KSAPDPL.COM

Table of Contents

Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Introduction
Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Objectives
Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – First: Personal Data Destruction
Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Second: Anonymization
Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Third: Pseudonymisation
Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Fourth: General Guidelines

Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Introduction

Overview

Personal Data Destruction, Anonymization, and Pseudonymisation Guideline – Introduction explains how organizations subject to the Saudi Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) must handle personal data once it is no longer required. Issued by SDAIA, this guideline clarifies when personal data must be destroyed or anonymized, and provides examples of techniques, including anonymization and pseudonymisation, support compliance with PDPL Article 18 and Articles 8 and 9 of the Implementing Regulations.

It also emphasizes that the guideline is advisory in nature and does not replace the binding requirements of the Law and its Implementing Regulations.

SDAIA's Official Text

The text below reproduces official PDPL law, regulation, or guideline issued by the Saudi Data & AI Authority, verified against the original SDAIA source. No changes or reinterpretation applied.

Introduction

In fulfillment of its mandate to raise awareness among entities subject to the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Law, the “Law” and its Implementing Regulations, and to enable those entities to understand their obligations under Article (18) of the Law and Articles (8) and (9) of the Implementing Regulations, the Saudi Data & AI Authority (SDAIA) has issued this Guideline to assist entities in determining the cases where personal data should be destroyed or anonymized. This Guideline also provides examples of techniques to aid in the destruction, anonymization and Pseudonymisation of personal data. The terms and phrases used in this Guideline shall be construed in accordance with the definitions provided in the Law and its Implementing Regulations. This Guideline shall not be considered a binding legal document, nor shall it substitute consulting the Law and its Implementing Regulations, which shall constitute the regulatory reference for all matters related to the application of the Law’s provisions.

Plain-Language Explanation

The explanation below is provided to help you understand the SDAIA’s legal text and does not replace or override the official PDPL law, regulation, or guideline.

Regulatory Awareness Purpose

This guideline is issued to support entities subject to the Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) by increasing awareness of their obligations relating to the end of personal data lifecycle activities. It focuses specifically on destruction, anonymization, and pseudonymisation as required regulatory outcomes when personal data is no longer needed for lawful purposes.

Legal Basis and Applicability

The guideline is grounded in Article 18 of the Law and Articles 8 and 9 of the Implementing Regulations, which collectively govern personal data retention limits and the obligation to securely destroy or anonymize data once the purpose of processing has been fulfilled. The guidance applies to all entities subject to these provisions.

Destruction and Anonymization Triggers

The introduction clarifies that the guideline assists entities in determining the specific cases in which personal data must be destroyed or anonymized. This includes situations where the legal basis for processing no longer exists, or where retention periods have expired in accordance with statutory or operational requirements.

Practical Techniques and Examples

In addition to legal interpretation, the guideline provides practical examples of techniques that may be used to destroy, anonymize, or pseudonymise personal data. These examples are intended to help entities implement compliant technical and organizational measures aligned with PDPL requirements.

Alignment With Legal Definitions

All terms and phrases used in the guideline are to be interpreted consistently with the definitions set out in the Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) and its Implementing Regulations. This ensures uniform understanding and avoids conflicting interpretations across different regulatory instruments.

Non-Binding Nature of the Guideline

The introduction explicitly confirms that the guideline is not a binding legal instrument. It does not replace or override the Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) or its Implementing Regulations, which remain the authoritative legal reference for compliance obligations related to personal data destruction, anonymization, and pseudonymisation.

Saudi Personal Data Protection Law Compliance Services (KSA PDPL)

KSA PDPL Compliance Implementation

Achieve PDPL Compliance in 4 weeks or less.

Data Protection Officer As A Service (DPOaaS)

Let us handle your daily PDPL Compliance Operations.

KSA PDPL Compliance Audit (External)

Audit your PDPL compliance obligations.

Scroll to Top