Pakistan is preparing to change its digital future by improving internet speed across the country by June 2026. The federal IT minister shared this plan while briefing media about the upcoming 5G spectrum auction. The goal is simple and clear, to fix slow internet, support businesses, and give users better online access for work, education, and daily communication nationwide. This effort marks a policy shift.
International Support for 5G Auction
In her briefing, Shaza Fatima explained that the 5G auction is being handled with help from NERA, an international consulting firm. The auction pricing is being set carefully so telecom companies can invest more in networks instead of paying heavy fees. This approach is meant to encourage long term growth, stability, and healthy competition in Pakistan’s telecom market for both consumers businesses, and digital services.
Groundwork and Rollout Planning
According to the minister, the government has completed key preparations including spectrum planning, auction design, and coordination with regulators and operators. The first phase of 5G rollout will focus on big cities where demand is high and systems are ready. Officials say the auction will be successful if over half of the 600 MHz spectrum is sold during the planned nationwide auction process next year.
Telecom Sector Pushes Forward
Mobile companies have often raised concerns about pricing rules, payment terms, and rollout duties in the past. These issues slowed investment and delayed new technology. This time, there is a strong push from telecom operators themselves to bring 5G to Pakistan. Industry leaders now see advanced networks as necessary for survival and future profits in a fast changing regional digital economy today and beyond borders.
Role of PTA and ECC Approvals
The 5G launch depends heavily on approval from the ECC and other forums, with PTA overseeing the process. Authorities say transparency and market balance are top priorities. Experts believe auction structure and reserve prices will decide how fast networks roll out after licenses are issued. Smart decisions here could speed deployment, while mistakes could delay progress for years and hurt digital growth goals nationwide long.
Speed, Capacity, and Infrastructure Vision
The rollout promises faster speeds, lower delay, and better capacity, especially in crowded cities. Even starting with 300 MHz would sharply improve performance. The government views 5G as basic infrastructure, not a luxury. The IT ministry expects rollout to take four to six months, since much of the required equipment must be imported from abroad to meet technical standards and ensure stable service delivery nationwide.
Legal Challenges and Industry Struggles
Fatima also highlighted problems faced during preparations, including court cases and legal hurdles. Another major delay came from the pending Telenor and PTCL merger. These issues slowed planning and decision making. She admitted that Pakistan’s internet infrastructure remains weak, with rising costs and falling user revenue making investment harder for mobile operators across the country despite growing demand for reliable data services daily nationwide now.
Satellite Internet and Starlink Policy
Answering a question about satellite internet like Starlink, the minister said policy work is underway. Once rules are clear, such companies may be allowed to operate. Satellite services could help remote areas lacking fiber and towers. Officials believe proper regulation is needed to protect security, pricing fairness, and existing operators while welcoming new technology options that support inclusion, innovation, and nationwide digital access goals responsibly.
Why 5G Matters Now
A nationwide 5G push is now urgent as it supports Pakistan’s digital goals. Faster internet can attract foreign investment and modernize services like health and education. Experts warn that more delays could widen the digital gap and hurt competitiveness. Moving forward with 5G may help Pakistan keep pace with technology driven economies in the region while building foundations for future innovation, jobs, growth, and exports.












