Pakistan’s smartphone taxes and 5G adoption are now officially in conflict, according to the country’s own telecom regulator. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) submitted formal recommendations to the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication (MoIT&T) on July 17, 2026, urging the government to rationalise taxes on mobile devices before heavy duties kill off demand for 5G-compatible phones entirely.
What PTA Actually Said to the IT Ministry
PTA warned that high smartphone taxes could slow 5G uptake in Pakistan and submitted its recommendations to the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication, while noting that actual tax policy falls under the jurisdiction of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).
According to the PTA document, heavy taxation significantly increases smartphone prices, making devices less affordable for low- and middle-income households, students, rural communities, and first-time users.
The authority also warned that expensive smartphones restrict access to e-commerce, digital banking, freelancing, and online businesses, and that excessive taxation could weaken demand for locally assembled devices and discourage investment in Pakistan’s handset manufacturing industry.
How Bad Are the Taxes Right Now?
The numbers are striking. Pakistan’s mobile users face one of the heaviest telecom tax burdens globally, with total effective taxes reaching 37 percent. Mobile services are hit by multiple layers, including 19.5 percent sales tax, 15 percent advance income tax, and a 2.5 percent regulatory duty. Handset import taxes range between 18 percent and 25 percent, while broader import duties can go as high as 46 percent.
Devices priced above $500 face a higher 25 percent sales tax, and a $700 smartphone ends up costing consumers around Rs294,500 after all taxes and duties, with the tax portion alone amounting to roughly Rs98,500.
Committee members in parliament have argued that mobile phones have become a basic necessity rather than a luxury item, and that imposing taxes of around 40 percent on mobile phones is unjustified and places an unnecessary burden on consumers.
Why 5G Cannot Take Off Without Cheaper Phones
Here is the core problem: Pakistan is rolling out 5G, but most people cannot afford the phones needed to use it. Fewer than five percent of all phones in Pakistan are currently 5G-enabled, and PTA has advised the IT Ministry to take steps to increase the availability of compatible devices ahead of the formal launch.
PTA Director General retired Brigadier Amer Shahzad has warned that manufacturers must prepare in advance so consumers have suitable devices when 5G becomes available, adding: “If the cost of 5G-compatible sets is very high, users will not opt for them.”
According to the Pakistan Mobile Phone Manufacturers Association (PMPMA), around 40 percent of mobile users still rely on feature phones, while nearly 10 percent of the population does not own any phone at all. Monthly production stands at 1.2 million smartphones and 1.5 million feature phones, adding up to about 30 million locally manufactured devices annually.
The Wider Digital Divide Problem
The smartphone tax issue is part of a bigger gap. Pakistan’s digital divide is driven more by affordability constraints than infrastructure limitations. While around 81 percent of the population lives in areas covered by 3G and 4G networks, only 29 percent actively use the internet, leaving a usage gap of 52 percent. Researchers attribute this gap primarily to high taxes on mobile devices and telecom services.
High taxation is also contributing to a growing grey market for smartphones, including cloned and illegally modified devices. The PTA blocked nearly 100 million unauthorised devices during FY2024-25 alone.
For Pakistani freelancers and small business owners, the stakes are especially high. Pakistan currently has more than 1.5 million freelancers and a rapidly expanding app-based economy that depends on affordable internet and smartphones. Women with access to mobile phones are significantly more likely to join the labour force, making digital access increasingly tied to economic inclusion.
What PTA Wants FBR to Do
PTA has recommended reducing taxes and rationalising duties on mobile phones in a way that supports both locally manufactured devices and completely built units (CBUs), while discouraging illegal imports and IMEI tampering.
The regulator has also called for reducing duties of around 19.5 percent on imported components for mobile phone manufacturing, and on backend equipment required by telecom operators. According to PTA, lowering or removing these taxes would boost mobile penetration and internet usage, which in turn would generate higher government revenues through the expansion of digital services.
PTA acknowledged that rationalising smartphone taxes may reduce tax collection per device in the short term, but argued that greater affordability would increase smartphone adoption, strengthen digital connectivity, support local manufacturing, stimulate economic activity, and ultimately expand the overall tax base.
There are also early signs that FBR may be open to a rethink. Chairman FBR has stated that if the Tax Policy Office of the Finance Ministry recommends a reduction in the relevant tax, FBR will have no objection to rationalising the tax percentage. However, no formal reduction has been announced yet, and any change would require approval from the Ministry of Finance and relevant tax bodies.
You can track the latest device registration requirements directly on the FBR’s official mobile devices regularisation page.
For a closer look at how PTA’s regulatory decisions affect Pakistani consumers, see our earlier coverage of the PTA telecom data crackdown in Lahore and the wider enforcement picture it paints.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are smartphone taxes so high in Pakistan?
Imported phones in Pakistan face a combination of regulatory duties, sales tax, advance income tax, and registration fees. These can add hundreds of dollars to the final price of a device. The government has argued the levy is designed to regulate imports and curb grey-market phones, but critics say the policy restricts digital access for ordinary citizens.
How do high taxes affect 5G adoption specifically?
5G-compatible phones cost more than standard 4G handsets because they need newer chipsets. If taxes are not reduced, most Pakistani consumers simply cannot afford to upgrade. Right now, fewer than five percent of all phones in Pakistan are 5G-enabled, which means the country could end up with a 5G network and almost no one able to use it.
What is PTA actually asking for?
PTA is not the tax authority, it is the regulator. It has submitted a formal request to the IT Ministry asking FBR to cut import duties, reduce taxes on manufacturing components, and create a fairer tax structure that makes locally assembled phones more attractive. Tax policy itself sits with FBR, so any real change requires FBR and the Finance Ministry to act.
Could lower taxes actually bring in more revenue for the government?
High prices discourage mobile usage and limit digital expansion, which ultimately shrinks the future tax base. Excessive sector-specific taxation raises costs for consumers and slows access to digital services such as banking, education, healthcare, and payments. PTA’s argument is that a bigger base of smartphone users paying moderate taxes will generate more total revenue than a small base paying very high taxes.
