Pakistan startup exits are critically rare, and the numbers make this very clear. According to Tracxn data, Pakistan’s startup ecosystem has recorded only 107 acquisitions across its entire history, even as the country now hosts well over 1,100 active startups. With funding still far below the 2021-22 boom and no locally founded company acquired by a global player at scale, exits remain the critical gap in Pakistan’s maturing tech story.
The Numbers Behind Pakistan Startup Exits
The headline is striking. Pakistan startup exits through acquisition totalled just 107 deals ever tracked by Tracxn, from the ecosystem’s earliest days to today. In 2025, only 11 acquisitions happened across the whole country. So far in 2026, just 2 more have been recorded by March.
Compare that to Vietnam, a market of similar size: Vietnam has recorded 204 total startup acquisitions to date, according to ecosystem analysis. Pakistan’s M&A market, by that comparison, is roughly half as active.
The deal slowdown is recent too. Only five M&A deals were recorded in 2024, a 44 percent decline from nine deals in 2023, and far below the 17 seen in 2022. From 2020 to 2024, there were 38 M&A transactions in total, with 25 being cross-border and 13 domestic. That is a very thin pipeline for an ecosystem that attracts serious global attention.
Why Funding Alone Is Not Enough
Pakistan’s startup funding story is well known. Investments plummeted from $355 million in 2022 to just $37 million in 2024, a drop of nearly 90 percent. Funding did recover somewhat in 2025, with startups raising over $74 million through 11 disclosed deals, up 121 percent from the year before. But funding levels remain well below historical peaks.
Here is the deeper problem: funding and exits are two very different things. You can raise money to build a startup. But an exit, whether through acquisition or IPO, is how founders and investors actually get their money back. Without exits, the whole VC cycle stalls. Investors cannot return capital to their own backers, which makes them less willing to write new cheques into new startups.
VC funds have a lifecycle. They need to return capital to their investors. If a startup cannot show how it eventually creates a liquidity event, such as an acquisition, an IPO, or a secondary sale, investors cannot model their return. This is a core reason why early-stage money in Pakistan is still available, but late-stage growth capital is almost impossible to find.
Pakistan Startup Exits: What Investors Actually Fear
Foreign investors, it turns out, never really lost confidence in Pakistani founders. What they lost confidence in was the exit: the ability to eventually sell the company or take it public and get their money back out. In a country with a shallow capital market, a near-dormant IPO pipeline, and slow legal processes, there is simply no reliable path to an exit.
This explains why a large share of Pakistan’s most promising startups are now legally registered in Singapore, the UAE, or Saudi Arabia, while their actual engineering and operations remain in Pakistan. Founders borrow the contract law, investor protections, and exit infrastructure from somewhere else, then bolt their Pakistani business onto it. It is a workaround, not a solution.
Industry leaders have pointed to regulatory bottlenecks, minimal R&D investment at just 0.16 percent of GDP against a global average of 2.62 percent, and a lack of dollar-retention accounts for tech exporters as persistent barriers. Sudden tax changes and unclear digital services rules add to the uncertainty.
No Locally Founded Startup Acquired at Global Scale
One of the most striking facts about Pakistan startup exits is this: no locally founded Pakistani startup has been acquired by a global operator at a meaningful scale. The biggest deals Pakistan is known for, such as Daraz (Rocket Internet) and OLX, were built by foreign companies, not local founders.
The closest to a real exit success story in recent years is SadaPay’s acquisition by Turkey’s Papara, valued at around $2 billion. That is genuinely notable. But one standout deal in the history of an ecosystem does not make an exit culture.
Contrast this with India, where Walmart acquired Flipkart for $16 billion in 2018, a company genuinely founded locally. That single deal produced real founder wealth, a wave of new angel investors, and a second generation of founders who are now backing the next wave of Indian companies. Pakistan has not yet had that moment.
Even Pakistan’s venture capital ecosystem, which now has a combined enterprise value of over $4 billion across VC-backed startups, up 3.6 times since 2020, has produced no unicorn and no company earning more than $100 million in annual revenue. Limited domestic capital is widely seen as the main reason.
What a Real Exit Culture Could Do for Pakistan
Industry voices are clear about what is needed. Ali Samir Oosman of Endeavor Pakistan has argued that rather than chasing Pakistan’s first unicorn, the ecosystem needs quality companies where founders make a successful exit in the $15 to $100 million range through acquisition. “If we can create the right conditions to scale companies in Pakistan and start seeing mergers and acquisitions in the startup space, it will result in a massive multiplier effect.”
That multiplier effect works like this: a founder who sells a company for $30 million becomes an angel investor. Those angel investments fund ten new startups. Two of those get acquired. The cycle compounds. Countries like India and Indonesia closed this gap, but it took over a decade of consistent policy work, domestic capital, and a local corporate sector willing to buy digital businesses.
Pakistan’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SECP) has moved in this direction with its Empowering Innovation Roadmap, which includes digital capital-raising platforms under a regulatory sandbox. These are steps forward. But regulatory sandboxes do not automatically create acquirers. Pakistan’s large traditional companies, banks, and conglomerates need to start buying startups more actively. Domestic M&A in 2024 was 80 percent of all M&A activity, which sounds good until you realise the total was only five deals.
The good news is that 2025 marked a period of correction and maturity, with capital becoming more selective and filtering out hype-driven ventures. Startups focused on real-world problems, strong governance, and unit economics are now better positioned. But Pakistan startup exits will only multiply when there are more willing buyers, clearer legal pathways, and a track record of deals that gives the next acquirer confidence to move.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many startup acquisitions has Pakistan recorded in total?
According to Tracxn data, Pakistan has recorded approximately 107 to 113 acquisitions across its startup ecosystem’s entire history, depending on the date of the data snapshot. In 2025, only 11 acquisitions happened in the country.
Why are Pakistan startup exits so rare?
The key barriers include a shallow domestic capital market, a near-dormant IPO pipeline, regulatory complexity, rupee instability, and a lack of willing domestic corporate acquirers. Many promising startups are legally registered abroad to access better exit infrastructure in Singapore, the UAE, or the US.
What was Pakistan’s biggest startup exit?
One of the most notable recent exits was SadaPay’s acquisition by Turkey’s Papara, with Papara valued at around $2 billion. The 2022 acquisition of Cloudways, a Pakistani-founded cloud hosting company, by DigitalOcean for a reported $350 million is also widely cited as a landmark deal for the ecosystem.
What needs to change for more startup exits in Pakistan?
Experts point to several needs: more growth-stage capital to fund companies past Series A, a local corporate sector willing to acquire digital businesses, clearer legal frameworks for M&A transactions, stable currency conditions, and regulatory reforms that make it easier to bring investor capital in and take returns out of the country.













