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1.0302 SAR
Both currencies are independently pegged to the US dollar — QAR at 3.64 since 1980, SAR at 3.75 since 1986 — so their cross-rate (about 1 QAR = 1.0302 SAR) is effectively fixed too, and only moves if one of the two Gulf central banks ever adjusted its peg, which neither has done in decades.
Unlike Qatar's South Asian remittance corridors, this pair is mostly about GCC travel, trade, and business invoicing — Qatari and Saudi nationals cross the shared Abu Samla/Salwa land border for family visits, business, and Hajj/Umrah transit, and companies on both sides invoice across the two currencies routinely.
Because both riyals are dollar-pegged, the ~1.0302 cross-rate barely ever moves — a rate quoted by a bank or exchange counter that differs from it is simply that provider's spread, not a market shift.
Banks and exchange counters typically apply a spread of one to a few percent around the 1.0302 reference when converting between the two, with airport and hotel kiosks usually wider than a bank branch or licensed exchange house.
Card networks convert close to the reference cross-rate, but your card issuer may add its own foreign transaction fee on top — worth checking your card's terms rather than assuming the peg-derived rate applies in full.
For transfers or invoicing between Qatar and Saudi Arabia, both pegs remove exchange-rate risk entirely — the only real differences between providers are the transfer fee and the small spread each applies, so compare those two costs rather than 'the rate'.
The rate shown here is a continuously updated reference derived from both currencies' official dollar pegs — it reflects the benchmark cross-rate, not the exact rate any specific bank or exchange house will apply to your transaction.
Why is QAR/SAR always close to 1.03?
Because both the Qatari riyal (3.64/USD) and Saudi riyal (3.75/USD) are independently pegged to the dollar, so their ratio to each other is effectively fixed too.
Does this rate ever change?
Only if Qatar or Saudi Arabia adjusted its dollar peg — neither has done so in decades, so the cross-rate has stayed essentially static.
Is this a remittance corridor like QAR/INR?
Not really — it's driven mostly by GCC travel, trade, and business invoicing between the two neighboring economies, not migrant-worker remittances.