Sovereign AI engineering for Kuwait and the GCC.
Gulf organizations are racing toward AI — but banks, ministries, and energy companies cannot ship their source code to a foreign cloud. NeueCode brings the autonomous engineer to your environment instead: local models, an Arabic/English workbench, and deployment that starts from Kuwait City.
Why GCC organizations need sovereign AI
Data-sovereignty expectations
Regulated GCC organizations face growing expectations that data stays in-country and in-house. An agent that runs entirely on your infrastructure settles that question by design.
Arabic first, not an afterthought
The workbench itself is fully bilingual — Arabic and English with complete right-to-left support, in the product, not just the website.
Built for the sectors that define the Gulf
Government, banking, defense, oil & gas, healthcare, telecom — the sectors whose code cannot leave the building are the sectors NeueCode was built for.
Kuwait-first deployment
Our office is in Kuwait City, and deployment and support start here — with coverage across the wider GCC.
Deployment as a service, not your problem
GPU/CUDA server setup, local model deployment, and MLOps — delivered inside your environment by the same team that built the platform.
GCC compliance-aware architecture
Our audit-evidence export is mapped to frameworks including SAMA and Saudi NCA controls alongside international ones — a mapping that gives your compliance team a starting point, not a certification we claim.
Further reading: our guides on data localization and air-gapped deployment — the guides library

The real product — not a mockup.
A pilot program for regulated sectors
Seven days on your server, inside your network, on one test repository — approved tasks, exported audit evidence, and a security review session. Your decision then rests on evidence, not a slide deck.
Our Kuwait City team is ready.
A deployment consultation in Arabic or English — we review your architecture, hardware, and isolation requirements, and map the pilot.
Book a GCC consultation