ISLAMABAD — The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has put mobile phone import duties on handsets priced up to USD 200 under formal review, signalling what could be the first major PTA tax relief wave for budget smartphones in Pakistan since 2022. FBR Chairman Rashid Mahmood Langrial confirmed the move during a National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue meeting, citing that nearly 44% of all imported phones fall in the $31–$100 slab used by lower-income and rural buyers.
The Chairman’s disclosure is being read across the industry as a clear pivot from revenue-maximisation to affordability-and-compliance — an admission that the current 36–41% effective tax band is pushing buyers into the grey market. With 44% of imports in the $31–$100 range and another large chunk in the $101–$200 range, even a modest rate cut could put several thousand rupees back into the pockets of ordinary buyers and re-anchor Pakistan’s legal import channel.
Current PTA Tax Structure on Imported Phones
Before any change is finalised, here is the existing tax structure that applies to imported handsets on CNIC and passport. The duty is calculated as a combination of customs duty, regulatory duty, sales tax, withholding tax, and PTA levy:
| Price Slab (USD) | Effective Tax Rate | Share of Imports | Typical Buyer Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to $30 | ~18% | ~3% | Ultra-budget, feature phones |
| $31 to $100 | 36% | ~44% | Entry-level smartphones — largest slab |
| $101 to $200 | 40% | ~25% | Mid-range daily drivers |
| $201 to $350 | 38% | ~14% | Upper mid-range / older flagships |
| $351 to $500 | 40% | ~8% | Premium / recent flagships |
| Above $500 | 41% | ~6% | Ultra-premium / iPhone Pro Max tier |
What FBR Has Now Proposed
While the FBR Chairman stopped short of announcing a final number, the broad shape of the relief being reviewed is becoming clear:
- Targeted cut for the $31–$100 slab — currently taxed at 36%, this is the largest-volume bracket and where affordability matters most. A 5–10 percentage-point cut here would be the single biggest relief for ordinary buyers.
- Targeted cut for the $101–$200 slab — currently taxed at 40%, this is the second-largest bracket and the one explicitly named in the FBR Chairman’s briefing.
- High-end slabs largely untouched — $351–$500 and $500+ are expected to stay at 40–41% because they contribute the bulk of revenue and are considered “luxury” by the FBR.
- Possible reduced customs duty for mid-range — the Finance Bill 2026–27 reportedly also includes a 20% reduction in regulatory duty on imported mobile phones, with a deeper cut for the $200–$300 mid-range.
Why the FBR Is Moving Now
Three forces are converging behind the proposed wave:
- Smuggling is back. A 40% effective tax rate is well above the regional average, and grey-market imports via Dubai and Afghanistan have surged. The FBR is now openly acknowledging that the duty is so high it is self-defeating.
- Local manufacturing needs protection without choking the market. Pakistan’s mobile assembly industry is growing — but the bulk of consumer demand in the $100–$200 bracket is still met by imports. A modest cut balances revenue, local industry, and consumer affordability.
- Digital Pakistan requires affordable devices. With mobile internet penetration now the primary way most Pakistanis access the internet, the FBR is being pushed by PTA itself to lower duties. The PTA Chairman has publicly stated that high taxes are a barrier to digital inclusion.
How the New Rates Could Look
No final slab has been published, but the expected direction is broadly in line with the table below. The figures assume a 5–10 percentage-point cut for the budget slabs and a 1–2 percentage-point cut for the mid-range, with high-end slabs unchanged:
| Price Slab (USD) | Current Rate | Expected New Rate | Net Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to $30 | ~18% | ~15% | -3 pts |
| $31 to $100 | 36% | ~28–30% | -6 to -8 pts |
| $101 to $200 | 40% | ~32–35% | -5 to -8 pts |
| $201 to $350 | 38% | ~35% | -3 pts |
| $351 to $500 | 40% | ~40% | Unchanged |
| Above $500 | 41% | ~41% | Unchanged |
Disclaimer: The above is a working estimate based on the FBR Chairman’s public statements and the proposed 20% regulatory-duty cut floated in Finance Bill 2026–27. Final slab-wise numbers will be confirmed when the budget is formally passed and the SRO is issued by the FBR.
What the FBR Chairman Said
— Rashid Mahmood Langrial, Chairman FBR, briefing to NA Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue, June 21, 2026
— FBR Member (Customs Policy), interaction with journalists, June 22, 2026
How Much Will You Save on a Sub-$200 Phone?
Here is what a 5–8 percentage-point cut would mean on three typical budget and mid-range handsets:
| Phone Example | Declared Value (PKR) | Current Tax (PKR) | New Tax (PKR) | Saving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung Galaxy A06 ($90) | ~25,200 | ~9,100 | ~7,300 | ~PKR 1,800 |
| Infinix Hot 40i ($130) | ~36,400 | ~14,600 | ~12,000 | ~PKR 2,600 |
| Redmi Note 13 ($180) | ~50,400 | ~20,200 | ~16,500 | ~PKR 3,700 |
For someone bringing in a phone twice a year (e.g., overseas Pakistani visiting family), the cumulative saving is meaningful. For a small importer or grey-market operator, the gap between legal and illegal import narrows enough to make going legitimate attractive again.
When Will the New Rates Apply?
FBR has signalled a final decision “soon” — likely within weeks. The most likely path is:
- Passage of Finance Bill 2026–27 by the National Assembly (expected in the current session).
- Issuance of an SRO (Statutory Regulatory Order) by the FBR setting the new slab rates.
- Effective from July 1, 2026 alongside the start of the new fiscal year, or shortly thereafter if implementation is phased.
What This Means for You
If you are planning to bring in a budget or mid-range phone legally through PTA, the next 2–4 weeks are the best window to wait for the new rates. If you already have a phone that needs to be regularised, the current rates will still apply — there is no retro relief. The cut is forward-looking only.
For more on how the existing rates translate into per-device bills, our PTA IMEI check and registration guide walks you through the exact payment process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Not yet. The FBR Chairman has confirmed that the $31–$100 and $101–$200 slabs are under active review, with a final rate expected alongside the Federal Budget 2026–27. The current 36% and 40% rates remain in force.
Phones in the $31–$100 slab are currently taxed at an effective rate of 36%, which translates into roughly PKR 8,500–10,000 depending on the exact declared value and CNIC/passport route.
Unlikely in this round. The FBR has indicated that the $351+ slabs will stay close to 40–41% because they bring in the bulk of the revenue. Apple devices alone contribute about PKR 21 billion of the PKR 37 billion annual PTA tax take.
No. The relief, when announced, will apply to future import declarations and PTA registrations. Phones already registered or already in use will not see a refund or retroactive adjustment.
Use the allpktaxes.com PTA mobile tax calculator. It is being updated in real time as the new slabs are gazetted.
That is the explicit goal. The FBR’s working assumption is that closing the price gap between legal and illegal imports will pull buyers back into the compliant channel and ultimately grow total tax revenue.
Yes. The Finance Bill 2026–27 also covers sales tax, FED and customs duty changes for the broader mobile manufacturing chain, including incentives for local assembly.
Final Word
The FBR’s signalling of a PTA tax wave on phones under $200 is a quietly significant shift in Pakistan’s mobile-import policy. After years of pushing effective tax rates into the 36–41% range, the tax authority is now openly acknowledging that this is choking legal demand. If the proposed 5–8 percentage-point cut for the $31–$100 and $101–$200 slabs lands as expected, it will be the most meaningful smartphone-affordability reform in Pakistan in at least three years — and the first one that genuinely targets the bottom of the market.