In February of this year, the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) announced the creation of a new symbol to represent the Saudi riyal currency. This was widely noticed by users, font developers and other vendors, and many are wondering how it should be supported. The Unicode Consortium has received a number of inquiries regarding this. In this blog post, we want to let you know about our plans for supporting the Saudi riyal sign, and provide other information to help vendors plan to support the new symbol.
It can be put into use immediately, but “reflection in financial and commercial transactions and various applications will be done gradually and in coordination with relevant entities.”Allowance for gradual implementation is important since vendors need time to implement and deploy changes in their products and services.
Implementation Guidance
Vendor support for a new currency symbol can involve many different things, such as the following:
Updates to fonts
Updates to software keyboard layouts or new designs for physical keyboards
APIs for formatting currency values
Generation of financial statements and reports
Updates to applications, online services or devices for commercial transactions
After consulting with representatives from the Unicode Technical Committee (UTC), SAMA has now submitted a proposal to UTC for encoding a new character, SAUDI RIYAL SIGN. UTC will be taking up this proposal at its next meeting, to be held April 22 – 24, 2025.
Next steps
Extending support with CLDR
The reason for it being an alternative rather than the default is to avoid the symbol being displayed in contexts where fonts might not yet support the new symbol, causing users to see a missing glyph for their currency:
instead of
Later, when there is confidence that the symbol is more widely supported in fonts, a future CLDR version will change currency formatting to make the format with the Saudi riyal symbol the default, rather than an alternative.
People wishing to start using the new symbol in applications and services should anticipate that it could take several months or, in some cases, even years for vendors to implement and distribute product updates.