20/05/2026
Pakistan Federal Budget 2026–27 is expected to revolve around IMF compliance, economic stabilization, and selective tax relief measures. The proposed budgetary framework is likely to focus on broadening the tax base while providing limited relief to certain sectors of the economy.
Key expected features include:
• Possible reduction in income tax rates and revision of tax slabs for salaried individuals;
• Broader documentation measures and enhanced FBR digital enforcement;
• Expected reforms in the real estate sector including possible amendments relating to Section 7E;
• Gradual rationalization of Super Tax for corporate and industrial sectors;
• Introduction of simplified turnover-based taxation regime for traders;
• Expansion of e-invoicing, POS integration, AI-based profiling, and digital audit systems;
• Incentives for exporters, IT sector, freelancers, and SMEs;
• Development allocations for infrastructure, energy, health, education, and digitization;
• Anticipated increase in salaries and pensions of government employees;
• Continued focus on fiscal discipline, inflation control, and enhancement of tax-to-GDP ratio.
Major concerns of the business and legal community presently include:
• Withdrawal of tax exemptions;
• Increase in indirect taxation;
• Expansion of withholding tax regime;
• Additional enforcement powers for FBR;
• Increased compliance obligations and penalties.
It is pertinent to note that the Finance Bill 2026–27 has not yet been officially presented before Parliament; therefore, all proposals remain tentative and subject to IMF concurrence and Federal Cabinet approval.