RIYADH: Come 2030, Hajis will have a new experience in Makkah and Madinah
The two cities are expected to add 110,000 rooms by 2030 to cater to Hajj pilgrims, Colliers International said.
Over 100,000 rooms are expected to be supplied across the Gulf Cooperation Council area by 2026, with the total supply estimated to exceed 1 million rooms, Colliers International said.
The large majority will be in Saudi Arabia, followed by the UAE.
Some 700,000 individuals would be employed in the hotel sector in Saudi Arabia and UAE, the key regional markets, to facilitate this increase.
If planned mega projects in Makkah and Madinah are taken into account, these projects would require approximately 50,000 further skilled and trained hospitality professionals by 2030, the consultancy said.
As part of its localization drive, the Kingdom has mandated that at least 30 percent of the staff employed has to be Saudi.
While all front desk and managerial roles have to be assigned to Saudi nationals only, technical roles are still fulfilled by expatriates, the report said.
Key source markets for recruiting staff include the Philippines, Egypt, and South Asian Subcontinents like India, Pakistan, and Nepal.
The GCC will likely need to employ more than 90,000 professionals in the hospitality sector by 2026, with 82,000 of them working in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, Colliers said.
There were 894,700 rooms supplied across the GCC in 2021, an increase of nearly 387,000 rooms over the past decade, with 70 percent concentrated in Saudi Arabia, it said.
Saudi Arabia has historically been the center for religious tourism and pilgrimage for Muslims, according to Colliers.