Karachi Traffic Police are expanding their AI-powered ANPR camera system to Airport Road, Clifton, and the Do Talwar & Teen Talwar junctions by August 2026. The pilot on Shahrah-e-Faisal — using 20 round-the-clock cameras — is already issuing roughly 100 lane-violation challans per day. If you drive in Karachi, this directly affects you.
The Shahrah-e-Faisal Pilot: How It All Started
Karachi has long struggled with chaotic traffic. An estimated 5 million vehicles clog the city’s roads, and data from 2024 recorded 497 fatalities from traffic accidents, with a staggering 4,879 individuals injured — numbers that made a technology-driven crackdown not just desirable but urgent.
Shahrah-e-Faisal, which spans approximately 14 kilometres, was selected for the pilot project due to its importance as Karachi’s main traffic artery and the relative ease of monitoring compliance. DIG Traffic Pir Muhammad Shah confirmed that 20 high-resolution Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) cameras are monitoring violations round the clock up to Drigh Road.
The system detects lane violations using AI and advanced ANPR cameras, recording lane changes in real time and automatically sending a traffic fine to the owner’s registered residential address — complete with a photo and timestamp. There is no traffic warden involvement; the process is entirely automated.
Under the traffic management plan, the two right-side lanes on Shahrah-e-Faisal are reserved for fast-moving private vehicles — including cars, jeeps and double-cabin vehicles — while the two left-side lanes are designated for motorcycles and commercial traffic.
Early Results Are Encouraging
The numbers from the pilot phase paint a promising picture. The system is currently generating around 100 challans daily against motorists involved in lane violations on Shahrah-e-Faisal. More importantly, the compliance trend is moving in the right direction. DIG Traffic Pir Muhammad Shah said the impact of the technology is already visible on Shahrah-e-Faisal, with smoother traffic flow and improved lane discipline, particularly among public transport vehicles.
Officials say the new digital enforcement system has already contributed to a reduction in traffic accidents, while also significantly increasing fines compared to previous years.
Where Will the Cameras Go Next?
Karachi traffic police is planning to expand its artificial intelligence-powered traffic enforcement system to three major locations — Airport Road, Clifton, and the Do Talwar and Teen Talwar junctions — by August 2026. These are some of the city’s most congested and accident-prone corridors, making them natural candidates for automated oversight.
Authorities have confirmed that enforcement will gradually be expanded to other major roads and highways in Karachi beyond even these three initial targets, signalling that this is not a one-off initiative but part of a long-term smart-city strategy.
How the AI Technology Actually Works
Karachi’s e-challan system uses AI-powered traffic cameras and ANPR technology to detect violations, capture vehicle data in real time, verify registration through Sindh Excise records, and automatically generate digital challans issued by Sindh Police.
One of the standout features of the system is its ability to distinguish context from intent. The AI system has been designed to differentiate between intentional violations and genuine emergencies — cases involving vehicle breakdowns, road damage, potholes, or unavoidable situations are reviewed manually before action is taken. This safeguard is designed to ensure fairness and prevent the system from penalising drivers who had no choice but to change lanes.
In 2026, Karachi’s Safe City Project has further upgraded AI-based camera accuracy and ANPR matching to reduce false readings and improve night-time detection of traffic violations. Authorities are also testing advanced analytics for seatbelt and mobile phone usage detection to further enhance automated enforcement.
Fine Structure: What Karachi Drivers Will Pay
Penalties are tiered by vehicle type to reflect the level of risk each category poses on the road. Here is the current breakdown:
- Motorcycles & Rickshaws: Rs. 2,500 for lane violations.
- Private Cars & SUVs: Rs. 5,000.
- Buses: Rs. 7,500.
- Dumpers & Tankers: Up to Rs. 10,000.
Motorists have been warned that there is no first-offense waiver on Shahrah-e-Faisal, although a one-time deferment option is available. Additionally, if you clear your pending fine within 14 days of its initial generation, the system automatically applies a 50% early-bird discount.
On the flip side, ignoring challans carries serious consequences. Fines left unpaid for over 3 months trigger an automatic suspension of the driver’s licence; if left unresolved for more than 6 months, traffic police collaborate with NADRA to block the violator’s primary CNIC profile.
How to Check and Pay Your E-Challan
Citizens can verify and pay challans through the Sindh Police E-Challan Portal. Alternatively, the official “TRACS 4 Citizens” app, available on Google Play, streams real-time violation logs, digital payment requests, and warnings for all vehicles registered under your legal profile.
In Sindh, users can pay through JazzCash, EasyPaisa and other mobile wallets, online banking, or NADRA e-Sahulat centres. The process takes just a few minutes and eliminates the need to visit a traffic office in person.
Pakistan’s Broader AI Traffic Enforcement Wave
Karachi is not alone in this digital enforcement push. The Punjab government has also introduced AI-powered traffic cameras at key intersections in Lahore to automatically detect traffic law violations. In Lahore, the PSCA reported that camera-based challans reduced signal-breaking incidents by 42%. These figures give real weight to Karachi’s ambitions, showing that AI enforcement genuinely changes driver behaviour over time.
For a city of over 20 million people battling some of the most congested roads in South Asia, the expansion of smart traffic enforcement represents a meaningful shift — from hoping drivers comply, to making non-compliance technically and financially costly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which roads in Karachi will get AI traffic cameras by August 2026?
Karachi authorities plan to expand the AI-powered traffic enforcement system to Airport Road, Clifton, and the Do and Teen Talwar junctions by August 2026. The system is currently live on Shahrah-e-Faisal as a pilot.
What technology is used in Karachi’s AI traffic camera system?
The system uses ANPR, OCR, and AI video analytics under the Sindh Safe City surveillance framework. Cameras send continuous footage to the Traffic Control and Monitoring Centre Karachi for verification, review, and long-term storage.
What happens if a driver gets a challan but was in a genuine emergency?
The system routes potential exceptions such as breakdowns and emergencies for manual review, and offers a one-time deferment option rather than a first-offence waiver. Each flagged case is assessed by a human official before any penalty is finalised.
How do I dispute a wrong e-challan in Karachi?
You can file an online dispute through the Sindh Police E-Challan portal or approach your district traffic office. Photo evidence is attached to every challan, which you can review before deciding whether to contest it.






