Arab News
Arab news, Sun, May 18, 2025 | Dhu al-Qadah 20, 1446
Saudi startup Ejari plans to scale as demand grows
Saudi Arabia:
Property tech startup Ejari aims to build a
full-service real estate “super app” as it positions itself at the center of
Saudi Arabia’s rapidly digitizing housing market with its rent-now, pay-later
model.
The company, founded in 2022, is moving beyond
flexible rental payments to offer furnishing, maintenance, and relocation
services through integrated third-party partnerships.
In an interview with Arab News, CEO Yazeed Al-Shamsi
said Ejari’s approach is reshaping the renter experience by offering a
streamlined, digital alternative to the country’s traditional leasing system,
where tenants are typically required to pay six or 12 months upfront.
Al-Shamsi said the platform is now preparing to
widen its offering beyond residential rentals, targeting commercial and
industrial leases as part of a broader plan to become a real estate super app.
He told Arab News that the idea for Ejari was
sparked by his personal experience as a student in the UK, where he struggled
with upfront rental payments demanded by landlords.
“That was the first time I ever struggled with
rent,” Al-Shamsi said. “The solution was that an insurance company would come in
and guarantee your rent.”
After returning to Saudi Arabia, and facing
similar rigid payment structures in the local market, he and his co-founders set
out to address the challenge head-on.
Ejari’s core business model centers on
leasing properties from landlords in bulk payments, then subleasing them to
tenants through installment plans.
“We pivoted six to seven times before landing on
our current model, which allows us to lease the property from the landlord with
a bulk payment and then lease it back in installments to tenants with a higher
price,” Al-Shamsi said.
This structure, he added, creates a win-win
dynamic: landlords receive their payments upfront, while tenants benefit from
affordable monthly payments.
The platform, which currently operates in 17
cities across eight regions in Saudi Arabia, is part of a growing cohort of
startups targeting financial accessibility in the real estate market.
In its first year, Ejari reported generating over
$30 million in service demand and has since seen that figure rise above $50
million, all with minimal marketing investment.
“This is off a very modest marketing spend of
probably just over a hundred thousand dollars,” Al-Shamsi said.
Despite being in operation for less than two
years, Ejari is already seeing strong financial indicators.
“Our revenues are very healthy. Our loan book is
very healthy. We’ve grown probably over 10 times between 2023 and 2024,” Al-Shamsi
stated, noting further growth early in 2025. Still, he acknowledged the
challenges in achieving profitability.
“We’re a long way from profitability, but it is
something that we’ve been keeping on top of mind. The current phase is growth.”
Al-Shamsi emphasized Ejari’s differentiated
approach compared to traditional financing companies.
“Banks, financing companies — they’re doing 20,
30, 40 things at one time,” he said. “Versus us, where we’re just trying to do
one thing. And as soon as we perfect it, we can then start doing other things.”
The vision for Ejari extends well beyond rent
facilitation. The company’s long-term strategy is to become a real estate super
app, providing a full suite of services throughout the customer lifecycle.
“Today, we’re helping the customer with payment
facilitation. The customer moves into the apartment — it’s an empty apartment.
We help them furnish it. They live in it. A light bulb goes off — we help them
fix it. Tomorrow they want to move — we offer a button they hit, then a team
comes and helps them move,” Al-Shamsi explained.
The company aims to enable this ecosystem through
partnerships with existing service providers, integrating their offerings into
Ejari’s platform.
The company is also expanding its focus to include
commercial segments such as offices, shops, malls, and even industrial spaces
later this year.
“The plan is to start activating different types
of rent in the offices, shops, malls, as well as the industrial sector,” Al-Shamsi
said, adding that the company balances growth with operational focus to ensure
it doesn’t “have our efforts captured around too many things, then the value of
that doesn’t become additive.”
To drive its customer acquisition strategy, Ejari
is leveraging real estate marketplaces. Al-Shamsi cited an ongoing partnership
with a platform he described as “the local version of Property Finder in Dubai,”
which has an 80 percent market share and 3 million unique monthly visitors.
Ejari’s recent $14.65 million seed round
reflects growing investor interest in Saudi Arabia’s maturing proptech sector.
Alongside Partners for Growth, BECO Capital, and
Alinma Pay, other investors included Rua Ventures, anb seed, Vision Ventures,
and Aqar platform.
The round, held in October, comprised both equity
and debt, with the latter provided by California-based PFG.
The capital will be used to enhance its core
technology platform, scale team capabilities, and expand into value-added
services.
Looking ahead, Al-Shamsi said the company’s
immediate focus for the first half of 2025 is to deepen market penetration and
build internal capacity.
“The focus remains on the current product in a
very big way,” he said. “Growing the team, building capabilities, building the
technical capabilities that we need to be able to expand to whatever we want
to.”
While the company’s default rates remain high —
hovering at 13 percent to 15 percent — Al-Shamsi appeared undeterred, stating
that this was due to a planned and carefully executed strategy to test the
market.
“But again, when we started, we thought that this
play would be mainly in the major cities. But surprisingly, the market takes you
where it wants to go. We have demands from small villages, small cities in the
north and south and east.”
With demand increasing from both urban and rural
markets and a substantial seed round now secured, Ejari is preparing to
consolidate its position in Saudi Arabia’s evolving rental economy.
Al-Shamsi expects revenue growth to remain strong
through 2025, forecasting another significant jump. “I’d say close to that 10
times figure. But maybe 8 or 7 times.”