All expatriates in Saudi Arabia, not to mention Bangladeshis there too, can host their "close" relatives under a new 90-day visa, which will be made available within the coming days.
The visa will require them personal sponsorship, reported Saudi Gazette, an influential English-language daily in the oil-rich country.
Under this visa system, a citizen or expatriate can host three to five Umrah pilgrims. As for citizens, they, of course with personal sponsorship, can host anyone whom they want to bring in.
However, as far as expatriates are concerned, they can only bring "close" relatives.
The Directorate General of Passports (Jawazat) and the Ministry of Haj and Umrah are carrying out studies about the introduction of the “host visa” service through the Ministry of Interior’s portal of Absher, the daily reported.
The Jawazat and the ministry will soon come out with a working mechanism for the host visa, which would costs SR500 per person for a year.
The same person can be brought to the Kingdom at least three times in a year after issuance of separate visa for each travel through Absher -- a Saudi government app.
The new visa allows the hosts to entertain their guests with full of freedom for travel and stay either in hotels, furnished apartments or along with them in their residential apartments.
The visa holders can travel freely throughout the Kingdom and participate in tourist activities. The data of the guests will be recorded in the Civil Status registry of citizens and Absher portal of expatriates.
It will be the responsibility of the host citizens and expatriates to take care of their guests and serve them until their departure from the Kingdom.
Saudi Arabia threw open its doors to foreign tourists from September 27, launching a new visa regime benefitting citizens of 49 countries.
According to the new visa regime, visitors from some countries are eligible to obtain a visa on arrival while others need to apply at one of the Saudi diplomatic missions in advance.
The total cost for a multiple re-entry tourist visa is SR440 ($118) for a period of one year, and this includes SR300 government fee plus charges for health insurance, tax and transaction fee.
Tourists will be allowed to stay in the Kingdom for a maximum period of 90 days during the year during which they can enter the Kingdom multiple times.
The expatriates in the oil-rich country make up around a third of its total 33 million population, and reportedly around 1.1 million of them are Bangladeshis.
