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Top 5 Courier Companies in Pakistan for E-commerce in 2026 Picking a courier partner is one of the highest-leverage decisions an online seller in Pakistan makes. It shapes your delivery success rate, how quickly COD cash comes back into your business, how many customers refuse orders, and, ultimately, how much of your revenue turns into real profit. With Pakistan’s e-commerce sector continuing to expand through 2026 and COD still dominating checkout behavior, the courier you choose is as much a cash-flow decision as a logistics one. This guide breaks down the five courier companies Pakistani online sellers ask about: PostEx , TCS, Leopards, M&P, and Trax, and what each one actually means for your store’s operations. What Actually Matters When Choosing a Courier in 2026 Before the rankings, here’s the framework worth applying to any courier decision: COD settlement speed, how fast cash from a delivered (or even undelivered) order reaches your account Delivery success / RTO rate, what share of orders actually get delivered on the first attempt Coverage, how many cities and towns are reachable, and how deep into Tier-2/3 markets the network goes Platform integration, plug-and-play support for Shopify, WooCommerce, and OMS/WMS systems Cost per shipment, base rates plus COD handling fees, which compound at volume Support responsiveness, how fast disputes, address issues, and failed deliveries get resolved With that lens, here’s how the top five stack up. 1. PostEx PostEx is Pakistan’s largest e-commerce-focused courier and fintech company, and today roughly 7 out of every 10 COD parcels shipped nationwide move through the PostEx network, the leading share of the e-commerce COD market in the country. Founded in Lahore in 2020, PostEx was purpose-built for e-commerce rather than adapted from a traditional courier model. What sets PostEx apart: Upfront COD payouts. Instead of waiting the traditional 10, 15+ days for cash to clear, PostEx pays sellers a significant portion of the COD amount early, often instantly or within a short window, directly solving the cash-flow bottleneck that COD-heavy stores struggle with most. Deep national reach. The network covers 750+ cities, backed by 300+ warehouses and 9,000+ riders, reaching into rural and remote markets that many traditional couriers underserve. Delivery speed. Same-city deliveries typically complete within 24, 48 hours, while intercity shipments (e.g., Lahore to Karachi) run 2, 5 working days, with express options available in select cities. Built for merchants, not walk-ins. PostEx runs on a hub-and-spoke model driven by dashboards and APIs rather than retail counters, which keeps its cost structure lean, but means it’s optimized for registered sellers rather than one-off individual shippers. Best for: COD-heavy online stores that need faster access to cash and want a courier whose incentives are aligned with e-commerce operations specifically, rather than a general parcel network. 2. TCS TCS is the most established courier brand in Pakistan and is frequently cited as the best overall courier service in the country in 2026, combining strong nationwide coverage, reliable delivery, robust tracking tools, and solid international options. What TCS brings to the table: Brand trust and consistency. Decades in the market translate into predictable service quality across most regions. Strong tracking and rate tools. TCS offers accessible calculators and tracking systems that make quoting and monitoring shipments straightforward for merchants. International reach. For sellers who also ship cross-border or handle documents alongside parcels, TCS’s global network is a genuine advantage most COD-only couriers can’t match. Retail counters. Unlike API-first couriers, TCS maintains a dense network of walk-in branches, useful for sellers who don’t want to rely purely on rider pickups. The trade-off: TCS tends to sit in the mid-to-higher range on price compared to leaner e-commerce-first couriers, and its COD settlement cycles are generally slower than fintech-enabled players like PostEx. Best for: Sellers who prioritize brand reliability, international shipping needs, and don’t want to compromise on tracking infrastructure, and who can absorb a somewhat slower cash cycle. 3. Leopards Courier Leopards is one of the largest courier networks in Pakistan and is consistently positioned as a close second to TCS for e-commerce. What Leopards offers: Wide nationwide coverage comparable to TCS, with strong integration support for e-commerce platforms. Established API/plugin ecosystem , making it a common default choice for OMS and Shopify/WooCommerce integrations across Pakistani e-commerce tooling. The trade-off: Public reviews on platforms like Trustpilot show inconsistent last-mile experiences, delayed pickups, slow customer support response, and communication gaps around delivery attempts are recurring complaints. As with any large network, performance varies significantly by region and branch. Best for: General mail and wide nationwide coverage. . 4. M&P (Muller & Phipps Express Logistics) M&P is one of the oldest logistics names in Pakistan, operating since 1986, and has built a reputation as a dependable mid-tier option for both domestic and international shipping. What M&P offers: Broad domestic coverage. M&P delivers to more than 1,600 locations within Pakistan, plus 200+ international destinations. Flexible service tiers. Overnight, Same-Day (limited to Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad), and Economy/MyBox options give sellers room to match service level to order urgency. COD support at scale , with coverage across 1,600+ locations and volume-based discounts for merchants shipping regularly. Value-oriented pricing. M&P is frequently positioned as a budget-friendly alternative for sellers who prioritize cost per shipment over premium speed or upfront COD payouts. The trade-off: M&P’s COD settlement model follows the traditional courier cycle rather than the accelerated fintech model of PostEx, and same-day service is limited to major metro areas only. Best for: Sellers shipping heavier or bulkier parcels, or those looking for a reliable, budget-conscious alternative to the big two (TCS/Leopards) without sacrificing national coverage. 5. Trax Trax built its reputation as an e-commerce-focused warehousing and last-mile delivery specialist, and in 2025 it was fully acquired by Secure Logistics Group Ltd. (SLGL), a publicly listed logistics company with existing strength in long-haul transport, asset tracking, and fleet management. What SLGTrax brings post-merger: A 4PL model. SLGTrax positions itself as Pakistan’s first tech-enabled 4PL platform, unifying logistics, warehousing, security, and fintech services into one ecosystem aimed squarely at reducing the vendor-juggling problem many growing D2C brands face. Warehousing depth. Over 1.6 million square feet of nationwide warehousing gives SLGTrax an edge for sellers who need fulfillment and storage bundled with delivery, not just point-to-point shipping. The trade-off: As a recently merged entity, service consistency and support maturity are still stabilizing compared to more established players, worth testing with smaller batches before committing large volumes. Best for: Growing brands that want warehousing, fulfillment, and delivery bundled under one provider rather than managed as separate vendors. How to Actually Decide Don’t pick a courier off a ranking alone, test it against your own numbers. A structured way to do it: Run a small batch (50, 100 orders) across two or three couriers simultaneously. Track first-attempt delivery success rate , not just overall delivery rate, this is the single biggest driver of RTO losses. Measure actual COD settlement time in days, not what’s advertised. Calculate true cost per delivered order, base rate + COD handling fee + return cost on failed attempts, divided by successful deliveries, not t