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Things to Do in Riyadh 2026: Top Attractions

Explore Riyadh's transformed entertainment scene in 2026. Discover new attractions, world-class venues, and Vision 2030 experiences reshaping Saudi Arabia's capital.

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By Riyadh News Desk · Published 3 July 2026, 5:55 pm

2 min read

Updated 17 h ago· 3 July 2026, 10:26 pm

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This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Riyadh is independently owned and covers Riyadh news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. Read our editorial standards →

Things to Do in Riyadh 2026: Top Attractions
Photo: Photo by Onur / Pexels

Riyadh in 2026 is a city in the middle of the most accelerated urban transformation in the world. Vision 2030, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's sweeping modernisation program, has moved from blueprint to concrete reality at a pace that has astonished urban planners globally. The Boulevard Riyadh City entertainment district -- a 450-hectare complex of restaurants, concert arenas, cinemas, and retail -- now hosts international artists who would not have performed in Saudi Arabia five years ago. Winter at Tantora, the heritage music and cultural festival held at AlUla, draws tens of thousands of visitors to a landscape of rose-red sandstone that rivals Petra for sheer geological drama, and day trips from Riyadh on the new Haramain high-speed rail have made the journey practical for the first time.

The Diriyah Gate development on the outskirts of the capital has transformed the ancestral home of the Al Saud family -- a UNESCO World Heritage mud-brick city -- into a living heritage precinct. Restaurants in restored Najdi-style buildings serve contemporary Saudi cuisine alongside historical exhibitions, and guided walks through the At-Turaif district explain the origins of the Wahhabi-Saudi alliance that shaped modern Arabia. For art enthusiasts, the JAX District in Diriyah has emerged as the kingdom's most dynamic contemporary art hub, with galleries, studios, and the permanent home of the Diriyah Biennale, which alternates between art and architecture editions each year.

The sheer scale of projects still under construction adds a surreal dimension to any Riyadh visit. NEOM's marketing presence is visible across the city even as construction continues 1,000 kilometres to the north-west, and the King Salman Park -- which at 13.4 square kilometres will be one of the largest urban parks on earth -- is scheduled for phased opening from late 2026. Traditional experiences remain accessible alongside the new: the Masmak Fortress in the old city centre still anchors the national narrative, camel markets on the city periphery operate every Thursday, and the dates, frankincense, and handwoven textiles on offer at the Dira Souq have not changed in character for generations.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Riyadh

Covering lifestyle in Riyadh. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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