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Kuwait's NBCC mandate: What organisations must do now

Published
Kuwait National Basic Cybersecurity Controls
Kuwait's NBCC mandate: What organisations must do now
9:22

Kuwait's NBCC is now mandatory, and the 18-month clock is
running

On 5 April 2026, Kuwait's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) issued Decision No. 2 of 2026, formally establishing the National Basic Cybersecurity Controls (NBCC) as a mandatory minimum cybersecurity baseline for government agencies, security and military bodies, and critical private sector organisations. Covered entities have 18 months from publication to achieve full compliance. 

 

Who this is for: Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs), compliance officers, and risk managers in Kuwaiti government agencies, financial institutions, and private sector entities designated as critical national infrastructure.

 

 


TL;DR

 

  • Kuwait's NCSC issued Decision No. 2 of 2026 on 5 April 2026, making the National Basic Cybersecurity Controls (NBCC) mandatory
  • Applies to civil government agencies, military and security authorities, private sector critical infrastructure, and other NCSC-designated entities
  • 18 months to achieve full compliance from the date of publication
  • The NBCC establishes a unified national baseline covering asset inventory, incident response, accountability, and cybersecurity awareness
  • If you don't yet have a Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) platform in place, now is the time — manual compliance tracking will not scale to an 18-month audit deadline
  • 6clicks is deployable as Sovereign GRC Infrastructure — on your terms, in your environment, always audit-ready

Why this mandate matters right now

Kuwait has been building its cybersecurity regulatory architecture rapidly. The NCSC NBCC follows closely behind the Central Bank of Kuwait's (CBK) Cybersecurity Operational Resilience Framework (CORF), issued in December 2025, which requires regulated financial institutions to implement comprehensive resilience controls and undergo annual independent assessments. Organisations in the financial sector now face overlapping, legally binding frameworks, while the broader national baseline adds an additional layer of accountability for critical infrastructure entities across all sectors.

The NBCC is Kuwait's first unified, nationally mandated cybersecurity baseline. This is not guidance; it is enforceable regulation backed by the NCSC's statutory authority. The 18-month compliance window is a clear signal that the regulator expects action, not planning.

For organisations that have operated without a formalised cybersecurity governance programme, the NBCC creates a hard deadline. For those already working toward international standards such as ISO 27001 or NIST CSF, the NBCC is a natural alignment point — and an opportunity to consolidate compliance work rather than run parallel programmes.

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What the NBCC requires: The core control domains

The NBCC establishes a national cybersecurity baseline aligned to the NIST Cybersecurity Framework, structured across six core domains:

  • Govern (GOV)
    Establishes accountability at the leadership level, requiring defined roles, policies, and oversight mechanisms to ensure cybersecurity is managed as a business risk.
  • Identify (ID)
    Requires organisations to maintain a complete, current inventory of assets, systems, and data, with classification based on sensitivity and criticality.
  • Protect (PR)
    Covers safeguards to secure systems and data, including access control, cybersecurity awareness and training, and protection of sensitive information.
  • Detect (DE)
    Mandates capabilities to monitor systems and identify cybersecurity events in a timely manner through logging, monitoring, and anomaly detection.
  • Respond (RS)
    Requires documented and tested incident response plans, including defined escalation paths, communication protocols, and reporting obligations.
  • Recover (RC)
    Ensures organisations can restore capabilities and services following an incident, with recovery planning and continuous improvement built into operations.

Who does the NBCC apply to?

Decision No. 2 of 2026 applies to:

  • Civil government agencies — Ministries and public sector bodies under the NCSC’s mandate
  • Military authorities — Defence and national security entities
  • Security agencies — Law enforcement and intelligence-related bodies
  • Private sector entities critical to national infrastructure — Organisations supporting national infrastructure (e.g. telecommunications, energy, healthcare, transport, and other designated sectors)
  • Other NCSC-designated entities — Organisations formally designated by the NCSC as subject to the mandate

If your organisation is in any of the above categories and operates in Kuwait, you are in scope. The 18-month compliance window applies from the date of publication — April 2026.

How the NBCC relates to existing frameworks

Organisations already working toward ISO 27001, NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF), or the CBK CORF will find significant overlap with the NBCC's control requirements. This is by design — the NBCC is structured as a national baseline that layers on top of, rather than replaces, international standards.

The practical implication: if you have already invested in ISO 27001 or NIST CSF alignment, a significant portion of your NBCC compliance work is already done. The priority is gap identification and evidence mapping; understanding which NBCC controls are covered by your existing programme and where remediation effort is required.

For organisations with no existing GRC framework, the NBCC is the starting point. Use it to build a controls programme that will naturally expand to cover international standards as maturity grows.

The compliance challenge: Evidence at scale

The most common failure point in regulatory compliance is not a lack of controls; it is a lack of evidence. Organisations implement the right processes but cannot demonstrate them at audit time because evidence is scattered across spreadsheets, email threads, shared drives, and personal files.

The NBCC compliance window is 18 months. An NCSC audit will require organisations to produce documented evidence of control implementation across every domain — asset registers, incident response tests, training records, governance decisions, and more. Manual tracking of this evidence across a government agency or large private sector organisation is not a viable approach.

GRC platforms purpose-built for this challenge provide a centralised, auditable record of compliance activity. Both manual and automated evidence collection must be first-class — some environments will support automated integrations, others will require structured manual workflows. A platform that handles both without compromise is essential in Kuwait's complex hybrid infrastructure landscape.

How 6clicks supports NBCC compliance

6clicks is positioned as Sovereign GRC Infrastructure — built to deploy on your terms, in your environment, not ours.

For Kuwaiti government agencies and critical infrastructure operators, this matters. Many organisations in Kuwait operate in air-gapped, on-premises, or hybrid technology environments where conventional cloud-only GRC platforms cannot reach. 6clicks is built for exactly these environments.

Three layers of capability relevant to NBCC:

  1. Sovereign Infrastructure — Deploy 6clicks in your own environment: sovereign cloud, on-premises, air-gapped, or hybrid. Data sovereignty is not a trade-off.
  2. GRC Core — Prebuilt control frameworks, risk and asset registers, and assessment workflows that map directly to NBCC control domains. Always audit-ready, with a complete evidence trail.
  3. Agentic Connectivity — AI-driven workflows for evidence collection, gap analysis, and continuous control monitoring, operating entirely within your environment. Connects to OT systems, legacy infrastructure, and hybrid technology stacks other GRC platforms cannot reach.

For organisations facing an 18-month compliance deadline, the ability to deploy quickly, evidence continuously, and audit confidently is not optional — it is the difference between compliance and penalty.

Frequently asked questions

The NBCC is a mandatory national cybersecurity baseline issued by Kuwait’s National Cyber Security Center (NCSC) under Decision No. 2 of 2026, published on 5 April 2026. It establishes minimum cybersecurity controls for government entities, security and military authorities, and private sector organisations designated as critical to national infrastructure. All in-scope organisations have 18 months from publication to achieve full compliance.

The NBCC applies to civil government entities, military and security authorities, private sector entities critical to national infrastructure (including telecommunications, energy, financial services, and healthcare), and any organisation formally designated by the NCSC. If your organisation operates in Kuwait and falls into these categories, you are in scope. 

The NBCC is designed as a national baseline that aligns with, rather than replaces, international standards such as ISO 27001 and the NIST Cybersecurity Framework. Organisations already working toward these standards will find significant control overlap and can use existing compliance work as the foundation for NBCC alignment. A gap assessment is the recommended starting point. 

Organisations have 18 months from the date of publication — April 2026 — to achieve full compliance. Given the breadth of control requirements, organisations should begin their compliance programme immediately to allow sufficient time for gap assessment, remediation, evidence collection, and audit preparation. 

Yes. 6clicks provides a Sovereign GRC Infrastructure platform with prebuilt control frameworks, risk registers, policy libraries, and audit workflows that map directly to NBCC control domains. 6clicks is deployable in on-premises, air-gapped, and hybrid environments — critical for Kuwaiti government and critical infrastructure operators that cannot use conventional cloud-only platforms.

 
Next step

With 18 months to comply and audits won on evidence, now is the time to move from “we should” to a practical plan. RSM in Kuwait and 6clicks are hosting a 60-minute executive briefing, Navigating Kuwait's 2026 Cybersecurity Mandate, on 4 May 2026 at 11:00 AM Kuwait Time.

You will get a clear walkthrough of NCSC Decision No. 2 of 2026 and the National Basic Cybersecurity Controls (NBCC), what auditors will expect, and a readiness approach you can apply immediately, including how AI-driven automation can accelerate NBCC compliance and evidence collection.

The session features Bhaskar Maheshwari (Cybersecurity Partner, RSM in Kuwait) and Marcus Smith (Technical Operations Lead, UK/EMEA, 6clicks).

Seats are strictly limited to keep the discussion high-value.

Register now

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