🇸🇦 This is the brand hub for Al Rajhi Bank. For the bigger picture on the riyal, the dollar peg, the mada network, and Saudi Arabia having no Bank of America Alliance partner, see the Saudi Arabia Money Guide. For exact ATM areas and the fee-beating playbook, see the Jeddah ATM Guide. For card acceptance by district and the airport run, see the Jeddah Money Guide. For the other big network, see the SNB guide. Flying in? King Abdulaziz (JED) guide.
🧾 Order Riyals Before You Fly
Land in Jeddah with a riyal float for the souk and tips. Insured 2–5 day US delivery, rate below the airport counters.
Order Riyals → CEI Currency ExchangeWhat Al Rajhi Bank is, in one paragraph
Al Rajhi Bank, headquartered in Riyadh, is the world's largest Islamic bank and Saudi Arabia's biggest bank by branch and ATM footprint, founded in 1957 and running fully Sharia-compliant. It operates the widest machine network in the kingdom, so an Al Rajhi ATM is the one you will see most often, from the King Abdulaziz arrivals area to the malls and main streets of Jeddah and across Riyadh and the Eastern Province. For US travelers the practical points are specific: Al Rajhi machines run on the shared mada network, accept foreign Visa and Mastercard, dispense riyals at the interbank rate (which tracks the hard SAR 3.75 dollar peg), and usually add no operator fee of their own, so the cost depends mostly on the card you bring.
What Al Rajhi charges foreign cards
| Fee component | Amount | Paid to |
|---|---|---|
| Al Rajhi operator fee (foreign card) | Usually none | Al Rajhi (refunded by Schwab if charged) |
| Exchange rate | Mid-market (interbank), tracks the SAR 3.75 peg | Visa or Mastercard network |
| Per-transaction cap | ~SAR 2,000-5,000 (varies by machine) | Al Rajhi (withdraw a useful amount) |
| Your home bank's foreign ATM fee | $2-5 | Your home bank, unless waived (Schwab, Wise) |
| Bank of America non-network fee (no Alliance here) | 3% | BoA, since Saudi Arabia has no Alliance partner |
| DCC markup (if accepted) | +5-10% | Always decline. Pick Saudi riyals every time the screen offers US dollars. |
Because the riyal is pegged, the rate barely moves, so the variable cost is almost entirely your card. There is no BoA Alliance partner in Saudi Arabia, so a no-FX-fee card (Wise, Schwab) saves the 3 percent a BoA card would pay.
How to make Al Rajhi cheap: the right card, riyals not dollars
Two moves keep an Al Rajhi withdrawal cheap. First, because there is no Bank of America Alliance partner in Saudi Arabia, the card you bring matters more than the bank: carry a Wise card for the interbank rate with no markup, or a Charles Schwab card that adds no FX fee and refunds any operator fee worldwide, rather than relying on a BoA card that pays 3 percent everywhere. Second, when the screen offers to "charge in US dollars," always decline and take Saudi riyals, letting your card network convert at the pegged interbank rate; DCC adds 5 to 10 percent on top.
Because the riyal is fixed at about 3.75 to the dollar, you do not need to time withdrawals or chase a better day, the way you would in a floating-rate country. Pull a useful amount at any Al Rajhi machine in a branch or mall, decline DCC, and the only cost is whatever your card charges.
Where to find Al Rajhi in Saudi Arabia
Tahlia Street & the malls
Al Rajhi ATMs along Tahlia Street and inside Red Sea Mall, Mall of Arabia, and Jeddah Park. Covered in the Jeddah ATM Guide.
Nationwide coverage
Al Rajhi runs Saudi Arabia's largest ATM and branch network, so a machine is rarely far in Riyadh, the Eastern Province, Mecca, Medina, or smaller towns.
Around the old town
Withdraw from an Al Rajhi machine on the main roads bordering Al-Balad (Bab Makkah, King Abdulaziz Street) before heading into the cash-leaning souk lanes.
Terminal 1 arrivals
Al Rajhi ATMs in the King Abdulaziz Terminal 1 arrivals area, your first riyals on arrival, away from the exchange counters. See the JED airport guide.
Any machine works
Al Rajhi machines run on the shared mada network, so a foreign Visa or Mastercard works at any of them at the same pegged riyal rate.
For pilgrims
Al Rajhi has a dense presence in the holy cities and along the Haramain train corridor, handy for Umrah and Hajj travelers arriving through Jeddah.
Al Rajhi vs SNB: the actual decision
| Al Rajhi Bank | SNB (Saudi National Bank) | |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign-card operator fee | Usually none | Usually none |
| BoA Global ATM Alliance partner | No (none in Saudi Arabia) | No (none in Saudi Arabia) |
| Network size in Saudi Arabia | Largest | Largest by assets, very wide |
| mada network | Yes | Yes |
| Rate | Interbank (pegged) | Interbank (pegged) |
Decision tree: there is no meaningful cost difference between the two, because both run on mada, both give the pegged rate, and neither is a BoA Alliance partner. Use whichever machine is closest, which most often is an Al Rajhi ATM given its larger network. Pair it with a Wise or Schwab card, take riyals not dollars, and decline DCC. See the SNB guide for that bank's detail.
Best card pairing with Al Rajhi
Wise for cards, Schwab to refund any fee
A Wise debit card gives zero FX markup and the real interbank riyal rate at malls, hotels, and restaurants across Jeddah. A Charles Schwab card adds no FX fee and refunds any ATM operator fee worldwide. Because Saudi Arabia has no BoA Alliance partner, the no-FX-fee card is what saves you the 3 percent a BoA card would pay. Withdraw a useful amount at an Al Rajhi machine in a branch or mall, take riyals not dollars, and decline DCC every time.
Get the Wise Card →Charles Schwab Investor Checking
Schwab adds zero foreign-transaction fee and refunds ATM operator fees worldwide, so even on the rare Al Rajhi machine that charges one, your withdrawal is effectively free. Pair it with a useful withdrawal at an Al Rajhi mall machine, take riyals not dollars, and decline DCC.
Bank of America debit (no Alliance waiver here)
Saudi Arabia has no BoA Alliance partner, so a BoA card pays its 3 percent non-network fee at Al Rajhi and every other Saudi bank. There is no Saudi bank that waives it, so a no-FX-fee card such as Wise or Schwab is the better choice for cash in the kingdom.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Al Rajhi charge foreign cards at ATMs?
Usually no operator fee of its own, at the pegged interbank rate, on the mada network. You pay only what your card charges; a Schwab card refunds any fee and Wise removes FX markup. Decline DCC and take riyals.
Is Al Rajhi in the Bank of America Global ATM Alliance?
No. Saudi Arabia has no Alliance partner, so a BoA card pays 3% at Al Rajhi and every Saudi bank. Use a no-FX-fee card (Wise, Schwab) instead.
What is Al Rajhi Bank?
The world's largest Islamic bank and Saudi Arabia's biggest ATM and branch network, headquartered in Riyadh, fully Sharia-compliant. Its machines are the ones you will see most often.
Can I get riyals before arriving?
Yes, the riyal is freely orderable. CEI ships riyals to a US address in 2-5 days, and major US banks stock it. Most travelers pre-order a small float and pull the rest at an Al Rajhi machine.
Will my US debit card work at Al Rajhi ATMs?
Yes, with a Visa, Mastercard, Plus, or Cirrus logo via the mada network. English option, 4-digit PINs. Use branch and mall machines, decline DCC, take riyals.
Should I take riyals or US dollars at an Al Rajhi ATM?
Riyals, always. The riyal is pegged at about 3.75 to the dollar, so there is no advantage to dollars, and DCC or a dollar dispense costs more. Decline DCC and choose SAR.
The Al Rajhi + Wise + Schwab Combo
Wise zero FX markup for malls and restaurants; Schwab refunds any ATM fee. No BoA Alliance partner here, so the card saves the 3%. Take riyals not dollars.
Get the Wise Card →