Pakistan IT export tax freeze locked in until 2029

Pakistan’s IT export tax relief just got a firm three-year timeline. The FY2026-27 federal budget extends the 0.25% Final Tax Regime (FTR) on IT export earnings until June 2029 and slashes the advance tax on foreign payments from 5% to 0.5%, two changes that directly affect every freelancer and software house earning in dollars. With Pakistan’s IT exports sitting at around $3.8 billion in FY2024-25, the big question now is whether these moves are enough to push the sector past the $5 billion mark.

What Is the IT Export Tax and Why Did It Nearly Expire?

The FTR is a special low tax rate that applies to IT and IT-enabled services (ITeS) exports. Instead of paying the normal income tax rate, which can reach up to 35%, registered exporters pay just 0.25% of their foreign earnings. That tax is collected by their bank when the payment arrives, and it counts as the full and final tax on that income. No extra tax is owed at return time.

The preferential 0.25% FTR, which applies when PSEB-registered freelancers receive foreign income through approved banking channels, was scheduled to expire on June 30, 2026. Without an extension, freelancers would have faced a jump back to standard income tax rates, a prospect that alarmed a sector expected to generate over $1 billion in export earnings this fiscal year.

The proposal to extend follows concerns raised by IT companies, freelancers, software houses, and digital exporters about future tax treatment. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif reportedly took notice of these concerns and directed authorities to ensure continuity of incentives aimed at supporting export growth.

The Two Key IT Export Tax Changes Explained

1. The 0.25% FTR Extended to June 2029

The budget extends the preferential 0.25% Final Tax Regime on IT export earnings for three more years, until June 30, 2029. The income tax exemption for the IT sector has also been extended until June 2029 under Section 65F of the Income Tax Ordinance.

In practical terms, what does this save? A freelance developer earning $1,000 a month, roughly Rs 280,000 at current rates, pays just Rs 700 in IT export tax under the 0.25% FTR. Under the standard 35% income tax bracket, that same person would owe roughly Rs 98,000. The gap is enormous, and locking in the lower rate for three years lets people make real financial plans.

The three-year extension eliminates the annual renewal uncertainty that constrained long-term planning by IT exporters, converting a preferred tax measure from a year-to-year contingency into a medium-term policy commitment.

2. Advance Tax on Foreign Payments Cut from 5% to 0.5%

The advance tax on foreign remittances made through debit, credit, and prepaid cards has been reduced sharply from 5% to 0.5%. This is the tax that was charged every time a Pakistani used a card to pay a foreign platform, think cloud tools, software subscriptions, or receiving a client payment via an international gateway.

The advance tax cut carries the most immediate operational impact: it directly reduces the cash-flow burden on Pakistan’s roughly 1 million freelancers and smaller software houses that receive international client transfers regularly.

To put a number on it: a software house spending $500 a month on AWS, GitHub, and other foreign tools was paying Rs 7,000 a month in advance tax alone under the old 5% rate. Under the new 0.5% rate, that drops to Rs 700. Over a year, that is a saving of nearly Rs 75,000, real money for a small team.

This directly lowers operational costs for almost every tech startup.

Who Qualifies and How to Claim the IT Export Tax Rate

Not everyone automatically gets the 0.25% rate. There are clear conditions to meet.

The takeaway is simple: register with PSEB and route your payments through a local bank account. That single step is the difference between 0.25% and 1%, or, without registration, standard tax slabs that could reach 35%.

Can These Changes Push IT Exports Past $5 Billion?

Pakistan’s IT exports are projected to grow 18% to $4.5 billion in the outgoing fiscal year. The government has set a $15 billion IT export target for 2030.

P@SHA Chairman Sajjad Syed told Arab News that the extension of FTR, reduction of payroll tax, reduction of super tax, and reduction of tax on foreign payments are all welcoming steps, and that the industry believes it will continue the 20% growth it has consistently proven over the last five years.

However, industry voices are split. The payroll tax issue remains a sticking point, as no one will want to pay 30%+ tax versus 0.25% tax, meaning most IT workers will prefer to work as freelancers rather than employees of a corporate company. This makes it hard for Pakistan to build large-scale software companies that can compete globally.

Unless the government addresses the massive payroll tax gap and invests heavily in AI, Pakistan risks remaining a nation of individual freelancers rather than a powerhouse of global corporate tech giants.

While the budget has been widely welcomed by industry stakeholders, internet disruptions, regulatory uncertainty, payment processing constraints, and difficulties in accessing international digital platforms remain concerns for many businesses.

There is also a credibility question. The FTR regime extension for three more years is viewed with some scepticism, since the government has a track record of announcing multi-year tax benefits and then changing policy in the very next budget.

Still, for the near term, the math works in favour of growth. The Pakistan Freelancers Association chairman expressed confidence that freelancers’ earnings could potentially double export receipts from $1 billion to $2 billion by 2029, with the number of freelancers also increasing to 4 million. If that holds alongside growth in formal software houses, the $5 billion milestone looks reachable well before 2029. For a broader view of how digital infrastructure supports this growth, see how Pakistan’s data centre capacity is set to more than double by 2030, which will matter a great deal for locally hosted IT services.

Beyond the IT sector, the $15 billion 2030 target implies approximately 25% compound annual growth from the current $3.8 billion base, achievable on the current trajectory if tax stability holds and digital payment infrastructure keeps pace with export volume growth.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the 0.25% FTR for Pakistan IT exports?

The Final Tax Regime (FTR) is a concessionary income tax rate for registered IT exporters. Instead of paying standard income tax rates of up to 35%, the tax deducted by your commercial bank upon receiving international business remittances serves as your full and final tax discharge for that specific revenue stream. You face no additional tax liability on those export proceeds during your annual return processing.

Does the advance tax cut apply to all foreign card payments?

The reduction in advance tax on foreign transactions made through debit and credit cards, lowered from 5% to 0.5%, is expected to reduce costs for individuals making international payments, including online subscriptions, e-commerce purchases, and travel bookings. It is not limited to IT companies and covers everyday users too.

What happens if I am not registered with PSEB?

Without PSEB registration, you do not qualify for the 0.25% FTR. The three-year extension of the 0.25% FTR removes the single biggest uncertainty that was suppressing formalisation in the freelance sector. With clarity on tax rates through June 2029, freelancers can now invest in PSEB registration, open proper banking arrangements, and grow their operations without worrying that the tax framework will shift under them next year.

Are these IT export tax benefits guaranteed for the full three years?

Officially yes, the extension runs to June 30, 2029 under the Finance Bill 2026-27. But by extending the existing tax framework until 2029, the government is effectively providing a medium-term planning horizon for technology companies. Industry participants are likely to view this as a positive signal, particularly at a time when global competition for technology investment is intensifying. Whether future budgets honour the commitment will be the real test.

Exit mobile version