If the income tax slab restructuring was the headline of Budget 2026-27, the indirect tax package was the substance. Sales tax reforms, Federal Excise Duty changes, customs duty rationalisation, and a sweeping digital-invoicing push together represent the most comprehensive indirect tax overhaul in years. Some of the changes will lower consumer prices. Others will raise them sharply. And several of them shift the cost of doing business in Pakistan in ways that will be felt long after the budget speech is forgotten.
Sales tax: the standard rate stays, the exemptions move
The standard General Sales Tax rate remains at 18%, with the IMF having previously asked for an increase to 19% that the government did not accept. The more interesting changes are at the schedule level โ the Sixth Schedule, the Third Schedule, and the list of zero-rated and exempt items have all been reworked.
Notable changes in the sales tax framework include:
- Magazines exempted from sales tax for the first time, a long-standing demand from the publishing sector
- Tampon tax abolished โ a small but symbolically significant removal
- Family planning devices withdrawn from the exemption list, a reversal that has drawn criticism from public health advocates
- CKD kits for electric vehicles โ exemption extended until 30 June 2027
- Steel sector โ tax is now linked to electricity consumption, a structural shift away from production-based assessment
- Minimum tax for distributors and wholesalers increased from 0.25% to 0.5%
The combined effect is a rebalancing rather than a uniform cut or hike. The full sectoral schedule runs to several hundred pages and will require FBR’s explanatory memorandum to interpret in detail. The FBR’s complete sales tax rules for 2026 cover the procedural side of how these changes apply in practice.
Federal Excise Duty: a mix of reliefs and new charges
FED changes in the budget cut both ways. Some items see relief; others face significant new charges. The pattern is consistent: relief on essential or public-health items, new charges on luxury goods and on products seen as creating market distortions.
| Item | Old FED | New FED |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign travel (business class) | Applicable | Abolished |
| Acetate tow (cigarette filter material) | Rs 44,000 per kg | Rs 10,000 per kg |
| WHO-standard sports/electrolyte beverages | Applicable | Exempted |
| E-liquids for e-cigarettes | Rs 10,000 per kg | Rs 16,500 per kg (65% tariff removed) |
| Vehicles above 2000cc engine capacity | Applicable rates | New tariff table โ higher |
| Electric vehicles above Rs 20 million | Lower | New FED imposed |
| Petroleum-based solvents (naphtha, white spirit, turpentine) | 0 | Rs 80 per litre |
| Base oils and lubricants | Lower | New FED |
Customs duty: the National Tariff Policy at work
The customs changes are framed inside the National Tariff Policy (NTP) 2025-30, which sets the strategic direction for tariff rationalisation over the next five years. The headline measures are reductions in Customs Duty, Additional Customs Duty, and Regulatory Duty across a wide range of industrial inputs.
The reductions are concentrated in industrial inputs โ raw materials, intermediate goods, and capital equipment used by domestic manufacturers. The intent is to lower the cost of production for Pakistani industry, which should, in theory, feed through to consumer prices over time. Whether the savings are passed through depends on competitive dynamics in each sector, but the structural direction of the change is unambiguously pro-industry.
Several targeted exemptions have also been introduced or extended: CD on agricultural machinery is exempted, CD on cancer-related Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients is exempted, and the EV CKD exemption has been extended until 30 June 2027. The Pakistan Business Council’s pre-budget proposals for tax reform had pushed many of these measures, and the budget has adopted a meaningful portion of them.
Digital integration: the structural change that will outlast the budget
Perhaps the most consequential change in the budget is not a rate or a schedule but a structural shift: the FBR’s expanded digital integration framework. The budget introduces definitions for advance receipt invoices, algorithmic settlement, e-invoicing, and a national faceless centre. It establishes a Directorate General (Field Compliance) and creates a faceless audit system under a new Section 11H.
The practical effect is that FBR is shifting from a paper-based, in-person audit model to a fully digital, algorithm-driven compliance system. For businesses, this means higher compliance costs in the short term โ every invoice, every transaction, every supply chain movement becomes part of the FBR’s data infrastructure โ but it also means that the documentation cost of being in compliance falls over time. The FBR digital revolution guide walks through the IRIS 2.0 portal and the new requirements in detail.
Withholding tax on social media and digital earnings
One of the more talked-about measures is the new withholding tax regime on income from social media platforms. YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok earnings will now face WHT deducted at source by banks. The move formalises a category of income that was previously often undeclared, and aligns the treatment of digital content creators with other income categories.
For creators, the new WHT applies at the banking level โ meaning the deduction happens when earnings are credited to a Pakistani bank account. The specific rate has not been finalised in the budget speech and will be set out in the Finance Bill and FBR notifications. Creators who were already filing returns and declaring this income will see the WHT function as an advance payment, with any excess claimable as a refund. For creators who were not declaring, the introduction of WHT at source effectively forces documentation.
The wider regulatory backdrop for digital-economy taxation has been building for over a year, with the FBR’s earlier social media earnings tax framework setting the stage. The budget now codifies the practice into primary law.
Cross-border card transactions: the relief for overseas Pakistanis
The WHT on cross-border credit and debit card transactions has been slashed from 5% to 0.5% โ a 90% reduction. For overseas Pakistanis using Pakistani cards internationally, or for residents using cards to make foreign-currency purchases, the change is significant. The original 5% WHT had been widely criticised as a friction on remittance-funded spending and on ordinary cross-border commerce. The cut to 0.5% aligns the rate more closely with regional comparators and removes a major irritant for the diaspora.
Combined with the abolition of CVT on foreign assets and the Section 7E removal, the cross-border and foreign-asset package is the most comprehensive set of reforms aimed at overseas Pakistanis in any recent budget.
What this means in practice
For consumers, the immediate impact of the indirect tax package is mixed. Buyers of sub-2000cc vehicles, household appliances, and most consumer goods will see little direct change. Buyers of luxury vehicles, premium EVs, and high-end electronics will see higher prices. Buyers of imported specialised equipment for industry, agriculture, and healthcare construction will see lower landed costs.
For businesses, the customs duty reductions on industrial inputs are the most welcome change. The increased minimum tax for distributors and wholesalers is the most unwelcome. The expanded digital integration framework is the most consequential โ every business above the small-trader threshold will need to invest in compliance infrastructure, and the FBR’s data reach will be substantially broader from FY27 onward.
For the FBR, the package is designed to support the Rs 15.264 trillion revenue target through a combination of base-broadening (digital integration), rate adjustments (customs reductions offset by FED increases on luxury goods), and structural changes (e-invoicing, faceless audit, algorithmic settlement). Whether the target is met will depend heavily on compliance levels, which in turn depend on how smoothly the digital transition is managed. The IMF’s view, set out in its earlier warning that Pakistan’s tax revenue would stay flat until 2030, is that even with these reforms, structural constraints will persist.
Frequently asked questions
Sources: Federal Budget FY27 documents and Finance Bill 2026 (Ministry of Finance, FBR), Dawn, Business Recorder, AKD Securities Research, ProPakistani, Tribune. Figures are based on budget proposals and are subject to change upon formal passage of the Finance Bill 2026.