For most Pakistani taxpayers, Budget 2026-27 will be remembered for the income tax slab cuts and the salary increase. For businesses, accountants, and tax practitioners, the more consequential changes are buried in the structural reforms: the abolition of Section 7E, the restructuring of super tax, the introduction of fixed tax schemes for retailers and small traders, and the expansion of the digital integration framework. These are the changes that reshape how Pakistan’s tax system actually works, and they will be felt long after the headline rates fade from memory.
Section 7E: the end of deemed rental income
Section 7E of the Income Tax Ordinance, introduced in 2022, was designed to tax the deemed rental income of property owners based on the gross value of their property, regardless of whether it was actually rented out. For owners of multiple properties, particularly overseas Pakistanis and investors, the deemed-income charge was controversial from the outset. Property owners challenged the provision in court, and the Federal Constitutional Court’s 2025 ruling on related tax matters signalled that the legal basis for deemed-income taxation was increasingly contested.
Budget 2026-27 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 a detailed walk-through of the previous Section 7E rules, our archived Section 7E guide remains available for reference.
The change is significant not just for the relief it provides, but for what it signals: the government is willing to retreat from aggressive deemed-income provisions when they are challenged. That has implications for other controversial tax provisions currently in force.
Super tax: relief for most, but not banks, E&P, and fertiliser
Super tax under Section 4C, which applies to companies with income above Rs 150 million, has been significantly restructured. The previous schedule had six intermediate slabs between Rs 150 million and Rs 500 million, with rates ranging from 1% to 7.5%. The new schedule sets all six intermediate slabs to zero, meaning that companies earning between Rs 150 million and Rs 500 million will pay no super tax at all. The top slab for companies earning above Rs 500 million has been cut from 10% to 8%.
The change is broad-based relief for the corporate sector, but it is not universal. Banks, exploration and production (E&P) companies, and fertiliser manufacturers are explicitly excluded from this relief and continue under the previous super tax structure. The exclusion reflects a combination of political economy โ these sectors have consistently been treated as higher-revenue sources โ and IMF concern about the revenue impact of broader super tax relief.
| Income slab | Old super tax | New super tax (TY2027) |
|---|---|---|
| Up to Rs 150 million | 0% | 0% |
| Rs 150m โ 200m | 1.0% | 0% |
| Rs 200m โ 250m | 1.5% | 0% |
| Rs 250m โ 300m | 2.5% | 0% |
| Rs 300m โ 350m | 3.5% | 0% |
| Rs 350m โ 400m | 5.5% | 0% |
| Rs 400m โ 500m | 7.5% | 0% |
| Above Rs 500 million | 10.0% | 8.0% |
| Banks, E&P, fertiliser (above Rs 500m) | 10.0% | 10.0% (excluded from relief) |
For most medium-sized and large non-financial companies, the super tax relief is unambiguous. The effective tax rate for companies in the Rs 200m to Rs 500m range falls by 1.5% to 7.5%, depending on the specific income level. For the largest non-financial companies earning above Rs 500 million, the cut from 10% to 8% is a 20% reduction in the super tax rate.
Fixed tax for retailers: a new compliance pathway
For the first time, the budget introduces a fixed tax regime for small retailers and shopkeepers under Section 99B of the Income Tax Ordinance. The new system applies in two tiers:
- Tier-1 retailers (turnover above Rs 200 million) face the standard regime with mandatory electronic integration, and are not eligible for the fixed tax.
- Small shopkeepers (annual sales below Rs 10 million) pay 0.5% of annual sales as tax.
- Retailers with annual sales up to Rs 200 million (the new Tajir Dost-style “Asaan Scheme”) can choose between a minimum tax of Rs 25,000 per year or 1% of sales, whichever is applicable.
The “Asaan Scheme” is the most significant of these because it directly targets the small and mid-sized retail sector that has historically been outside the tax net. Our earlier coverage of the Tajir Dost Scheme and its IMF-driven rollback explained why the previous retail-taxation framework struggled, and the new fixed-tax approach is designed to address those structural problems. The combination of a low fixed rate and the elimination of complex compliance requirements is intended to make formal registration more attractive than remaining outside the system.
Digital integration: the framework that ties it all together
The structural thread that connects the property, retail, and indirect-tax changes is the expanded digital integration framework. The budget introduces definitions for advance receipt invoices, algorithmic settlement, e-invoicing, a national faceless centre, and a production monitoring system. It also establishes a new Section 11H for faceless audit and a Section 30AA for faceless jurisdiction.
The practical effect is a fundamental shift in how FBR conducts business with taxpayers. The traditional model โ paper returns, in-person audits, discretionary enforcement โ is being replaced by a digital model in which transactions are reported in real time, audits are conducted algorithmically, and enforcement actions are issued through faceless channels. The FBR’s digital revolution guide and IRIS 2.0 portal walks through the operational specifics.
For businesses, the transition costs are real. Tier-1 retailers and any business above the small-trader threshold will need to invest in POS integration, e-invoicing infrastructure, and the internal accounting capacity to support real-time reporting. The penalties for non-compliance, now linked to inflation rather than fixed amounts, will increase over time. The trade-off is lower explicit tax rates, but the cost of compliance is shifted from the FBR to the taxpayer.
The bank data integration push
One of the more quietly significant changes is the expansion of FBR’s authority to integrate bank data for tax-mismatch detection. The budget formalises the framework for FBR to cross-reference declared income against banking transaction data, which has been a stated FBR priority for several years. The earlier FBR action on recovering windfall tax from 16 banks in a single day demonstrated the revenue potential of this approach, and the budget now codifies it into primary law.
For taxpayers, the practical effect is that banking transactions are no longer a separate compliance regime from tax declarations. The two are integrated, and discrepancies are detectable. For ordinary salaried individuals, this is unlikely to be intrusive โ banks already report withholding and the integration is mostly automated. For business owners and self-employed individuals with significant banking activity that does not match declared income, the change is consequential.
Tax on misuse of life insurance policies
A new provision targets sham or misuse-based life insurance policies โ schemes designed to exploit regulatory arbitrage rather than provide genuine insurance coverage. The tax is designed to close a loophole that has been used to convert taxable income into tax-advantaged investment returns through insurance wrappers. The FBR’s earlier work on business tax reform proposals had flagged the issue, and the budget now addresses it.
For genuine life insurance customers, the change is irrelevant. For users of insurance-based tax-planning schemes, the change converts a previously favourable structure into an unfavourable one.
Withholding tax on professional services
The withholding tax regime for services and professionals has been revised, with adjustments to the rates and scope that affect a wide range of consultancy, legal, medical, and accounting practices. The specific changes are detailed in the Finance Bill’s schedule of WHT rates, and the practical effect will vary by sector. For most professionals, the change is incremental rather than structural, but for high-earning consultants and practices with significant cross-border work, the revisions are meaningful.
What the business tax package means in practice
Taken together, the business tax changes in Budget 2026-27 represent a clear strategic direction. The government is trading explicit tax relief (lower super tax, abolition of Section 7E, fixed tax for retailers) for expanded data visibility (digital integration, bank data integration, e-invoicing) and broader enforcement reach (faceless audit, algorithmic settlement, expanded penalty regime). The trade-off is rational from a revenue perspective: lower rates encourage compliance and broaden the base, while better data and stronger enforcement ensure that the base actually pays.
Whether the trade-off works depends on the implementation. The FBR’s digital infrastructure is being built, but the transition period will be rocky. The IMF’s view, set out in its warning that Pakistan’s tax revenue would stay flat until 2030, is that even with these reforms, structural constraints will persist. The business tax package in Budget 2026-27 is the most ambitious attempt yet to address those constraints, and its success or failure will shape Pakistan’s fiscal trajectory for the rest of the decade.
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.