Pakistan Tax Calculator
Calculate Pakistan income tax from salary, business, or property income with applicable slabs. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Formula
Tax = Fixed Amount + (Income - Slab Lower Limit) x Slab Rate%
Pakistan uses a progressive slab-based system. Each slab has a fixed amount and a marginal rate. Your tax equals the fixed amount for your slab plus the applicable percentage on income exceeding the slab's lower limit. Non-filers pay an additional surcharge of up to 100% on top of the base tax.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Salaried Employee - 2.4 Million PKR
Problem: A salaried filer earns 2,400,000 PKR annually. Calculate the income tax liability.
Solution: Income falls in slab: 1,200,001 - 2,200,000 (but exceeds it)\nActual slab: 2,200,001 - 3,200,000\nFixed tax: 180,000 PKR\nRate on excess: 25% on (2,400,000 - 2,200,001) = 25% x 199,999 = 50,000\nTotal tax = 180,000 + 50,000 = 230,000 PKR\nEffective rate = 230,000 / 2,400,000 = 9.58%\nMonthly tax = 230,000 / 12 = 19,167 PKR
Result: Tax: 230,000 PKR | Effective Rate: 9.58% | Monthly: 19,167 PKR
Example 2: Non-Filer Business Income - 3.6 Million PKR
Problem: A non-filer with business income of 3,600,000 PKR. Calculate total tax including non-filer surcharge.
Solution: Business slab: 2,400,001 - 3,600,000\nFixed tax: 225,000 PKR\nRate on excess: 20% on (3,600,000 - 2,400,001) = 20% x 1,199,999 = 240,000\nBase tax = 225,000 + 240,000 = 465,000 PKR\nNon-filer surcharge (100%): 465,000 PKR\nTotal tax = 465,000 + 465,000 = 930,000 PKR\nPotential savings by becoming filer: 465,000 PKR
Result: Base Tax: 465,000 | Non-filer surcharge: 465,000 | Total: 930,000 PKR
Frequently Asked Questions
How is income tax calculated in Pakistan?
Pakistan uses a progressive tax system where income is taxed at increasing rates as it rises through defined slabs. The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) establishes annual tax slabs that determine the rate applicable to each income bracket. For salaried individuals, income up to 600,000 PKR annually is exempt from tax. Above this threshold, rates range from 5 percent to 35 percent depending on the income bracket. The tax calculation involves finding your applicable slab, applying the fixed amount for that slab, and then adding a percentage of the income that exceeds the lower limit of that slab. Different slabs apply to salary income versus business or professional income, with business income generally facing slightly different rates and thresholds.
What is the difference between a tax filer and non-filer in Pakistan?
In Pakistan, a filer is someone who has filed their income tax return with the FBR and appears on the Active Taxpayers List (ATL). A non-filer is anyone not on this list, regardless of whether they earn taxable income. The distinction carries significant financial consequences. Non-filers face substantially higher withholding tax rates on virtually all financial transactions including bank withdrawals, vehicle purchases, property transactions, stock trading, and cash transactions. Non-filers pay double the tax rate on property transactions, higher vehicle registration taxes, and increased withholding on bank transactions. Additionally, non-filers cannot purchase vehicles above 1300cc or property above 5 million PKR without facing penalties. Filing returns and maintaining active filer status provides meaningful tax savings across all these areas.
What deductions and allowances reduce taxable income in Pakistan?
Pakistani tax law provides several deductions that can reduce your taxable income. Zakat contributions are deductible as they are considered charitable donations under Islamic law. Donations to approved charitable institutions qualify for deductions up to 30 percent of taxable income. Contributions to approved pension funds and voluntary pension schemes are eligible for tax credits up to 20 percent of taxable income. Health insurance premiums may qualify for tax credits. Education expenses for dependent children at approved institutions can provide limited deductions. Home loan interest payments on the first property may be deductible. Additionally, disabled taxpayers receive enhanced exemption thresholds. It is important to maintain proper documentation and receipts for all claimed deductions as the FBR may request verification during assessment proceedings.
How does withholding tax work in Pakistan?
Withholding tax in Pakistan is a mechanism where tax is collected at the source of income or transaction. Employers withhold tax from monthly salaries based on projected annual income and applicable slabs. Banks withhold tax on profit from savings accounts and fixed deposits. When purchasing property, the buyer and seller both face withholding taxes at prescribed rates. Vehicle registration, mobile phone purchases, utility bills exceeding certain thresholds, and even cash withdrawals above 50,000 PKR all trigger withholding tax collection. For filers, these withholding taxes are generally adjustable against final tax liability when filing annual returns. For non-filers, the withholding rates are typically double those for filers, making non-filer status significantly more expensive across virtually every financial transaction.
When is the tax filing deadline in Pakistan and what are the penalties for late filing?
The standard tax filing deadline in Pakistan for salaried individuals is September 30 following the end of the fiscal year which runs from July 1 to June 30. For business individuals and companies, the deadline is typically December 31. The FBR frequently extends these deadlines, sometimes multiple times, through official notifications. Late filing penalties include removal from the Active Taxpayers List, which triggers higher withholding tax rates on all transactions. A penalty of 0.1 percent of the tax payable per day of delay may be imposed, subject to minimum and maximum limits. Additionally, late filers may face prosecution under tax evasion provisions in extreme cases. The FBR has increasingly used technology and data matching to identify non-filers, including monitoring property purchases, vehicle registrations, electricity consumption, and bank transactions to identify potential taxpayers.
How do I get the most accurate result?
Enter values as precisely as possible using the correct units for each field. Check that you have selected the right unit (e.g. kilograms vs pounds, meters vs feet) before calculating. Rounding inputs early can reduce output precision.