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FBR Slashes Property Withholding Tax in Budget 2026-27: What Buyers, Sellers, and Investors Should Know

Property WHT halved for filers, Section 7E abolished, CVT on foreign assets removed. Here is exactly how the real-estate tax overhaul in Budget 2026-27 changes the math for buyers, sellers, investors, and overseas Pakistanis.

The biggest tax story in Budget 2026-27 for ordinary Pakistanis is not the income tax slab restructuring that dominated the headlines. It is what happened to the property sector. Withholding tax on property transfers was halved. Capital Value Tax on foreign assets was abolished. And the controversial Section 7E โ€” which had been used to tax deemed rental income on owned property โ€” was removed entirely from the Income Tax Ordinance.

For anyone buying, selling, or holding property in Pakistan, the combined effect of these changes is the most significant shift in real-estate taxation in over a decade.

What actually changed in the property tax regime

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb announced a coordinated package of reforms to the real estate tax framework. The headline measures are these:

1.25%New WHT for property purchasers (from 2.5%)
2.75%New WHT for property sellers (from 5.5%)
RemovedSection 7E โ€” deemed rental income on owned property
AbolishedCapital Value Tax on foreign assets of residents

Each of these four changes is a structural shift, not a marginal adjustment. For a market where transactions have been frozen for years by the combined weight of WHT, CVT, and FBR valuation rules, the package represents the government’s clearest signal yet that it wants transaction volume back. A detailed walk-through of how these changes apply to non-filers is available in our non-filer property tax guide.

Property transfer WHT: the numbers that matter

The new flat WHT rates are:

Transaction partyOld WHTNew WHT (TY2027)Reduction
Purchaser (filer)2.5%1.25%-50%
Seller (filer)5.5%2.75%-50%
Purchaser (non-filer)5.5%Higher non-filer rates applyNon-filers pay more
Seller (non-filer)10%Higher non-filer rates applyNon-filers pay more

The WHT for filers has been cut in half. For non-filers, the rates remain punitive โ€” which is the point. The structural design of the change is to use lower WHT as a reward for filer status, with the gap between filer and non-filer rates remaining wide enough to push more transactions into the documented economy. A useful reference for filer-vs-non-filer implications is our filer vs non-filer cost breakdown with real numbers.

Worked example: A filer buying a Rs 50 million property under the old rules would have paid Rs 1,250,000 in purchaser WHT. Under the new rules, the same transaction attracts Rs 625,000. The seller, previously liable for Rs 2,750,000, now pays Rs 1,375,000. The combined saving is Rs 2,000,000 โ€” a meaningful change for any transaction that crosses the Rs 20 million mark.

Section 7E abolished: what it means for property owners

Section 7E of the Income Tax Ordinance, introduced in 2022, imposed tax on the deemed rental income of a property owner based on the gross value of the property, regardless of whether it was actually rented out. For owners of multiple properties, particularly overseas Pakistanis, the deemed-income charge was controversial from the start. The Supreme Court of Pakistan’s landmark 2025 ruling on related tax provisions signalled that the legal basis for deemed-income taxation was increasingly contested, and the budget has now codified that signal into statute.

From Tax Year 2027, Section 7E is removed. Property owners will continue to pay tax on actual rental income, capital gains on sale, and WHT at the time of transaction, but the deemed-rental charge based on gross asset value is gone. For overseas Pakistanis holding multiple properties, the practical effect is a significant simplification of the tax computation, and for some, a meaningful reduction in the total tax bill.

CVT on foreign assets: a quieter but significant change

Capital Value Tax on foreign assets held by Pakistani residents has been abolished. This change applies to the CVT that had been charged on assets such as property, securities, and other holdings outside Pakistan. The IMF had previously objected to the abolition, arguing that it undermined Pakistan’s tax base, but the government has proceeded on the basis that the measure is needed to encourage documented foreign-asset declarations under the asset-declaration framework.

Who benefits most: Overseas Pakistanis who hold foreign-currency property, equities, or other assets and who were previously deterred from regularising those holdings by the prospect of a CVT charge. The abolition removes a meaningful friction on repatriation and on formal declaration of foreign assets, which in turn supports the broader goal of broadening the tax net.

FBR valuation rates: the question the budget did not fully answer

WHT is only one part of the property tax story. The other is the FBR’s District Council Rate (DC Rate) valuation system, which sets the deemed value of property for tax purposes. The FBR has revised property tax valuations in six cities over the past year, and there had been speculation that the budget would adjust the system further. The headline WHT changes do not alter the DC rate mechanism, but they do change the relative cost of declaring a transaction at FBR’s deemed value versus the actual sale price. With WHT halved, the gap between declared and actual price has narrowed, which in theory should encourage more transactions to be recorded at closer to market value.

The wider context for this change sits inside Pakistan’s chronic property documentation problem, which the FBR has been trying to address through a series of sector-specific tax-policy interventions in 2025-26. The property sector, alongside retail and agriculture, has been one of the three areas where the documentation gap was widest.

What this means for different players

For first-time buyers: The WHT cut is unambiguous relief. If you are buying in your own name, are on the active filer list, and your transaction is properly documented, the 1.25% rate is a real reduction in transaction cost.

For property investors: The Section 7E removal and CVT abolition together represent a meaningful de-risking of holding property. The total tax cost of acquiring, holding, and disposing of a property is now lower than at any point in the past five years. How much of that translates into actual investment activity depends on interest rates, political stability, and buyer confidence โ€” all of which sit outside the tax framework.

For non-filers: The relative cost of remaining outside the tax net has increased. The WHT gap between filer and non-filer status is now wider in absolute terms (a 1.25% vs higher-rate gap rather than a 2.5% vs higher-rate gap is smaller, but the headline message from the budget is unambiguous). The late filer status guide walks through what becoming a filer actually costs and what it unlocks.

For overseas Pakistanis: The combination of CVT abolition and Section 7E removal removes the two most significant tax frictions on holding foreign-currency or domestic property from abroad. The remaining tax obligations โ€” actual rental income tax, capital gains tax on sale, and WHT at the time of transaction โ€” are the standard set that applies to residents as well.

The wider FBR push for documentation

These property reforms sit inside a larger FBR push that the budget has accelerated. The FBR has been expanding its POS network, now linking nearly 36,000 retail and restaurant outlets, alongside the rollout of the digital integration framework. The property tax changes follow the same logic: lower the cost of compliance, raise the cost of non-compliance, and use the difference to drive transactions into the documented economy.

Whether the package delivers the volume the government is hoping for will become clear over the next two to three quarters. The price data, transaction volume, and FBR collection from the property sector will be the proof points. For now, the structural direction is clear: the tax cost of buying, selling, and holding property is falling for filers, and the gap between the documented and undocumented markets is narrowing.

Frequently asked questions

When do the new property WHT rates take effect?The new rates are proposed to take effect from July 1, 2026, the start of Tax Year 2027, once the Finance Bill 2026 is passed by Parliament and formally notified by FBR.
Is Section 7E fully abolished?Yes. The federal cabinet approved the removal of Section 7E as part of Budget 2026-27. Property owners will no longer be taxed on deemed rental income based on gross asset value.
What is the new WHT rate for non-filers?Non-filer rates remain significantly higher than filer rates. The exact non-filer WHT schedule for property transactions will be confirmed in the FBR’s notification once the Finance Bill is passed.
Does the CVT abolition apply to all foreign assets?The budget proposes abolition of Capital Value Tax on foreign assets of residents. The specific scope will be confirmed in the Finance Bill and FBR circulars.
Do the FBR DC rate valuations change in this budget?The headline WHT changes do not directly alter the DC rate mechanism. However, the relative cost gap between declared and actual sale prices has narrowed, which may shift behaviour in the secondary market.
How does the WHT change affect capital gains tax on property?Capital gains tax on the sale of property remains separate from WHT and continues to apply based on the holding period and gain calculation. The WHT change reduces the upfront transaction friction but does not alter the underlying capital gains tax computation.

Sources: Federal Budget FY27 documents and Finance Bill 2026 (Ministry of Finance, FBR), Dawn, Business Recorder, AKD Securities Research, ProPakistani. Figures are based on budget proposals and are subject to change upon formal passage of the Finance Bill 2026.

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