Sole Proprietorship vs AOP vs Private Limited Company in Pakistan: Registration, Taxation and Compliance Compared
Almost every client who walks into our office with a new business idea asks the same question first: “Should I make a company?” The honest answer, in most cases, is no — at least not yet. Here is the full comparison so you can see exactly why.
Pakistan gives you three practical ways to run a business: as a sole proprietor (a business individual registered only with the FBR), as an Association of Persons (an AOP or partnership firm), or as a company registered with the SECP, usually a Private Limited or Single Member Company. The choice affects your tax rate, your filing deadlines, your withholding obligations, and how many notices land in your IRIS inbox every year.
This guide reflects the law as it stands for Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026), whose returns are being filed in the current filing season, and flags what the Finance Act 2026 changes for Tax Year 2027 (1st July 2026 to 30th June 2027) onwards.
1. What Each Structure Actually Is
Sole proprietorship. There is no separate legal entity. You add a business name to your personal NTN on the FBR IRIS portal, and the business’s income is simply your income. You are personally liable for every rupee of business debt. Registration takes a day and costs nothing beyond your time.
AOP / partnership firm. Two or more persons carry on business together under a partnership deed governed by the Partnership Act, 1932. For tax purposes the AOP gets its own NTN and files its own return; the firm pays the tax, and profit distributed to partners is then exempt in their hands (subject to inclusion for rate purposes in certain cases). Registration with the Registrar of Firms is technically optional, but an unregistered firm cannot sue to enforce its contractual rights under Section 69 of the Partnership Act — a trap we have seen cost clients real money in recovery suits. Register the deed.
Private Limited / Single Member Company. A separate legal person incorporated under the Companies Act, 2017 through the SECP’s eZfile portal. Shareholders’ liability is limited to their share capital, the company has perpetual succession, and shares can be transferred. Incorporation with SECP automatically generates an FBR NTN. In exchange, you sign up for a permanent two-regulator relationship: annual filings with both SECP and FBR, from day one, whether you make money or not.
2. Registration Compared
| Aspect | Sole Proprietor | AOP / Partnership | Pvt Ltd / SMC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regulator(s) | FBR only | FBR (+ Registrar of Firms for the deed) | SECP + FBR |
| Core documents | CNIC, business particulars on IRIS | Partnership deed on stamp paper, partners’ CNICs, Form-I (if registering the firm) | Memorandum & Articles, directors’/subscribers’ CNICs, registered office address |
| Typical timeline | Same day | 2–7 working days | 3–7 working days (name reservation + incorporation) |
| Government cost | Nil | Stamp duty on deed + nominal firm registration fee | Name reservation + incorporation fee (scales with authorised capital) + stamp duty |
| Separate legal entity | No | No (partners personally liable) | Yes — limited liability |
| Sales tax registration | Required for all three if making taxable supplies — structure gives no exemption here | ||
3. Income Tax: The Numbers That Decide It
Sole proprietors and AOPs — slab rates
Business individuals and AOPs pay tax on the non-salaried slab rates. For Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026) the slabs are:
| Taxable Income (PKR) | Rate of Tax |
|---|---|
| Up to 600,000 | 0% |
| 600,001 – 1,200,000 | 15% of the amount exceeding 600,000 |
| 1,200,001 – 1,600,000 | 90,000 + 20% of the amount exceeding 1,200,000 |
| 1,600,001 – 3,200,000 | 170,000 + 30% of the amount exceeding 1,600,000 |
| 3,200,001 – 5,600,000 | 650,000 + 40% of the amount exceeding 3,200,000 |
| Above 5,600,000 | 1,610,000 + 45% of the amount exceeding 5,600,000 |
Two riders sit on top of these slabs. First, professional firms that are legally barred from incorporating (law firms, medical practices, chartered accountancy firms and similar regulated professions) get the top slab at 40% instead of 45%. Second, a surcharge under Section 4AB applies where taxable income exceeds Rs. 10 million — effectively an extra layer of tax on high-earning individuals and AOPs.
Companies — the “highest of three” problem
A company does not just pay 29%. It pays the highest of three parallel computations every year:
| Computation | Rate / Base |
|---|---|
| Normal corporate tax | 29% of taxable income (20% for a qualifying small company; 39% for banking companies) |
| Alternative Corporate Tax (ACT) | 17% of accounting profit before tax |
| Minimum tax – Section 113 | 1.25% of turnover, payable even in a loss year |
That last row deserves attention. A sole proprietor or AOP only enters the Section 113 minimum tax net once turnover crosses Rs. 100 million. A company pays turnover tax from its very first invoice. A trading company doing Rs. 80 million in sales on thin 3% margins pays 1.25% of turnover (Rs. 1,000,000) even if the slab computation on its actual profit would be far lower. The same business as an AOP pays tax only on its actual profit.
The double layer: dividend tax
Here is the part most new incorporators miss. Corporate tax is only round one. When the company distributes its after-tax profit to you as a dividend, a further 15% withholding tax applies (higher for non-ATL shareholders). An AOP’s or sole proprietor’s profit, once taxed, is yours — drawings trigger no second tax.
Worked Example: Rs. 5,000,000 taxable profit — same business, three structures
| Sole Proprietor | AOP | Pvt Ltd Company | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taxable profit | 5,000,000 | 5,000,000 | 5,000,000 |
| Income tax | 650,000 + 40% × 1,800,000 = 1,370,000 | Same computation = 1,370,000 | 29% = 1,450,000 |
| Tax on taking profit home | Nil | Nil (exempt in partners’ hands) | 15% dividend WHT on 3,550,000 = 532,500 |
| Total tax cost | 1,370,000 | 1,370,000 | 1,982,500 |
| Effective rate | 27.4% | 27.4% | 39.65% |
At Rs. 5 million of profit, incorporating costs this owner roughly Rs. 612,500 extra per year in tax alone — before audit fees, SECP filing costs, and compliance staff. The gap narrows at very high profits (the 45% slab plus surcharge bites hard above Rs. 10 million, especially if profits are retained in the company rather than distributed), which is precisely when incorporation starts making financial sense.
Super tax applies to all three structures once income crosses Rs. 150 million, on graduated slabs reaching 10% above Rs. 500 million. The Finance Act, 2025 moderated the mid-bracket rates from Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026) onwards, but the structure itself is here to stay. If you are anywhere near these thresholds, structure planning is a board-level issue, not a blog-level one.
4. Withholding Obligations: Where Companies Really Pay
The tax rate comparison above is what clients ask about. The withholding agent burden is what actually consumes their staff’s time. A company becomes a withholding agent for practically everything from the day of incorporation. A sole proprietor or AOP gets generous thresholds first.
| Withholding Obligation | Company | Sole Proprietor / AOP |
|---|---|---|
| Section 153 — payments for goods, services, contracts | Must withhold on all vendor payments from day one | Only becomes a withholding agent once turnover crosses Rs. 100 million |
| Section 149 — salaries | Withhold where annual salary exceeds Rs. 600,000 | Same — no relaxation |
| Section 155 — rent | Withhold where annual rent to a landlord exceeds Rs. 300,000 | Only a prescribed person once cumulative annual rent across all premises exceeds Rs. 1.5 million |
| Sales tax withholding on unregistered suppliers | Withhold 5% of gross value on purchases from unregistered persons | Generally limited to advertisement services |
| Advance tax — Section 147 | Quarterly, by default | AOPs by default; individuals only if latest assessed income was Rs. 1 million or more |
Every one of those obligations comes with monthly and quarterly withholding statements, payment challans, reconciliations, and — when something slips — a Section 161/205 show cause notice. We defend these notices before RTO Lahore and RTO Rawalpindi week in, week out, and the pattern is consistent: the taxpayers in the deepest trouble are small companies that incorporated early, never built a withholding system, and accumulated three or four years of defaults before the first notice arrived. Default surcharge under Section 205 does not care that you didn’t know.
5. Annual Compliance Calendar
| Requirement | Sole Proprietor | AOP | Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income tax return deadline | 30th September | 30th September | 31st December (for the normal 30th June year-end) |
| SECP annual return (Form A/B) | — | — | Yes, annually |
| Form 29 (changes in directors/officers) | — | — | Within 15 days of any change |
| Statutory audit | Only if turnover exceeds Rs. 300 million | Only if turnover exceeds Rs. 300 million | Mandatory audited accounts with the return |
| UBO register — Section 123A, Companies Act | — | — | Maintain and report ultimate beneficial owners |
| Monthly/quarterly WHT statements | Only if a withholding agent | Only if a withholding agent | Yes, from day one |
| Sales tax returns (if registered) | Monthly | Monthly | Monthly |
Notice the return deadlines. Sole proprietors and AOPs file by 30th September; companies get until 31st December. That extra quarter sounds like a benefit until you remember it exists because the company must first complete a statutory audit — an annual cost of anywhere from Rs. 75,000 for a dormant SMC to several lakhs for an active trading company.
6. So When Should You Incorporate?
Tax alone almost never justifies incorporation for a business earning under Rs. 10 million a year. But tax is not the only variable. Incorporate when one or more of these applies:
| Situation | Why the Company Wins |
|---|---|
| The business carries real liability risk (pharma, construction, manufacturing, logistics) | Limited liability shields personal assets. An AOP partner’s house is on the line; a shareholder’s is not. |
| You need bank financing, foreign partners, or outside investors | Banks and investors want audited accounts, a share register, and SECP-verifiable ownership. Foreign shareholding practically requires a company. |
| Government tenders, multinational vendor onboarding, or export contracts | Many procurement regimes and foreign buyers only deal with incorporated entities. |
| Succession planning | A company survives its shareholders. An AOP dissolves on a partner’s death unless the deed says otherwise, and even then transitions are messy. |
| Profits are large and retained for reinvestment | Retained profit is taxed at 29% flat versus up to 45% plus surcharge on the slab regime. If you are not distributing dividends, the corporate rate can be the cheaper one. |
Our standard advice to a first-time founder in Lahore with projected profits under Rs. 5 million: start as a sole proprietor or AOP, keep clean books from month one, and revisit incorporation when turnover approaches Rs. 100 million (where your withholding exemption dies anyway) or when a specific commercial trigger from the table above appears. Converting later is a known, manageable process. Unwinding a company you never needed — winding up, striking off, closing the NTN — is slower and more expensive than most people expect.
7. What the Finance Act 2026 Changes
The Finance Act 2026, effective from 1st July 2026 for Tax Year 2027 (1st July 2026 to 30th June 2027), does not rewrite the basic structure comparison above, but it raises the compliance temperature for everyone:
Digital invoicing and e-commerce. The sales tax net now firmly covers online marketplaces and digital platforms. Marketplace operators carry registration and withholding obligations on payments settled to sellers, so if you sell through Daraz or similar platforms, tax is being collected on your flows whether you have organised your affairs or not. Electronic invoicing integration with FBR’s system is being pushed down to progressively smaller businesses, and suspension of registration is now a lever FBR can pull against non-integrating persons.
Documentation pressure carried forward. The disallowance regime introduced by the Finance Act, 2025 remains in force and continues to bite in Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026) returns: 10% of expenditure on purchases from non-NTN holders is disallowed, and 50% of expenditure is disallowed where sale proceeds above Rs. 200,000 per invoice are received outside banking or digital channels. These rules apply regardless of structure — they punish undocumented supply chains, not legal forms.
We are covering the Finance Act 2026 amendments section by section in our ongoing series on this blog, including the new withholding provisions for digital content creators under Section 154B and the revised property advance tax regime under Sections 236C and 236K.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I convert my sole proprietorship into a company later?
- Yes. There is no formal “conversion” — you incorporate a new company with SECP, transfer the business assets to it, and wind down activity on the individual NTN. With planning, the transfer can be structured tax-efficiently. The practical work is in novating contracts, bank accounts, and supplier registrations.
- Does an AOP need a written, registered partnership deed?
- The law recognises oral partnerships, but FBR requires the deed for AOP NTN registration, and an unregistered firm cannot sue on its contracts (Section 69, Partnership Act, 1932). Treat a stamped, registered deed as mandatory.
- What is a “small company” and does the 20% rate help me?
- A small company under the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 must meet strict cumulative conditions on paid-up capital, employee count and annual turnover, and must not be formed by splitting up an existing business. Where the conditions hold, the corporate rate drops from 29% to 20% — but the minimum turnover tax, dividend tax, audit requirement and full withholding-agent status all still apply.
- I am a freelancer exporting IT services. Does any of this change for me?
- IT and IT-enabled service exporters registered with PSEB enjoy a concessional 0.25% final tax on export proceeds, subject to being on the Active Taxpayer List and filing complete returns. That concession applies whether you operate as an individual, AOP or company, so structure choice for exporters is driven by the liability and client-onboarding factors above rather than the tax rate.
- What happens if I just don’t register at all?
- Non-ATL persons pay withholding tax at up to double the standard rates on bank transactions, property, vehicles and utilities, and FBR’s data-matching between banks, NADRA and provincial authorities makes discovery a question of when, not if. The cost of staying out of the net now comfortably exceeds the cost of compliance.
Choosing a Structure? Get It Right the First Time.
H.S. Advocate & Co. handles FBR registration, AOP formation, SECP incorporation and ongoing tax compliance for businesses across Pakistan. We are Authorized Representatives before the SECP and appear regularly before RTO Lahore and RTO Rawalpindi on enforcement matters.
Office No. 72, 5th Floor, Rajpoot Heights, Begum Road, Mozang, Lahore
Call/WhatsApp: 0344-4444703 | hsadvocate.com
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and reflects the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001, the Companies Act, 2017 and related laws as amended up to the Finance Act, 2026. Rates, thresholds and procedures change through annual Finance Acts and SROs. It does not constitute legal or tax advice, and no advocate-client relationship is created by reading it. Obtain professional advice on your specific facts before acting.
Sole Proprietorship vs AOP vs Private Limited Company in Pakistan: Registration, Taxation and Compliance Compared
Almost every client who walks into our office with a new business idea asks the same question first: “Should I make a company?” The honest answer, in most cases, is no — at least not yet. Here is the full comparison so you can see exactly why.
Pakistan gives you three practical ways to run a business: as a sole proprietor (a business individual registered only with the FBR), as an Association of Persons (an AOP or partnership firm), or as a company registered with the SECP, usually a Private Limited or Single Member Company. The choice affects your tax rate, your filing deadlines, your withholding obligations, and how many notices land in your IRIS inbox every year.
This guide reflects the law as it stands for Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026), whose returns are being filed in the current filing season, and flags what the Finance Act 2026 changes for Tax Year 2027 (1st July 2026 to 30th June 2027) onwards.
1. What Each Structure Actually Is
Sole proprietorship. There is no separate legal entity. You add a business name to your personal NTN on the FBR IRIS portal, and the business’s income is simply your income. You are personally liable for every rupee of business debt. Registration takes a day and costs nothing beyond your time.
AOP / partnership firm. Two or more persons carry on business together under a partnership deed governed by the Partnership Act, 1932. For tax purposes the AOP gets its own NTN and files its own return; the firm pays the tax, and profit distributed to partners is then exempt in their hands (subject to inclusion for rate purposes in certain cases). Registration with the Registrar of Firms is technically optional, but an unregistered firm cannot sue to enforce its contractual rights under Section 69 of the Partnership Act — a trap we have seen cost clients real money in recovery suits. Register the deed.
Private Limited / Single Member Company. A separate legal person incorporated under the Companies Act, 2017 through the SECP’s eZfile portal. Shareholders’ liability is limited to their share capital, the company has perpetual succession, and shares can be transferred. Incorporation with SECP automatically generates an FBR NTN. In exchange, you sign up for a permanent two-regulator relationship: annual filings with both SECP and FBR, from day one, whether you make money or not.
2. Registration Compared
| Aspect | Sole Proprietor | AOP / Partnership | Pvt Ltd / SMC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regulator(s) | FBR only | FBR (+ Registrar of Firms for the deed) | SECP + FBR |
| Core documents | CNIC, business particulars on IRIS | Partnership deed on stamp paper, partners’ CNICs, Form-I (if registering the firm) | Memorandum & Articles, directors’/subscribers’ CNICs, registered office address |
| Typical timeline | Same day | 2–7 working days | 3–7 working days (name reservation + incorporation) |
| Government cost | Nil | Stamp duty on deed + nominal firm registration fee | Name reservation + incorporation fee (scales with authorised capital) + stamp duty |
| Separate legal entity | No | No (partners personally liable) | Yes — limited liability |
| Sales tax registration | Required for all three if making taxable supplies — structure gives no exemption here | ||
3. Income Tax: The Numbers That Decide It
Sole proprietors and AOPs — slab rates
Business individuals and AOPs pay tax on the non-salaried slab rates. For Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026) the slabs are:
| Taxable Income (PKR) | Rate of Tax |
|---|---|
| Up to 600,000 | 0% |
| 600,001 – 1,200,000 | 15% of the amount exceeding 600,000 |
| 1,200,001 – 1,600,000 | 90,000 + 20% of the amount exceeding 1,200,000 |
| 1,600,001 – 3,200,000 | 170,000 + 30% of the amount exceeding 1,600,000 |
| 3,200,001 – 5,600,000 | 650,000 + 40% of the amount exceeding 3,200,000 |
| Above 5,600,000 | 1,610,000 + 45% of the amount exceeding 5,600,000 |
Two riders sit on top of these slabs. First, professional firms that are legally barred from incorporating (law firms, medical practices, chartered accountancy firms and similar regulated professions) get the top slab at 40% instead of 45%. Second, a surcharge under Section 4AB applies where taxable income exceeds Rs. 10 million — effectively an extra layer of tax on high-earning individuals and AOPs.
Companies — the “highest of three” problem
A company does not just pay 29%. It pays the highest of three parallel computations every year:
| Computation | Rate / Base |
|---|---|
| Normal corporate tax | 29% of taxable income (20% for a qualifying small company; 39% for banking companies) |
| Alternative Corporate Tax (ACT) | 17% of accounting profit before tax |
| Minimum tax – Section 113 | 1.25% of turnover, payable even in a loss year |
That last row deserves attention. A sole proprietor or AOP only enters the Section 113 minimum tax net once turnover crosses Rs. 100 million. A company pays turnover tax from its very first invoice. A trading company doing Rs. 80 million in sales on thin 3% margins pays 1.25% of turnover (Rs. 1,000,000) even if the slab computation on its actual profit would be far lower. The same business as an AOP pays tax only on its actual profit.
The double layer: dividend tax
Here is the part most new incorporators miss. Corporate tax is only round one. When the company distributes its after-tax profit to you as a dividend, a further 15% withholding tax applies (higher for non-ATL shareholders). An AOP’s or sole proprietor’s profit, once taxed, is yours — drawings trigger no second tax.
Worked Example: Rs. 5,000,000 taxable profit — same business, three structures
| Sole Proprietor | AOP | Pvt Ltd Company | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taxable profit | 5,000,000 | 5,000,000 | 5,000,000 |
| Income tax | 650,000 + 40% × 1,800,000 = 1,370,000 | Same computation = 1,370,000 | 29% = 1,450,000 |
| Tax on taking profit home | Nil | Nil (exempt in partners’ hands) | 15% dividend WHT on 3,550,000 = 532,500 |
| Total tax cost | 1,370,000 | 1,370,000 | 1,982,500 |
| Effective rate | 27.4% | 27.4% | 39.65% |
At Rs. 5 million of profit, incorporating costs this owner roughly Rs. 612,500 extra per year in tax alone — before audit fees, SECP filing costs, and compliance staff. The gap narrows at very high profits (the 45% slab plus surcharge bites hard above Rs. 10 million, especially if profits are retained in the company rather than distributed), which is precisely when incorporation starts making financial sense.
Super tax applies to all three structures once income crosses Rs. 150 million, on graduated slabs reaching 10% above Rs. 500 million. The Finance Act, 2025 moderated the mid-bracket rates from Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026) onwards, but the structure itself is here to stay. If you are anywhere near these thresholds, structure planning is a board-level issue, not a blog-level one.
4. Withholding Obligations: Where Companies Really Pay
The tax rate comparison above is what clients ask about. The withholding agent burden is what actually consumes their staff’s time. A company becomes a withholding agent for practically everything from the day of incorporation. A sole proprietor or AOP gets generous thresholds first.
| Withholding Obligation | Company | Sole Proprietor / AOP |
|---|---|---|
| Section 153 — payments for goods, services, contracts | Must withhold on all vendor payments from day one | Only becomes a withholding agent once turnover crosses Rs. 100 million |
| Section 149 — salaries | Withhold where annual salary exceeds Rs. 600,000 | Same — no relaxation |
| Section 155 — rent | Withhold where annual rent to a landlord exceeds Rs. 300,000 | Only a prescribed person once cumulative annual rent across all premises exceeds Rs. 1.5 million |
| Sales tax withholding on unregistered suppliers | Withhold 5% of gross value on purchases from unregistered persons | Generally limited to advertisement services |
| Advance tax — Section 147 | Quarterly, by default | AOPs by default; individuals only if latest assessed income was Rs. 1 million or more |
Every one of those obligations comes with monthly and quarterly withholding statements, payment challans, reconciliations, and — when something slips — a Section 161/205 show cause notice. We defend these notices before RTO Lahore and RTO Rawalpindi week in, week out, and the pattern is consistent: the taxpayers in the deepest trouble are small companies that incorporated early, never built a withholding system, and accumulated three or four years of defaults before the first notice arrived. Default surcharge under Section 205 does not care that you didn’t know.
5. Annual Compliance Calendar
| Requirement | Sole Proprietor | AOP | Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income tax return deadline | 30th September | 30th September | 31st December (for the normal 30th June year-end) |
| SECP annual return (Form A/B) | — | — | Yes, annually |
| Form 29 (changes in directors/officers) | — | — | Within 15 days of any change |
| Statutory audit | Only if turnover exceeds Rs. 300 million | Only if turnover exceeds Rs. 300 million | Mandatory audited accounts with the return |
| UBO register — Section 123A, Companies Act | — | — | Maintain and report ultimate beneficial owners |
| Monthly/quarterly WHT statements | Only if a withholding agent | Only if a withholding agent | Yes, from day one |
| Sales tax returns (if registered) | Monthly | Monthly | Monthly |
Notice the return deadlines. Sole proprietors and AOPs file by 30th September; companies get until 31st December. That extra quarter sounds like a benefit until you remember it exists because the company must first complete a statutory audit — an annual cost of anywhere from Rs. 75,000 for a dormant SMC to several lakhs for an active trading company.
6. So When Should You Incorporate?
Tax alone almost never justifies incorporation for a business earning under Rs. 10 million a year. But tax is not the only variable. Incorporate when one or more of these applies:
| Situation | Why the Company Wins |
|---|---|
| The business carries real liability risk (pharma, construction, manufacturing, logistics) | Limited liability shields personal assets. An AOP partner’s house is on the line; a shareholder’s is not. |
| You need bank financing, foreign partners, or outside investors | Banks and investors want audited accounts, a share register, and SECP-verifiable ownership. Foreign shareholding practically requires a company. |
| Government tenders, multinational vendor onboarding, or export contracts | Many procurement regimes and foreign buyers only deal with incorporated entities. |
| Succession planning | A company survives its shareholders. An AOP dissolves on a partner’s death unless the deed says otherwise, and even then transitions are messy. |
| Profits are large and retained for reinvestment | Retained profit is taxed at 29% flat versus up to 45% plus surcharge on the slab regime. If you are not distributing dividends, the corporate rate can be the cheaper one. |
Our standard advice to a first-time founder in Lahore with projected profits under Rs. 5 million: start as a sole proprietor or AOP, keep clean books from month one, and revisit incorporation when turnover approaches Rs. 100 million (where your withholding exemption dies anyway) or when a specific commercial trigger from the table above appears. Converting later is a known, manageable process. Unwinding a company you never needed — winding up, striking off, closing the NTN — is slower and more expensive than most people expect.
7. What the Finance Act 2026 Changes
The Finance Act 2026, effective from 1st July 2026 for Tax Year 2027 (1st July 2026 to 30th June 2027), does not rewrite the basic structure comparison above, but it raises the compliance temperature for everyone:
Digital invoicing and e-commerce. The sales tax net now firmly covers online marketplaces and digital platforms. Marketplace operators carry registration and withholding obligations on payments settled to sellers, so if you sell through Daraz or similar platforms, tax is being collected on your flows whether you have organised your affairs or not. Electronic invoicing integration with FBR’s system is being pushed down to progressively smaller businesses, and suspension of registration is now a lever FBR can pull against non-integrating persons.
Documentation pressure carried forward. The disallowance regime introduced by the Finance Act, 2025 remains in force and continues to bite in Tax Year 2026 (1st July 2025 to 30th June 2026) returns: 10% of expenditure on purchases from non-NTN holders is disallowed, and 50% of expenditure is disallowed where sale proceeds above Rs. 200,000 per invoice are received outside banking or digital channels. These rules apply regardless of structure — they punish undocumented supply chains, not legal forms.
We are covering the Finance Act 2026 amendments section by section in our ongoing series on this blog, including the new withholding provisions for digital content creators under Section 154B and the revised property advance tax regime under Sections 236C and 236K.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I convert my sole proprietorship into a company later?
- Yes. There is no formal “conversion” — you incorporate a new company with SECP, transfer the business assets to it, and wind down activity on the individual NTN. With planning, the transfer can be structured tax-efficiently. The practical work is in novating contracts, bank accounts, and supplier registrations.
- Does an AOP need a written, registered partnership deed?
- The law recognises oral partnerships, but FBR requires the deed for AOP NTN registration, and an unregistered firm cannot sue on its contracts (Section 69, Partnership Act, 1932). Treat a stamped, registered deed as mandatory.
- What is a “small company” and does the 20% rate help me?
- A small company under the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 must meet strict cumulative conditions on paid-up capital, employee count and annual turnover, and must not be formed by splitting up an existing business. Where the conditions hold, the corporate rate drops from 29% to 20% — but the minimum turnover tax, dividend tax, audit requirement and full withholding-agent status all still apply.
- I am a freelancer exporting IT services. Does any of this change for me?
- IT and IT-enabled service exporters registered with PSEB enjoy a concessional 0.25% final tax on export proceeds, subject to being on the Active Taxpayer List and filing complete returns. That concession applies whether you operate as an individual, AOP or company, so structure choice for exporters is driven by the liability and client-onboarding factors above rather than the tax rate.
- What happens if I just don’t register at all?
- Non-ATL persons pay withholding tax at up to double the standard rates on bank transactions, property, vehicles and utilities, and FBR’s data-matching between banks, NADRA and provincial authorities makes discovery a question of when, not if. The cost of staying out of the net now comfortably exceeds the cost of compliance.
Choosing a Structure? Get It Right the First Time.
H.S. Advocate & Co. handles FBR registration, AOP formation, SECP incorporation and ongoing tax compliance for businesses across Pakistan. We are Authorized Representatives before the SECP and appear regularly before RTO Lahore and RTO Rawalpindi on enforcement matters.
Office No. 72, 5th Floor, Rajpoot Heights, Begum Road, Mozang, Lahore
Call/WhatsApp: 0344-4444703 | hsadvocate.com
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and reflects the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001, the Companies Act, 2017 and related laws as amended up to the Finance Act, 2026. Rates, thresholds and procedures change through annual Finance Acts and SROs. It does not constitute legal or tax advice, and no advocate-client relationship is created by reading it. Obtain professional advice on your specific facts before acting.