What sets HR pay in the Gulf
The HR function covers generalists, business partners, comp & benefits specialists, talent acquisition, learning & development, employee relations, HR operations, and the CHRO and VP HR tier above them. Three forces shape band-setting. First, the corporate cycle: regional headcount build-outs drive TA-lead and recruiter pay; Vision 2030 mandates pulled learning & development comp upward; the return to office moved benefits work into a quietly senior function. Second, the comp & benefits sub-function: C&B specialists are the second-best-paid HR role after the CHRO and the sample is small enough that bands are visibly contested. Third, Saudization on the HR organisation itself: senior Saudi-national HR Directors and CHROs at Saudi corporates command a real premium because the supply is limited.
Reference data in HR is unusually sparse because the large HR consultancies (Mercer, Aon, Korn Ferry) bundle HR roles into mid-range bands without separating sub-functions. The Hays Gulf guide aggregates HR into wide ranges that don't differentiate C&B from generalist. The Tenure Pay Index refreshes quarterly, separates HR sub-functions, and ships the source count on every row so the HR-on-HR conversation is grounded.
Seniority ladder, UAE (monthly total cash, AED)
| Level | P25 | Median | P75 | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manager | AED 39,718 | AED 46,727 | AED 53,736 | 62 |
| Senior Manager | AED 49,725 | AED 58,500 | AED 67,275 | 4 |
| Director | AED 67,069 | AED 78,904 | AED 90,740 | 40 |
| C-Level | AED 94,042 | AED 110,638 | AED 127,233 | 30 |
Bands aggregate the UAE HR cohort in the Tenure Pay Index as of May 2026. Manager has the deepest sample at 62 sources because HR Manager is the most common mid-grade HR role across regional employers. Senior Manager sits at the limited-data threshold (4 sources) and is flagged in the dashboard pending the next refresh. Director and C-Level (CHRO) carry strong samples and are the most defensible reference grades for senior offer-setting. Associate HR (HR Coordinator and HR Business Partner Associate) sits at the limited-data threshold separately and is queued for refresh expansion.
Who hires for HR in the Gulf
In-house HR organisations with the largest GCC benches sit inside the major UAE and Saudi banks, the major listed corporates across aviation, retail, FMCG, telecoms, energy, and petrochemicals, and the sovereign-fund portfolio companies in each market. These employers run the deepest generalist, business-partner, and HR-operations benches and pay for retention at the Director and CHRO grade, where housing, schooling, and bonus stack on top of base. The Big Four HR-advisory and people-consulting practices hire HR consultants and learning specialists across the region, paying base ahead of mid-tier consulting at the same grade and using promotion speed to hold their bench. The large global comp, benefits, and executive-search firms staff specialist C&B and reward consultants and senior search partners in the Gulf, paying senior search partners on a commission-led structure that lifts total cash well above the in-house equivalent at the top of the ladder. Mid-tier search and HR recruiting firms fill the volume of generalist and TA hiring, paying recruiters a lower base with a placement-fee variable. Tech-led HR vendors and HCM implementation partners hire HR-tech specialists at growing rates, competing for the same C&B and HR-operations talent on a mix of base and equity at the venture-backed end.
UAE and Saudi deltas
UAE leads HR-function hiring on volume because Dubai concentrates regional HR consultancy headcount and the largest in-house HR organisations. Saudi is the fastest-growing market, driven by Saudization-led HR-function build-outs at sovereign-fund portfolio companies, the major Saudi banks, and the corporates implementing Saudi Vision 2030 mandates. The Saudi HR Manager band (SAR 30,112 to 40,739) sits roughly 5 to 15 percent behind the UAE Manager band after FX. The Saudi CHRO band (SAR 87,386 to 118,228 at Director equivalent, scaling higher at C-Level) commands a Saudization premium at Director and C-Level because the senior Saudi-national HR-leadership supply is finite. Working-week alignment now matches finance and banking: Dubai and Riyadh both run Monday to Friday.
Currency context
AED is pegged to USD at 3.6725. SAR is pegged at 3.75. HR roles at banks, corporates, and consultancies are paid in local currency. International HR-search firms quote senior fees in USD but pay HR consultants in local payroll. Total monthly cash on the Pay Index combines base, housing allowance, transport allowance, and a prorated annual bonus where the source data carries it. Equity and LTIP at senior corporate CHRO roles are not in the headline.
FAQs
Where does Comp & Benefits sit relative to HR Business Partner at the same grade? C&B Specialist runs ahead of HR Business Partner at every grade. At Manager level the gap is roughly 10 to 20 percent; at Director level the gap widens to 15 to 30 percent because the senior C&B role at the large banks and corporates is a board-visible function. The dashboard separates the sub-functions when the source data supports it.
How thin is the senior Saudi-national CHRO sample? Thinner than any other senior HR role in the Pay Index. The senior Saudi-national CHRO band runs above the published Saudi C-Level band; the explicit national-segment is flagged as limited data and queued for refresh expansion. Subscribers see the gap when filter by national segment is applied.
Why is HR pay below Finance and Comp at the same grade? At the C-Level (CHRO vs CFO) the two run close, with the CFO typically 5 to 15 percent ahead. At Director level the gap widens because Director-of-Finance and Director-of-FP&A roles tend to carry larger LTIP and bonus than Director-of-HR roles at most regional corporates. The headline band is total monthly cash; LTIP-led pay sits outside it.
Next step
The table above is the UAE ladder; subscribers get the same view for Riyadh, plus the sub-function breakdown (generalist, C&B, TA, L&D, ER) inside the dashboard.