Gulf cybersecurity spend to top Dh120 billion by 2030

The Gulf region is poised to witness a significant surge in cybersecurity investments, with spending projected to surpass Dh120 billion by 2030. This growth is driven by the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), sovereign cloud strategies, and hyperscale data infrastructure, according to a recent report by Grand View Research titled ‘Cyber Resilience in the Gulf: Where Technology Meets Sovereign Risk (2025 Edition).’ The UAE and Saudi Arabia are at the forefront of this transformation, with both nations accelerating their digital agendas under the ‘We the UAE 2031’ vision and Vision 2030 programs, respectively. The report highlights that the region’s ambitious infrastructure projects, including national data centers, AI clusters, and cloud corridors, are fueling unprecedented investments in cyber resilience and data sovereignty. The UAE’s AI-driven security market alone is expected to grow more than fourfold, exceeding Dh19.6 billion by 2030. Swayam Dash, Managing Director of Grand View Research, emphasized that cyber resilience has evolved from a technical discipline to a sovereign capability, crucial for sustaining growth, attracting capital, and maintaining public trust. The UAE and Saudi Arabia, which together account for over 60% of the region’s cybersecurity expenditure, are embedding digital protection into national policies. The UAE is focusing on AI-driven threat intelligence, zero-trust frameworks, and sovereign cloud ecosystems, while Saudi Arabia’s National Cybersecurity Authority (NCA) and SDAIA are prioritizing data protection across industrial and infrastructure projects. The report also notes a shift in the region’s cybersecurity approach, from network defense to institutionalized resilience through policy, collaboration, and redundancy. Key initiatives include the ADGM Cyber Risk Management Framework (2025), Saudi Central Bank’s cyber stress-testing regime, and cross-border CERT intelligence sharing. As the line between cyber disruption and economic disruption narrows, digital resilience is increasingly viewed as a form of sovereign credit, with Gulf banks incorporating cyber metrics into ESG disclosures and regulators considering system uptime a proxy for fiscal stability. Dash concluded that the Gulf’s next global advantage will stem not from faster networks but from networks that never fail.