FBR Slashes Sugar Import Tax to 0.25% via SRO 527 โ What It Means for Your Eid Shopping Bill
The Federal Board of Revenue issued SRO 527(I)/2026 on March 20, 2026 โ just one day before Eid ul Fitr โ retaining a 0.25% sales tax on imported sugar instead of the standard 18% rate. This follows an earlier notification, SRO 455(I)/2026 issued on March 5, which had already extended reduced income tax on sugar imports at the same 0.25% rate. Together these two SROs represent the government’s latest attempt to put a floor under sugar prices during one of the highest-demand weeks of the year.
The question most consumers are asking: will this actually bring sugar prices down at the kiryana store level โ and if not, why not? This article explains exactly what these notifications do, what they do not do, and what to realistically expect on your grocery bill.
โก Key Facts โ SRO 527(I)/2026
- Issued: March 20, 2026 โ one day before Eid ul Fitr
- Sales tax on imported sugar: 0.25% (vs standard 18%)
- Previous SRO: 455(I)/2026 (March 5, 2026) โ reduced income tax to 0.25% on sugar imports
- Concessional scheme first introduced: July 2025 โ extended four times since
- Total permitted commercial sugar import: up to 500,000 tonnes
- Current sugar imports this fiscal year: 308,887 tonnes (July 2025โFebruary 2026) โ up from just 2,528 tonnes last year
- Standard sales tax rate being waived: 18% โ saving roughly Rs. 20,000โ25,000 per tonne on tax alone
Why Sugar Imports Have Exploded by 12,118%
The scale of this year’s sugar import surge is extraordinary. Pakistan imported just 2,528 tonnes of sugar in the same eight-month period last year. This fiscal year it has already crossed 308,887 tonnes โ a 12,118% increase. To understand why FBR is bending over backwards on import taxes, you need to understand what caused the domestic production shortfall.
Three factors converged. First, the sugarcane crop in Punjab and Sindh underperformed due to irregular rainfall patterns and input cost pressures that pushed farmers to alternative crops. Second, government-mandated price controls on domestic sugar made it uneconomical for mills to operate at full capacity โ the controlled price was below the cost of production at several mills. Third, sugar is a politically sensitive commodity in Pakistan โ price spikes generate immediate public anger, giving the government strong incentive to intervene aggressively on the supply side. The result: a rapid policy pivot to large-scale imports, supported by tax concessions to make those imports commercially viable for traders.
๐ What SRO 527(I)/2026 and SRO 455(I)/2026 Actually Do
- SRO 455(I)/2026 (March 5): Reduces income tax on sugar imports from the standard rate to 0.25% (final tax). Importers pay this at the import stage as a final settlement โ no additional income tax liability on the import profit.
- SRO 527(I)/2026 (March 20): Reduces sales tax on imported sugar from the standard 18% to 0.25%. This dramatically cuts the landed cost of imported sugar for commercial importers.
- Combined effect: an importer bringing in 1,000 tonnes of sugar pays taxes of approximately 0.5% of total value instead of 18.25% under standard rates โ a saving of roughly Rs. 18โ20 million per 1,000 tonnes.
- The concession applies to commercial importers only under the permitted 500,000-tonne quota โ not to all sugar transactions.
Will Your Sugar Price Actually Drop? A Realistic Assessment
| Factor | Impact on Retail Price | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Import tax reduced from 18% to 0.25% | Reduces landed cost for importers significantly | Positive for supply |
| Import quota: 500,000 tonnes total | Finite โ once quota consumed, imports stop | Supply ceiling exists |
| Gulf War shipping disruptions | Freight costs elevated โ partially offsets tax saving | Partially erodes benefit |
| Eid demand spike (this week) | Demand surge absorbs available supply before price falls | Bad timing for consumers |
| Rupee depreciation risk | Global commodity denominated in USD โ weaker PKR = higher import cost | Ongoing pressure |
| Distributor and retailer margins | Tax savings do not automatically pass to end consumer | Retail may not reflect |
The realistic picture: the tax concessions make it commercially viable to import sugar at scale, which will improve supply over the coming weeks and months. But retail prices will not drop meaningfully before Eid. The supply chain takes 3โ6 weeks to translate import arrivals into lower retail prices โ and Eid demand this week will absorb available stock regardless. Expect some price moderation by late April if imports continue at current pace.
Current retail sugar prices in Pakistan’s major cities range between Rs. 120 and Rs. 145 per kg as of March 22, 2026, depending on the city and point of sale. The government’s notional target is below Rs. 110/kg โ achievable by mid-Q4 FY26 if the import pipeline holds.
The Broader Tax Story: Non-Filer Impact on Sugar Purchases
The SRO concessions apply at the importer level, not at the retail level. For individual consumers, what actually matters more for their sugar cost is filer status โ specifically the withholding tax treatment on cash withdrawals used for bulk purchases and the broader inflationary environment driven by FBR’s non-filer penalty framework.
For businesses in the food sector โ bakeries, sweet shops, catering operations, restaurants โ the import tax concession is more directly relevant. If you source sugar in bulk from a commercial importer operating under the quota, the reduced tax cost should partially reduce your input cost compared to pre-concession rates, assuming your supplier passes it on.
What This Means for Budget 2026-27
Repeated extensions of the sugar import concession raise a structural question: Pakistan is effectively importing food it should be producing domestically, and waiving tax revenue to do so. The IMF’s ongoing review of Pakistan’s fiscal programme โ which has not yet reached a staff-level agreement as of March 22, 2026 โ is closely watching these ad-hoc concession SROs. Each extension costs the government foregone tax revenue. At 500,000 tonnes total import and a standard 18% sales tax on a commodity worth roughly Rs. 150/kg, the revenue foregone from this single concession scheme is in the range of Rs. 10โ13 billion. In a year where FBR is already Rs. 429 billion short of target, this is not a trivial number.
