Saudi police are hunting for arsonists who torched a woman's car, only a week after the kingdom lifted a decades-long ban on female motorists.

Salma al-Sherif, a 31-year-old cashier based near the holy city of Mecca, told local media that her car had been deliberately set alight this week by men 'opposed to women drivers'.

Video shows the car on fire at night as with a distressed al-Sherif crying as it burns.

The burnt out wreck of Salma al-Sherif's car after it was set alight by men opposed to women drivers

Video shows the 31-year-old's car on fire at night. Since taking to the road, she has faced abuse

On June 24, women celebrated taking the wheel for the first time in decades as the ultra-conservative kingdom overturned the world's only ban on female drivers.

For decades, arch-conservatives justified the ban saying that allowing female motorists would promote gender mixing and promiscuity.

Sherif said she faced abuse from men in her neighbourhood soon after she began driving in a bid to ease her financial pressures.

'Half of my salary of 4,000 riyals ($1,067) was spent on a driver to take me to my workplace and drive my elderly parents,' Sherif told the pro-government daily Okaz.

'But from the first day of driving I was subjected to insults from men.'

She added that she works to help support her parents and that her husband had encouraged her to get a licence as soon as the ban was lifted.

Sherif received an outpouring of support from Saudis on social media, with many posting pictures of her burning vehicle and denouncing the attack as a 'terrorist act'.

Local reports did not say whether her car was insured.

In the video, an audibly distressed al-Sherif can be heard crying as her car burns just a week after she was able to legally drive

The incident has led to an outpouring of support for al-Sherif, with many calling it a 'terrorist act'

'The incident is being investigated by security officials,' Mecca police said in a statement released late Tuesday by local authorities.

'We are searching for the culprits.'

Authorities have sought to show the driving reform had religious approval, with the kingdom's top clerical council emphasising the lifting of the ban was in line with Islamic values.

But many are still wary of a backlash from hardliners, amid a torrent of sexist comments against women drivers on social media.

Many women say they are staying off the streets, testing reactions in a society torn between conservatism and a modernisation drive launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Some 120,000 women have applied for driving licences, according to an interior ministry spokesman, but it remains unclear how many have been issued.

For now, the women taking to the roads appear mainly to be those who have swapped foreign licences for Saudi ones.