Qatar Cybersecurity Market Trends and Insights
State-Mandated Critical Infrastructure Protection Law Boosts Compliance Spending
Qatar's Cabinet adopted the National Cybersecurity Strategy 2024-2030 in February 2024 and set out five pillars such as critical infrastructure resilience, legislation and law enforcement, the data-driven economy, workforce development, and international cooperation. This policy direction keeps the Qatar cybersecurity market closely linked to public-sector governance rather than discretionary IT upgrades. The National Cyber Security Agency also has a formal assurance role, including issuing, auditing, and revoking compliance certificates within its governance and assurance functions. That framework gives cybersecurity investment direct commercial weight because compliance affects eligibility for government-facing work and critical infrastructure operations. The result is a Qatar cybersecurity market in which ministries, state-linked enterprises, and private contractors continue to fund controls aligned with national standards rather than treating security as a narrow IT expense.Surge In OT Attacks On LNG Facilities Driving ICS And SCADA Security Demand
Industrial protection remains a core growth theme in the Qatar cybersecurity market because the country's energy system is part of the national critical infrastructure agenda. QatarEnergy's recruitment for a Senior Industrial Control Systems Security Engineer role shows that dedicated OT security capability is now embedded in operating requirements, not treated as an occasional specialist need. The role's emphasis on industrial control systems and recognized certifications points to steady demand for ICS and SCADA security inside the Qatar cybersecurity market. As industrial sites become more connected, operators need segmentation, asset visibility, and incident response processes that fit production environments rather than standard office networks. That pattern supports continued procurement in Ras Laffan and related facilities, where operational continuity remains the main buying priority in the Qatar cybersecurity market.Scarcity Of Arabic-Speaking Cyber Talent Inflates MSSP Costs
The Qatar cybersecurity market continues to face a shortage of Arabic-speaking specialists in roles that combine technical depth with regulatory reporting and public-sector engagement. The launch of a Cybersecurity Manual for SMEs by Qatar Development Bank and the National Cyber Security Agency in August 2024 showed that authorities still see capacity building as a live need across the business base. The Communications Regulatory Authority also partnered with RIPE NCC, Cisco, and Huawei in June 2025 to expand training and digital awareness in cybersecurity, IoT security, IPv6 routing security, and 5G topics. Even with these efforts, many buyers still rely on managed security providers for round-the-clock monitoring, local delivery, and bilingual documentation. That dependence keeps the service pricing firm in the Qatar cybersecurity market and can slow project execution when clients need local staffing, local presence, and Arabic-language assurance support.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- FIFA 2022 Legacy Smart-City Assets Require Robust Cyber Safeguards
- TASMU Cloud-First Program Accelerating Cloud-Native Security Adoption
- Legacy OT Assets In Gas Terminals Complicate Security Integration
Segment Analysis
Solutions held 61.79% of the Qatar cybersecurity market in 2025, keeping them in the lead. Network security, cloud security, identity and access management, and endpoint security remain the main solution areas because they closely align with national assurance requirements, sector regulations, and public digital programs. Application security is also rising in the Qatar cybersecurity market as financial institutions strengthen governance across digital channels and regulated software environments. This leaves the Qatar cybersecurity industry tilted toward platforms that can protect identity, network traffic, data, workloads, and user endpoints within a more unified control structure.Services are projected to grow at a 7.92% CAGR from 2026 to 2031, making them the fastest-growing segment at the top level of the Qatar cybersecurity market. MEEZA expanded its managed offering through a June 2024 partnership with Darktrace, adding AI-powered detection, investigation, and autonomous response from its Doha security operations capability. IBM, Cisco, and Palo Alto Networks have also deepened their local footprint through government agreements and local infrastructure, which supports more advisory, integration, and managed security work inside the Qatar cybersecurity market. Buyers are increasingly using these services to support lean internal teams and to manage compliance across mixed on-premise and cloud environments. That trend keeps managed detection, incident support, and advisory work growing faster than product deployment alone in the Qatar cybersecurity industry.
On-premises deployment accounted for 61.21% of the Qatar cybersecurity market in 2025, reflecting the current operating model of the largest regulated buyers. The Qatar Central Bank's Cloud Computing Regulations require financial institutions to process personally identifiable information and financial data within Qatar and to obtain approval before engaging cloud service providers for regulated workloads. Government entities operating under national assurance requirements also remain cautious where sensitive functions and national systems are involved. This keeps locally controlled environments important in finance, government, and industrial operations across the Qatar cybersecurity market.
Cloud deployment is forecast to grow at a 6.52% CAGR from 2026 to 2031, making it the fastest-growing deployment model in the Qatar cybersecurity market. TASMU's cloud-first design continues to expand digital services across multiple sectors, which directly raises demand for cloud-native security controls. Palo Alto Networks launched local cloud infrastructure in Qatar in January 2024 to support country-specific log processing, analytics, and platform delivery, reducing compliance friction for regulated users. The Qatar cybersecurity market is therefore shifting toward cloud security in a measured way rather than through a full replacement of on-premise models. That pace will likely continue, as cloud growth remains strong, but local requirements still shape where and how security workloads are hosted.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Offering
- Solutions
- Application Security
- Cloud Security
- Data Security
- Identity and Access Management
- Infrastructure Protection
- Integrated Risk Management
- Network Security
- End-Point Security
- Services
- Professional Services
- Managed Services
- Solutions
- By Deployment Mode
- Cloud
- On-Premise
- By End-User Industry
- BFSI
- Healthcare
- IT and Telecom
- Industrial and Defense
- Retail and E-Commerce
- Energy and Utilities
- Manufacturing
- Other End-User Industries
- By End-User Enterprise Size
- Large Enterprises
- Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- IBM Corporation
- Cisco Systems, Inc.
- MEEZA QSTP-LLC (Public)
- Dragos, Inc.
- Dell Technologies Inc.
- Atos SE
- Protiviti Member Firm Qatar LLC
- Musarubra US LLC
- Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
- Fortinet, Inc.
- Palo Alto Networks, Inc.
- Check Point Software Technologies Ltd.
- Trend Micro Incorporated
- AO Kaspersky Lab
- SecureWorks Corp.
- Airbus CyberSecurity SAS
- Spire Solutions
- Tenable, Inc.
- Help AG
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- IBM Corporation
- Cisco Systems, Inc.
- MEEZA QSTP-LLC (Public)
- Dragos, Inc.
- Dell Technologies Inc.
- Atos SE
- Protiviti Member Firm Qatar LLC
- Musarubra US LLC
- Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
- Fortinet, Inc.
- Palo Alto Networks, Inc.
- Check Point Software Technologies Ltd.
- Trend Micro Incorporated
- AO Kaspersky Lab
- SecureWorks Corp.
- Airbus CyberSecurity SAS
- Spire Solutions
- Tenable, Inc.
- Help AG

