PayPal does not officially support Pakistan โ Pakistani users cannot open a standard PayPal account to send or receive money. But hundreds of thousands of Pakistani freelancers, e-commerce sellers, and remote workers receive PayPal payments every year, and getting that money into a Pakistani bank account is a real and well-understood process. The withdrawal pipeline typically runs PayPal โ Payoneer or a similar multi-currency account โ Pakistani bank account, with the FBR’s 0.5% withholding tax on cross-border card transactions (down from 5% in Budget 2026-27) applying at the banking layer when the funds are credited.
The current state of PayPal in Pakistan
PayPal has not changed its formal position on Pakistan since it stopped serving the country in 2010: Pakistani residents cannot open a standard receiving account, and the local-currency withdrawal options that exist in many other countries are not available. What has changed is the workaround ecosystem. Freelance platforms, payment aggregators, and multi-currency accounts have filled the gap, and the de facto pipeline is now well-tested, even if it adds an extra step and some fees compared to a direct PayPal-to-bank withdrawal.
For most Pakistani users, the practical question is not whether PayPal works (it does, with workarounds) but how to minimise the fees and conversion margin at each stage. The answer depends on the volume of receipts, the bank used, and whether the user has a Payoneer or alternative aggregator account.
Method 1: PayPal โ Payoneer โ Pakistani Bank (the most common)
The standard pipeline for most Pakistani freelancers runs through three steps:
- Receive USD in PayPal from a client or platform (Fiverr, Upwork, direct contracts, e-commerce platforms). The funds sit in the PayPal account in USD.
- Transfer USD from PayPal to a linked Payoneer account. Payoneer supports a PayPal receiving integration that makes this a single click in the PayPal dashboard. The transfer typically takes 1-2 business days.
- Withdraw USD from Payoneer to a Pakistani bank account. Payoneer supports direct withdrawals to Pakistani banks in PKR, with the conversion handled by Payoneer at its own USD/PKR rate. The withdrawal typically takes 2-4 business days.
Total fees along this path:
| Stage | Fee |
|---|---|
| PayPal to Payoneer transfer | 0% (free, but PayPal’s own currency conversion applies if you convert at PayPal) |
| Payoneer receiving fee (under $2,000/year total) | 1% on incoming payments, capped at certain thresholds for new accounts |
| Payoneer to Pakistani bank withdrawal (PKR) | 1.5-2% of the amount (Payoneer’s margin + FX spread) |
| FBR WHT on cross-border card transaction (TY2026) | 5% on the credited amount |
| FBR WHT on cross-border card transaction (TY2027 from July 1, 2026) | 0.5% on the credited amount |
| Possible receiving bank fee | Varies (PKR 0-500 for most banks, some free) |
Effective cost on a $1,000 transfer (under TY2026 rates): $1,000 ร 1% (Payoneer) ร 1.5-2% (Payoneer margin) = $25-30 + $50 (5% WHT, unless claimed as tax credit) = total effective cost of $75-80 plus the FX margin. Net rupee received: roughly Rs 270,000-275,000 out of a theoretical Rs 280,000 at the open-market rate.
Method 2: PayPal โ Direct bank withdrawal (where available)
For users with PayPal accounts registered in countries where PayPal does support direct bank withdrawals, the option is to maintain a foreign-currency account and withdraw directly. The most common setup is to have a PayPal account linked to a US bank account, a UK bank account, or a Wise multi-currency account. From there, the user transfers the funds to a Pakistani bank account via standard SWIFT or via an aggregator like Wise, Revolut, or Payoneer.
This method is more common for users who travel abroad, hold dual nationality, or have a foreign-currency account through a Pakistani bank (several Pakistani banks now offer USD-denominated accounts that can receive SWIFT transfers). The fees depend on the destination bank and the transfer method, but the headline cost is usually lower than the PayPal-to-Payoneer handoff because the conversion is done at the bank or the aggregator’s mid-market rate plus a transparent fee.
Method 3: PayPal โ Crypto โ Pakistani bank or P2P (advanced, higher risk)
Some Pakistani users route PayPal funds through cryptocurrency exchanges, converting USD to USDT or another stablecoin, then selling the crypto for PKR through a P2P platform. This method is faster and sometimes cheaper on the FX side, but it carries meaningful risks: crypto prices can be volatile even for stablecoins, P2P platforms carry fraud risk, and the FBR’s digital integration framework includes crypto exchange reporting. For most users, the standard PayPal-to-Payoneer pipeline is safer and easier to declare on the annual tax return.
The FBR tax treatment in detail
Freelance and e-commerce income received through PayPal is treated as business income for Pakistani tax purposes. The tax treatment has three components:
- Withholding tax at source. The 0.5% (TY2027) or 5% (TY2026) WHT on cross-border card transactions is deducted by the receiving bank when the funds are credited. The WHT is a credit against the final tax liability, not the final tax itself. For users whose final tax liability is higher than the WHT, additional tax is payable at filing time. For users whose final tax liability is lower than the WHT, the difference is refundable.
- Annual income tax return. Freelancers must file ITR-3 declaring the gross receipts from PayPal (and any other foreign sources), the allowable business expenses, and the net business income. The tax is computed using the standard slabs, applied to the net business income plus any other income.
- Foreign assets declaration. For users with significant retained balances in PayPal, Payoneer, or foreign bank accounts, the assets must be declared in the wealth statement that accompanies the annual return. The abolition of CVT on foreign assets introduced in Budget 2026-27 has simplified this part of the filing process, but the declaration is still required.
The full TY2026 filing process for freelancers is covered in our freelancer tax filing guide, and the freelance tax computation is in our freelance tax calculator.
How to choose the right method
The right method depends on the user’s situation:
| Situation | Recommended method | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Occasional freelancer ($500-2,000/month) | PayPal โ Payoneer โ bank | Simplest, well-supported, predictable fees |
| Active freelancer ($2,000-10,000/month) | PayPal โ Payoneer โ bank + USD account | Lower fees on higher volume, FX flexibility |
| E-commerce seller (high volume, multiple platforms) | PayPal โ Wise or bank USD account | Lower FX margin, faster settlement |
| Business with foreign entity registration | Direct SWIFT to USD bank account | Lowest fees, requires entity setup |
For most users, the PayPal-to-Payoneer route is the right answer because it is the most accessible, has predictable fees, and integrates cleanly with the FBR’s reporting framework. The slightly higher cost (compared to direct SWIFT) is offset by the simplicity and the absence of regulatory complexity around foreign-currency account management.
Practical tips to minimise fees
- Withdraw larger amounts less frequently. Payoneer’s receiving fee is capped on larger accounts, and the per-transaction cost is lower on larger transfers. Withdrawing $500 twice a month costs more than withdrawing $1,000 once.
- Time the conversion. The USD/PKR rate moves throughout the year. If you are not in urgent need of PKR, holding USD in Payoneer for a few weeks while waiting for a favourable rate can produce meaningful savings.
- Compare aggregator rates before each transfer. Payoneer, Wise, and direct bank SWIFT all have different FX margins. For transfers above $1,000, the difference can be several thousand rupees.
- Keep accurate records of every withdrawal for the annual tax return. The FBR’s e-invoicing and faceless audit framework introduced in Budget 2026-27 means cross-referencing is increasingly automated, and discrepancies can trigger notices.
- Claim the WHT as a credit at filing time. Many users overlook the 5% / 0.5% WHT credit on their return, which results in overpaying tax. The WHT is a credit, not a final tax.
What to watch for in 2026
Three developments in 2026 are worth tracking:
1. The 0.5% WHT rate from July 1, 2026. The FBR’s reduction of the cross-border card WHT from 5% to 0.5%, effective from July 1, 2026, is the most important change for freelancers. The lower rate applies to all cross-border card transactions, including PayPal payouts routed through any aggregator. For high-volume freelancers, the savings are substantial.
2. FBR digital integration. The faceless audit, e-invoicing, and bank data integration framework introduced in Budget 2026-27 means the FBR will increasingly cross-reference declared income against actual banking flows. Freelancers who have not been declaring their PayPal income are exposed to the new framework’s automated detection.
3. Any future PayPal entry into Pakistan. PayPal has periodically indicated interest in re-entering the Pakistani market, but no firm timeline has been announced. If and when PayPal does re-enter, the workaround ecosystem (Payoneer, Wise, USD accounts) will remain relevant for the transition period.
Related tax coverage on All Pakistan Taxes
For freelancers and remote workers, the wider tax framework matters as much as the withdrawal pipeline. Our salary tax slabs guide walks through the marginal tax rates that apply to freelance net income, and our FBR filer status check guide is a useful reference for confirming your status after declaring PayPal income. For users navigating the new e-filing framework, the income tax return calculator produces a complete tax computation that can be entered directly into the IRIS portal.
Frequently asked questions
Sources: PayPal Help Center, Payoneer Pakistan documentation, FBR Press Releases, Finance Bill 2026, Business Recorder, ProPakistani, Dawn. Fee rates and WHT rates are subject to update; users should verify current rates before initiating any transfer.
