
Furnished vs Unfurnished Apartments in Jeddah: Price Gap and Hidden Costs (2026)
Furnished or unfurnished? In Jeddah, this decision carries a twist that Riyadh renters do not face: humidity. The coastal climate accelerates wear on appliances and furniture, which changes the math on what you should buy versus what you should rent pre-installed. We pulled live pricing data from 13+ Saudi rental platforms to quantify the gap and help you decide.
The price gap: Jeddah-wide numbers
As of April 2026, Darak tracks 296 furnished and 210 unfurnished 2-bedroom apartment listings across Jeddah. Here are the median annual rents by bedroom count:
| Bedrooms | Furnished (median) | Unfurnished (median) | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 BR | SAR 35,000/yr | SAR 30,000/yr | +17% |
| 2 BR | SAR 42,000/yr | SAR 30,000/yr | +40% |
| 3 BR | SAR 55,000/yr | SAR 30,000/yr | +83% |
The 3-bedroom gap is the widest in Jeddah because furnished 3BR supply is thin (114 listings) and targets a higher-end segment. The 2BR segment shows the most useful comparison: 296 furnished versus 210 unfurnished listings give you enough data to compare like for like.
One pattern stands out: Jeddah has a larger share of monthly-rate furnished apartments than Riyadh. Many listings advertise SAR 2,800-4,500/month with utilities included. These monthly-rate units, common near Al Salamah and Al Safa, cater to Umrah visitors and short-term business travelers. They push the furnished median higher because the annualized cost of monthly rates runs 10-20% above annual contract prices.
Neighborhood comparisons
The premium varies by area. In neighborhoods popular with expats, here is what we see for 2-bedroom apartments:
Al Salamah: Furnished units range SAR 30,000-48,000/yr (34 listings). Unfurnished options range SAR 25,000-54,000/yr (12 listings). The neighborhood median is SAR 48,000. Most furnished listings here are monthly-rate serviced apartments at SAR 2,800-3,500/month (SAR 33,600-42,000 annualized). One operator on Saqr Quraysh Street offers furnished 2BRs at SAR 3,800/month with central AC, internet, and weekly cleaning included.
Al Rawdah: Furnished 2BRs range SAR 30,000-60,000/yr (12 listings). Unfurnished options range SAR 30,000-43,000/yr (6 listings). The neighborhood median is SAR 57,600. A furnished 2BR near Bunda and Al Baik at SAR 48,000/yr annual contract drops to SAR 4,500/month on a monthly basis (SAR 54,000 annualized). The same owner offers the unit at SAR 4,000/month with annual commitment. Unfurnished supply is thin here because Al Rawdah attracts furnished renters willing to pay for Tahlia Street proximity.
Al Safa: Furnished 2BRs range SAR 24,000-42,000/yr (many listings). Unfurnished options range SAR 24,000-30,000/yr (18 listings). The neighborhood median is SAR 38,400. Al Safa has the most competitive pricing because it sits east of King Abdulaziz Road, farther from the Corniche. A furnished 2BR on Al Shakireen Street lists at SAR 24,000/yr (SAR 2,000/month) including electricity, while unfurnished units in the same area start at SAR 24,000-27,000/yr. The gap here is minimal, making furnished the better deal for short stays.
Hidden costs of going unfurnished
The sticker price on an unfurnished apartment is lower. But "unfurnished" in Jeddah means something different from what you might expect.
Many Jeddah apartments come with NO air conditioning installed. Check before signing. Installing split AC units costs SAR 1,500-3,000 each, and a typical 2-bedroom apartment needs 3-4 units. That is SAR 4,500-12,000 just for cooling in a city where summer humidity regularly exceeds 80%.
Here is what you will likely need to buy or install when moving into an unfurnished apartment:
| Item | Estimated cost (SAR) | Jeddah-specific notes |
|---|---|---|
| Split AC units (3-4) | 4,500-12,000 | Many buildings have no AC. Coastal humidity strains units harder. |
| Kitchen | 3,000-5,000 | Cabinets, countertop. Some apartments have no sink installed. |
| Major appliances | 3,000-5,000 | Fridge, washing machine, stove/oven |
| Furniture | 5,000-15,000 | Beds, sofa, dining table, wardrobes. IKEA or local shops. |
| Curtains and blinds | 500-1,500 | Most windows come bare |
| Water heater | 300-800 | Sometimes missing in older buildings |
| Dehumidifier | 500-1,500 | Not essential but helps in coastal neighborhoods west of highway |
| Total first-time setup | 16,800-40,800 | Wide range depending on quality and apartment condition |
The practical range for most expats is SAR 15,000-25,000. You can go cheaper buying used furniture on Haraj or Facebook Marketplace, or spend more at malls in Red Sea Mall or Mall of Arabia.
One critical detail: if you buy split AC units and a kitchen, those stay with the apartment when you leave. You cannot take them with you. That money is gone.
Jeddah-specific factor: salt air and humidity. Apartments near the Corniche (Al Rawdah, Al Zahra, parts of Al Salamah) expose appliances and AC units to salt-laden air. Expect AC compressors to need servicing more often, and metal fixtures to corrode faster than in inland Riyadh. Budget SAR 500-1,000/year extra for maintenance if you are west of King Abdulaziz Road. This tilts the math toward furnished in coastal neighborhoods because the landlord absorbs replacement costs.
Break-even analysis
The math is straightforward. Take a 2-bedroom apartment in Al Salamah:
- Furnished: SAR 42,000/yr
- Unfurnished: SAR 30,000/yr
- Annual difference: SAR 12,000
- Setup cost (unfurnished): SAR 20,000 (mid-range estimate)
| Stay length | Furnished total | Unfurnished total | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year | SAR 42,000 | SAR 50,000 | Furnished by SAR 8K |
| 2 years | SAR 84,000 | SAR 80,000 | Unfurnished (barely) |
| 3 years | SAR 126,000 | SAR 110,000 | Unfurnished by SAR 16K |
Under 2 years: Furnished wins. The setup cost of SAR 20,000 does not pay off when you are only saving SAR 12,000/year. Add the time cost of shopping and installation, and furnished is the clear choice.
2-3 years: Borderline. Unfurnished is cheaper on paper at the 2-year mark, but factor in the coastal maintenance costs and the AC investment you lose when you leave.
Over 3 years: Unfurnished wins. The annual savings compound, and you get exactly the furniture and layout you want.
Note that the break-even in Jeddah takes longer than in Riyadh. The furnished premium in Jeddah (SAR 12,000/yr for 2BR) is smaller than Riyadh's (SAR 25,000/yr for 2BR), which means slower payback on setup costs.
Monthly furnished options for new arrivals
Jeddah has a deeper monthly furnished market than any other Saudi city. The Umrah/tourism pipeline keeps serviced apartment operators busy year-round. Expect to pay:
- Studio: SAR 2,200-4,000/month
- 1 BR: SAR 2,800-4,500/month
- 2 BR: SAR 3,500-5,000/month
These rates typically include electricity, water, internet, and sometimes weekly cleaning. Operators cluster in Al Salamah, Al Safa, Mishrifah, and Al Aziziyah. Many are not registered on Ejar and operate as hotel apartments.
Budget 1-3 months in a monthly rental while you search for your permanent apartment. The cost adds up, so move quickly. But given Jeddah's richer supply of monthly options, you have more negotiating room than in Riyadh.
Some listings in our data show competitive monthly rates: a furnished 2BR in Al Aziziyah at SAR 3,600/month (SAR 43,200 annualized) with hotel-grade furniture, AC, and Wi-Fi included. Another in Al Safa at SAR 2,500/month (SAR 30,000 annualized) including utilities. These work well as transitional housing.
When furnished makes sense
- Staying under 2 years. The setup costs for unfurnished do not pay off in a short stint. Jeddah's smaller price gap makes this window longer than in Riyadh.
- Living near the coast. If your apartment is in Al Rawdah, Al Zahra, or western Al Salamah, the landlord absorbs appliance replacement costs from salt air damage. That is worth paying a premium for.
- Relocating with minimal belongings. If you are arriving with suitcases and nothing else, furnished gets you settled in a day.
- Employer covers rent. If your company pays your housing, the furnished premium comes out of their budget, not yours. Take the convenience.
- Umrah season flexibility. Some expats sublease or vacate during peak Umrah months. Furnished units make this easier because you do not need to store or move furniture.
When unfurnished makes sense
- Staying 3+ years. The annual savings add up to tens of thousands of riyals over a long stay.
- You want to choose your own furniture. Furnished apartments in Jeddah are hit or miss on quality. Some have new, modern pieces. Others have worn-out sofas and mattresses that have absorbed years of coastal humidity.
- Family with specific needs. Children's beds, a large dining table, specific kitchen equipment. Furnished apartments rarely match what a family actually needs.
- East of the highway. In Al Safa, Al Marwa, and Al Bawadi, the furnished premium is small and appliance wear from humidity is lower. Unfurnished makes more financial sense here.
- Much larger selection. For 3-bedroom apartments, unfurnished listings outnumber furnished nearly 4 to 1 (399 vs 114). More choices mean better apartments at better prices.
Related guides
- Renting in Jeddah: The Expat Hub Guide ties together all six sub-guides
- Best Neighborhoods for Expats in Jeddah ranks 10 neighborhoods by price and livability
- Budget Neighborhoods in Jeddah covers areas under SAR 35,000/year
- Understanding Ejar Contracts explains the mandatory digital lease registration
- Housing Allowance Calculator maps your salary to neighborhoods you can afford
Ready to compare prices yourself? Browse Jeddah rentals across 13+ platforms: Jeddah
Mga Kaugnay na Post
Furnished vs Unfurnished Apartments in Riyadh: Price Gap and Hidden Costs (2026)
We compared furnished and unfurnished rents across Riyadh neighborhoods. The price gap, the hidden costs of going unfurnished, and when each option makes sense.
Can You Afford to Rent in Riyadh on a SAR 10,000 Salary?
We mapped every Riyadh neighborhood against real salary data. At SAR 10K/month, five neighborhoods fit the 30% rule. At 15K, the whole city opens up.
Understanding Ejar: The Complete Rental Contract Guide for Expats in Saudi Arabia (2026)
Everything expats need to know about Ejar, Saudi Arabia's mandatory rental contract platform. Registration steps, fees, tenant rights, rent increase rules, and common scams.


