Sahood Fort (Arabic: قصر صاهود) is situated outside the western walls of Al Mubarraz, Saudi Arabia.
[1][2] The walls and towers of the fort are built with mud bricks on two-layered bases—internal and external—and connected by palm trunks.
A storehouse and well were built on the southeastern side of the main entrance, fulfilling the water requirements at the fort.
A square-shaped room to the northern side of its entrance contains a rectangular shaped mosque with a niche and tribune supported by five pillars each with four rings.
The fort's founder is unknown, though some historical sources state that it was built in the late seventeenth century, according to the Hijri calendar.