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Pakistan Withholding Tax Calculator (Sections 148–236K)

Estimate the withholding tax (WHT) a bank, broker, employer, telco, registrar, or buyer must deduct on a Pakistani transaction. Covers sections 148–236K with ATL filer and non-filer rates.

Income Tax Ordinance 2001 · Finance Acts 2024 & 2025
Estimate
SectionGoods / Services / Contracts
Filer statusOn ATL
Applicable rate11.00%
Transaction valueRs 0
Withholding tax payableRs 0
Section 153 is deducted by the prescribed person at payment. Minimum / final tax treatment varies by sub-section.
Important caveats
• Pakistan withholding rates change with every Finance Act. Cross-check against the latest FBR rate card before relying on this number for a contract or remittance.
• Withholding deducted by the bank, broker, registrar, telco, or buyer is authoritative - this calculator is a cross-check, not a substitute for the official certificate.

What withholding tax actually does

Pakistan's tax system collects a substantial portion of its income tax revenue at source - before the money reaches the taxpayer's hands. Sections 148 to 236K of the Income Tax Ordinance 2001 list dozens of transactions where the payer (an importer, a bank, an employer, a buyer, a telecom operator, a property registrar) is legally required to deduct tax from the gross payment and deposit it with the FBR within seven days. The recipient gets the net amount plus a withholding certificate that documents what was withheld.

For the recipient, that withholding is usually an adjustable advance against their annual tax liability. When they file their return, total WHT paid throughout the year is credited against the tax computed on their slab base. If they over-paid (common for salaried filers with significant bank profit), they get a refund. If they under-paid, they owe the balance. Some sections, though, are declared as final tax regimes - meaning the WHT deducted is the entire tax obligation on that income, and you can't claim it back even if you over-withheld.

The filer / non-filer split runs through every section

For almost every WHT section, non-filers (people not on the Active Taxpayer List published weekly by FBR) pay substantially higher rates - often double, sometimes more. The intent is to penalise people who avoid the formal tax system by making informal transactions expensive. The practical effect is that the Active Taxpayer List has grown from about 1.5 million in 2018 to over 6 million by 2025.

A few common pairs:

  • Section 153 services: 11% filer / 22% non-filer
  • Section 233 brokerage: 10% filer / 20% non-filer
  • Section 236C property seller: 3% filer / 6% non-filer (post Finance Act 2024)
  • Section 236K property buyer: 3% filer / 10.5% non-filer
  • Section 151 profit on debt: 15% filer / 30% non-filer

Final-tax regimes you should not pay twice on

A handful of WHT sections operate as final tax. The deduction is the only tax due on that income and it does not get added to your slab base. The most common ones to recognise:

  • Section 154A: 0.25% on PSEB-registered IT exporter receipts. Final tax. Excluded from slabs.
  • Section 150: 15% on listed-company dividends. Final tax for individuals.
  • Section 151: 15% on profit on debt up to PKR 5 million is final tax for individuals (above that threshold, it becomes adjustable and added to slab base).
  • Section 156: Prize bond winnings - final tax.

Adjustable WHT is the opposite: the deduction is an advance, credited back to you in the annual return. Sections 153, 236C, 236K, 233, 235, and 231B are all adjustable for individuals.

Worked example - service provider on a PKR 200,000 invoice

A filer IT consultant invoices a corporate client PKR 200,000 for a one-off project. The client must deduct Section 153 services WHT at 11%.

WHT deducted = 200,000 × 11% = PKR 22,000. Client pays consultant PKR 178,000 net and issues a CPR showing PKR 22,000 deposited to FBR. The consultant declares PKR 200,000 as gross business income in their annual return, computes slab tax on total taxable income, and claims PKR 22,000 as adjustable WHT credit. Net effect: if the consultant's overall slab tax exceeded PKR 22k they pay the balance; if it was less they get a refund.

If the same consultant were a non-filer, the rate doubles to 22% and PKR 44,000 would be deducted - and the consultant could not get the excess refunded without first filing the return and going onto the ATL.

Frequently asked questions

What is withholding tax in Pakistan?
WHT is income tax collected at source by the payer at the time of a transaction. The payer deducts a percentage of the gross amount and deposits it with FBR within seven days, then issues the recipient a CPR certificate. For the recipient, WHT is usually an advance that's credited against their annual tax liability.
Why are non-filer rates so much higher?
The doubled rates exist as an incentive to register for the Active Taxpayer List. A non-filer effectively pays a flat penalty rate that they cannot easily reclaim. Once you appear on the ATL, your WHT drops back to the filer rate and any over-withheld amount becomes refundable through the annual return.
How do I claim WHT credit in my annual return?
Get a Computerised Payment Receipt (CPR) from each withholding agent (employer, bank, broker, AMC, registrar, etc.) showing the amount deducted and the section under which it was deducted. Enter the totals against the appropriate IRIS codes (9201, 9205, 9301, etc.) in your return. The system credits the WHT against your total liability automatically.
Is WHT the same as final tax?
Not always. Most WHT is adjustable - it's an advance against your annual liability. Some sections are explicitly final tax (Section 154A PSEB receipts, Section 150 dividends, Section 156 prize winnings) - those are settled at withholding and you neither owe more nor can claim back.
What happens if the withholding agent forgets to deduct?
Under Section 161, the agent becomes personally liable for the tax that should have been withheld plus default surcharge. Many corporates have been caught out by audit recoveries running into millions on small unreported vendor payments. From the recipient's side, they still owe the tax in their annual return.
Do non-residents pay Pakistani WHT?
Yes - Section 152 governs payments to non-residents (dividends, royalties, interest, fees for technical services). Many of these are subject to reduced rates under Pakistan's network of Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs). A non-resident can request a reduced-rate exemption certificate from FBR before the payment is made.
Guidance only. Easy Tax Online is not affiliated with FBR, PSEB, the State Bank, or any other authority. Tax law in Pakistan changes annually with each Finance Act - always verify the applicable rate on the FBR website or with a chartered accountant before remitting or filing. Withholding deducted by your AMC, broker, bank, or employer is authoritative; this calculator is a cross-check.