800–$2,400 all-in, 4–6 days port-to-warehouse, depending on whether you go straight or stage in Dammam.
- Compared to Jeddah ocean call → Shuwaikh: ~14–22 days door-to-door right now, with surcharge volatility (BAF, war-risk uplift, Cape diversion) eating any cost advantage.
- Riyadh → Kuwait City by road: 12–18 hours on the truck once the driver clears the border. The Khafji highway is signed and well-paved; the choke point is always the gate.
The cost gap between sea-then-truck and pure-ocean is narrower than it was six months ago, and the time advantage of the overland route is large enough that for medium-value cargo and time-sensitive raw materials, the truck leg is now winning the math.
Documents you still need
The Saudi reforms reduced friction but didn't eliminate paperwork. For a Kuwait import moving Jeddah → Nuwaiseeb:
- Commercial invoice and packing list (Arabic translation strongly preferred for Kuwait Customs)
- Original or notarised certificate of origin
- Bill of lading or air waybill for the inbound sea/air leg
- TIR Carnet (if applicable) or a CMR consignment note for the truck leg
- Manafith third-party liability insurance for any foreign-plated vehicle crossing into Saudi
- Importer's Civil ID and a Kuwait Customs file number — the broker handles this end
PAAFR (food) and MoH (medical, pharma, cosmetics) approvals are unchanged. These still need to be in place before the truck rolls, not after. Don't book the move and then chase the permits.
Where it can still go wrong
- Border weather. Sandstorms shut Khafji for hours every spring. April–May is peak. Build a buffer.
- Reefer power. If your driver waits four hours at the gate in 45°C summer heat, genset fuel and temperature drift matter. Confirm reefer protocols in writing.
- Carnet errors. A wrong HS code or volume mismatch on the TIR Carnet voids the seal protection and pushes you back into normal customs handling at Khafji.
- Empty-truck rule misuse. The "enter empty" allowance is for GCC-flagged trucks. Confirm plate origin before you book backhaul.
Bottom line — what to do this week
- If you import from China, Turkey, or Europe via Jeddah or Dammam, get a truck-leg quote alongside your sea-to-Shuwaikh quote. Compare like-for-like on landed cost and total transit time.
- Ask your broker explicitly whether they're using TIR. If not, ask which competitor is.
- Pre-stage PAAFR and MoH approvals for goods that need them — before you lock the corridor.
- For high-value or time-critical cargo, the Saudi corridor is now a primary option, not a fallback.
- Build a 4-hour border buffer into any tight-window delivery commitment.
Need help running a Jeddah or Dammam → Kuwait overland quote against your current routing? Get a quote in under 2 hours: qafxpress.com.