The core difference between SOC 2 Type 1 and Type 2 for a Saudi SaaS company is the audit period and depth of evidence: Type 1 examines whether your security controls are suitably designed at a single point in time, while Type 2 verifies that those controls operated effectively over a period of typically 6 to 12 months. For Saudi SaaS businesses targeting enterprise clients in finance, healthcare, or government—where compliance with SAMA CSF, NCA ECC, or Vision 2030 mandates is increasingly expected—a Type 2 report carries substantially more weight. Many organizations start with Type 1 as a baseline readiness check, then invest in the more rigorous Type 2 to meet procurement requirements. CyberSilo’s Compliance Standards Automation platform helps Saudi SaaS teams prepare for both audit types by continuously mapping controls to SOC 2 Trust Service Criteria and automating evidence collection.
What Are SOC 2 Type 1 and Type 2?
SOC 2 (System and Organization Controls 2) is a reporting framework developed by the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA). It assesses a service organization’s controls relevant to security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy — the five Trust Service Criteria. For SaaS providers in the Kingdom, SOC 2 has become a de facto requirement for closing deals with large corporates, government entities, and multinational customers operating in the GCC.
The two report types serve different validation stages:
- SOC 2 Type 1: Evaluates the suitability of the design of your controls as of a specific date. The auditor reviews policies, procedures, and system descriptions to determine whether they are appropriately designed to meet the relevant Trust Service Criteria.
- SOC 2 Type 2: Evaluates both the suitability of the design and the operating effectiveness of your controls over a defined period — typically 6 to 12 months. The auditor tests that controls were consistently applied and produced the intended outcomes throughout the audit period.
Key Differences Between Type 1 and Type 2
Understanding the SOC 2 Type 1 vs Type 2 distinction is critical when budgeting time, resources, and compliance roadmaps. The table below summarizes the main contrasts.
SOC 2 Audit Period and Timeline
The SOC 2 audit period is the single biggest factor separating the two report types. For Type 1, the audit is a snapshot — your controls are assessed at a specific date, and you do not need to demonstrate sustained operation. This can be completed in a matter of weeks if your documentation is already in order.
For Type 2, the audit period must cover at least 6 consecutive months, though 12-month periods are common and carry more credibility. During this window, the auditor will request periodic evidence: access review logs, vulnerability scan reports, change management tickets, and incident response records. This imposes a significant discipline requirement on your operations team. Saudi SaaS companies targeting banking clients regulated by SAMA CSF should plan for a 12-month Type 2 audit to align with the supervisory expectations of continuous control monitoring.
SOC 2 Cost Comparison
SOC 2 cost varies significantly between the two types and depends on the size of your organization, the number of Trust Service Criteria in scope, and the auditor’s location. For Saudi-based SaaS firms, local auditors in Riyadh and Jeddah typically charge less than Big Four firms while still meeting AICPA standards.
- Type 1 cost (SAR): 40,000–80,000 — Suitable for early-stage SaaS companies that need to show initial compliance traction to investors or pilot customers.
- Type 2 cost (SAR): 100,000–250,000+ — The price reflects the auditor’s extended engagement, additional testing procedures, and the operational burden of evidence collection over many months.
A common strategy is to complete a Type 1 audit first to identify control gaps, then invest in remediation and a subsequent Type 2 audit. CyberSilo helps clients avoid redundant spending by using automated evidence capture through our Compliance Standards Automation platform, which retains logs and policy versions throughout the audit period.
Choosing your SOC 2 audit path? We can help you decide.
Our compliance engineers have guided Saudi SaaS companies through dozens of SOC 2 Type 1 and Type 2 engagements, including alignment with NCA ECC and SAMA CSF controls. Get the right report for your customer’s requirements without overspending.
Which Should Saudi SaaS Pursue First?
For most Saudi SaaS organizations, the pragmatic order is Type 1 → Type 2. Here is why:
- Speed to market: A Type 1 report can be produced in 4–8 weeks, giving you a compliance artifact to share with prospects while you build toward a Type 2.
- Gap identification: Type 1 exposes weaknesses in control design early — such as missing data classification policies, weak access control documentation, or insufficient incident response playbooks — before you commit to a longer and more expensive Type 2 audit.
- Budget staging: Type 1 costs roughly one-third to one-half of a Type 2, making it accessible for funded startups and growth-stage SaaS firms. The full Type 2 budget can be allocated after closing initial gaps.
- Customer expectations: Many enterprise procurement teams in Saudi Arabia and the GCC accept a Type 1 report during the initial vendor assessment phase and require a Type 2 report at contract renewal or within 12 months of go-live.
When to Start Directly with Type 2
You may skip Type 1 if your SaaS platform already serves regulated customers (e.g., banking, healthcare) and you have mature GRC processes in place. This is common for Saudi fintechs that have already implemented SAMA CSF or NCA ECC controls — the overlapping requirements significantly reduce the readiness effort for SOC 2 Type 2.
What Auditors Look For in Each Report
Understanding the SOC 2 types from an auditor’s perspective helps you prepare the right evidence.
Type 1 Auditor Focus
- System description: Does your system description accurately represent the infrastructure, software, people, procedures, and data that support your service?
- Control design: Are the controls you documented capable of preventing or detecting a breach of the Trust Service Criteria? The auditor will examine policy documents, control matrices, and management assertions.
- Mapping to criteria: Each control must be clearly mapped to the relevant Trust Service Criteria (security, availability, etc.).
Type 2 Auditor Focus
- Operating effectiveness: Beyond design, the auditor needs proof that controls operated as intended. This includes system logs, access review evidence, backup verification records, and vulnerability management reports spanning the entire audit period.
- Consistency: Gaps or lapses in control operation — such as months without access reviews or missed backup cycles — result in exceptions and a qualified opinion.
- Monitoring and remediation: Evidence of continuous monitoring (SIEM alerts, SOC ticket logs) and timely remediation of findings is critical for a clean Type 2 report.
CyberSilo’s ThreatHawk SIEM + SOAR platform helps automate log retention, alert correlation, and incident response documentation, addressing the most common evidence requests in SOC 2 Type 2 audits.
Strategic insight for KSA SaaS: Saudi Arabia’s National Cybersecurity Authority (NCA) Essential Cybersecurity Controls (ECC) require continuous monitoring and incident response capabilities. A SOC 2 Type 2 report with security and availability criteria can simultaneously satisfy portions of NCA ECC domain 3 (operations) and help you meet PDPL data protection obligations during audit evidence collection. Aligning your SOC 2 controls with local regulations reduces duplicate audit work.
How to Prepare for a SOC 2 Audit in KSA
Whether you choose Type 1 or Type 2, preparation follows a structured path. Below is a phased approach used by CyberSilo for Saudi SaaS clients.
Define Scope and Trust Service Criteria
Identify which of the five Trust Service Criteria apply to your service. Most SaaS providers scope in Security plus one or two others (e.g., Availability and Confidentiality). Document your system description and control boundaries. Align with any existing NCA ECC or SAMA CSF control mappings to reuse evidence.
Conduct a Readiness Assessment
Perform a gap analysis against the selected criteria. For Type 1, focus on policy documentation and control design. For Type 2, also assess operational maturity — do logs exist for the full observation period? Are access reviews performed monthly? Use an automated tool to centralize evidence.
Remediate Gaps
Close identified gaps: create missing policies, implement access control automation, configure SIEM logging, and establish a vulnerability management cadence. CyberSilo’s Compliance Standards Automation platform tracks remediation tasks and maps them to SOC 2 controls.
Collect and Store Evidence
Begin continuous evidence collection. For Type 1, this is a one-time snapshot. For Type 2, you need ongoing documentation — retain logs, change tickets, access reviews, and incident reports for the full audit period. Automated tools reduce the manual burden.
Engage a Qualified Auditor
Select a CPA firm licensed by the AICPA with experience in Saudi and GCC environments. Many local firms understand the nuances of mapping SOC 2 to local frameworks, reducing the cost and complexity of dual compliance.
Common Mistakes Saudi SaaS Companies Make
Avoid these pitfalls when planning your SOC 2 journey:
- Choosing Type 2 too early: Without a Type 1 readiness baseline, you risk discovering design flaws halfway through a costly Type 2 audit, leading to exceptions and delays.
- Underestimating evidence collection: Type 2 requires systematic log retention and monitoring. Relying on manual evidence gathering often results in incomplete audit evidence.
- Over-scoping: Including all five Trust Service Criteria when only Security and Availability are needed triples the audit cost and effort for no commercial benefit.
- Ignoring local regulations: Applying SOC 2 controls without mapping to NCA ECC or PDPL creates separate compliance workstreams, wasting time and budget.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between SOC 2 Type 1 and Type 2?
Type 1 evaluates whether your security controls are suitably designed at a single point in time. Type 2 goes further by testing whether those controls operated effectively over a period of 6 to 12 months. Type 2 is more rigorous and carries greater weight with enterprise procurement teams.
How long does each SOC 2 audit take?
A Type 1 audit typically takes 4 to 8 weeks from engagement to report. A Type 2 audit requires an observation period of 6 to 12 months plus 3 to 6 months of readiness preparation and final reporting — total timeline is often 9 to 18 months.
Is SOC 2 required for SaaS companies in Saudi Arabia?
Not legally required, but it is increasingly demanded by enterprise customers, particularly in finance, healthcare, and government sectors. Many Saudi organizations view SOC 2 as a baseline trust signal when evaluating SaaS vendors.
Can I use SOC 2 to meet NCA ECC requirements?
Yes. SOC 2’s security and availability criteria overlap significantly with NCA ECC domains. Many Saudi SaaS companies map SOC 2 controls to NCA ECC to satisfy both frameworks in a single audit effort, reducing total compliance burden.
What is the estimated SOC 2 cost for a Saudi SaaS startup?
For a small SaaS startup (fewer than 50 employees, single product), Type 1 costs around SAR 40,000–60,000 and Type 2 costs SAR 100,000–150,000. Larger organizations with complex infrastructure should budget for the higher end of the range.
Our Conclusion & Recommendation
For Saudi SaaS companies, the decision between SOC 2 Type 1 vs Type 2 should be driven by customer requirements, budget, and operational maturity. If you are in early revenue stages or preparing for your first enterprise deal, start with Type 1 to establish a documented control baseline and uncover gaps quickly. If your platform already serves regulated clients or you have mature security operations aligned with NCA ECC, proceed directly to Type 2 for a more marketable and defensible compliance posture.
Regardless of path, automating evidence collection and control mapping is essential — particularly for Type 2 where inconsistent logs can lead to audit exceptions. CyberSilo’s Compliance Standards Automation platform helps you centralize policy management, capture evidence continuously, and map controls to SOC 2, NCA ECC, and SAMA CSF from a single interface. Our team also provides SOC 2 compliance services in Saudi Arabia tailored to your SaaS environment and target market.
Ready to plan your SOC 2 roadmap?
Our compliance and security engineers can assess your current posture, recommend the right audit type, and help you build evidence workflows that scale from Type 1 to Type 2 without rework.
