Agribusiness Company Setup in Pakistan

Agriculture is the foundation of Pakistan's economy, and agribusiness, the cultivation, processing, marketing, and export of food and agricultural products, spans farming enterprises, food processors, input suppliers, warehousing, and exporters. Establishing an agribusiness involves not only incorporation but the food-safety, licensing, export, and compliance requirements that this diverse sector carries. Global Law Company advises farmers' enterprises, food processors, agri-input businesses, and exporters across Pakistan on setting up and operating agribusiness companies.
Agribusiness sits at the intersection of company, food-safety, environmental, export, and contract law, and the requirements vary widely depending on whether the business cultivates, processes, supplies inputs, or exports. We help clients identify the regime that applies to their particular activity and build a compliant, competitive business.
The framework for agribusiness in Pakistan
An agribusiness is incorporated with SECP under the Companies Act 2017 and registered with FBR for income tax and, where it makes taxable supplies, sales tax. Food-related businesses must comply with food-safety regulation, administered by provincial food authorities (such as the Punjab Food Authority and its counterparts) under provincial food-safety laws, covering licensing, standards, labelling, and hygiene. Businesses dealing in agricultural inputs, seeds, fertilisers, and pesticides, fall under specific regulatory regimes governing registration and quality (such as the seed and pesticide laws). Exporters of food and agricultural products engage export registration, plant and animal health and sanitary/phytosanitary requirements, and the standards of destination markets. Environmental law applies to processing and other activities with environmental impact.
Incorporation, food licensing, and sector registration
We handle the incorporation of the agribusiness and its tax registration, and we advise on the sector-specific licensing the particular activity requires, food-authority licensing for processors and food businesses, input-registration regimes for seed, fertiliser, and pesticide businesses, and the registrations relevant to warehousing, dairy, livestock, or horticulture ventures. Identifying and obtaining the right licences for the specific activity is the foundation of a compliant agribusiness, and we guide clients through the applicable approvals so the business is authorised for what it actually does.
Export, standards, and market access
Many agribusinesses are export-oriented, and export of food and agricultural products carries its own demanding requirements. We advise exporters on export registration, on the sanitary and phytosanitary and plant- and animal-health requirements that govern agricultural exports, and on meeting the food-safety and quality standards of destination markets, which are often stricter than domestic requirements and central to market access. We also advise on the export incentives available to the sector and on structuring export operations for efficient tax and foreign-exchange treatment.
Contracts, supply chain, and land
Agribusiness is contract- and asset-intensive, involving farming and supply arrangements, processing and offtake agreements, input-supply contracts, warehousing and logistics, and land. We draft and review the agreements the sector depends on, supply and offtake contracts, contract-farming and outgrower arrangements, processing and distribution agreements, and export sale contracts, and we advise on the acquisition and leasing of agricultural land and the property issues that arise in farming and processing ventures. Sound contracts and clear land arrangements are central to the stability of an agribusiness.
Livestock, dairy, and halal certification
Beyond crops, a large part of agribusiness involves livestock, dairy, poultry, fisheries, and meat processing, each with its own regulatory dimension, animal health and sanitary requirements, slaughter and processing standards, and, increasingly, halal certification for both domestic credibility and access to export markets in the Muslim world and beyond. We advise livestock, dairy, and meat businesses on the licensing and standards that apply to their operations, on halal certification and the requirements of the relevant standards bodies, and on the export health and certification requirements for animal products. Meeting these standards is central to market access, particularly for exporters targeting markets where halal and sanitary certification are mandatory.
Inputs, technology, and intellectual property
Modern agribusiness increasingly involves technology and intellectual property, improved seed varieties, agricultural inputs, machinery, and agri-tech platforms, which raise issues of registration, plant-variety protection, licensing, and IP. We advise agri-input and agri-tech businesses on protecting and licensing their varieties, products, and technology, on the registration regimes for seeds and other inputs, and on the contracts under which inputs and technology are supplied to farmers. As agribusiness modernises, protecting and commercialising innovation becomes as important as the traditional concerns of land and supply, and we help businesses on both fronts.
How Global Law Company helps
We act for agribusinesses from incorporation and sector licensing through export, contracts, and land. Because the sector is diverse and the applicable regime depends on the specific activity, our value lies in identifying the right licences and standards and building a compliant, export-ready business. We combine corporate, regulatory, commercial, and property capability to support agribusiness ventures across their needs.
Why choose Global Law Company
Agribusiness work rewards advisers who can handle the food-safety, input, and export regimes that apply to different activities, and clients value that we do. We identify and obtain the right licences, build the food-safety and export compliance that market access requires, and draft the supply, offtake, and export contracts the business runs on. For a sector central to the economy and increasingly oriented to export, that practical, compliance-focused guidance is essential.
Talk to us about setting up an agribusiness in Pakistan
Speak with a lawyer at Global Law Company
Need help with Agribusiness Company? Book a confidential consultation. Reach us directly and we will respond within 4 business hours.
Monday to Saturday, 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Frequently Asked Questions
Food businesses generally need a licence from the relevant provincial food authority under provincial food-safety law, covering standards, labelling, and hygiene, in addition to SECP and FBR registration.
Yes. Seeds, fertilisers, and pesticides fall under specific registration and quality regimes. We advise input businesses on the applicable requirements and registrations.
Export registration plus compliance with sanitary and phytosanitary, plant- and animal-health, and destination-market standards. We advise exporters on meeting these requirements.
Yes. We draft and review contract-farming, outgrower, supply, offtake, processing, and export agreements that the agribusiness sector depends on.
Yes. We advise on the acquisition, leasing, and property issues relating to agricultural land for farming and processing ventures.