The law is public, but it is rarely legible—least of all to the foreign capital that has to read and trust it before it moves. We close that gap.
Refoundation builds the trusted, legible layer over a jurisdiction’s public law—one jurisdiction at a time. Refoundation Saudi is the deployment for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: its investor-facing law, in English, that you can search by meaning, ask in plain language, and verify against the source.
Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 is staked on foreign capital, and capital has never been more selective. It concentrates in the markets that are easiest to read, understand, and trust. Yet the Kingdom’s law is Arabic-first and fragmented across statutes, decrees, and ministerial regulations—a real, controllable source of friction between the Kingdom and the investors it is courting.
A country cannot control every variable that moves global capital. It can control whether an investor can read its law. Making that law legible is one of the highest-leverage, lowest-cost signals a state can send: we are open, we are legible, we have nothing to hide.
Most legal AI generates plausible prose you then have to re-check. We do the opposite. Every answer is grounded in the provided articles, cited to the exact provision, and checked against the source text by an automated citation firewall—verified or flagged. The result is something you can act on, not something you have to second-guess.
If a claim isn’t supported by the cited article, we flag it. Trust is the product.
Public law should be readable by the people it governs and the capital it attracts.
English is for guidance; the Arabic original governs. We say so, every time.
We help you ask better questions. We never replace your counsel.
Saudi Arabia is a deployment, not a prototype—the same engine already runs on another jurisdiction. The ambition is a new standard for how a country presents its law to the world: open, verified, legible. The Kingdom has the opportunity to be the first to set it.
A Refoundation deployment. Information and infrastructure, never legal advice.
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