International Tax Law in Pakistan

As businesses and individuals operate across borders, their tax affairs engage more than one country's rules at once, raising the risk of double taxation, the complexity of withholding on cross-border payments, and the scrutiny of transfer-pricing and anti-avoidance regimes. International tax is among the most technical areas of the field, and getting it right can save substantial sums while getting it wrong invites disputes in multiple jurisdictions. Global Law Company advises multinational businesses, foreign investors, exporters, and internationally mobile individuals on international tax matters connected with Pakistan.
International tax is where Pakistan's domestic rules meet the global system of treaties and information exchange. We help clients handle that intersection, claiming the relief the system provides, complying with its requirements, and defending their position when it is questioned.
The international tax framework
International tax issues in Pakistan are governed by the Income Tax Ordinance 2001, which contains the rules on the taxation of residents on their worldwide income, non-residents on their Pakistan-source income, withholding on cross-border payments, controlled foreign companies, and transfer pricing, read together with Pakistan's extensive network of double-taxation treaties (avoidance of double taxation agreements). These treaties allocate taxing rights between Pakistan and treaty partners and provide relief from double taxation, reduced withholding rates, and mechanisms to resolve cross-border disputes. Pakistan also participates in international information-exchange arrangements, so cross-border structures and accounts are increasingly transparent to the authorities.
Residence, source, and double taxation
The foundations of international tax are residence and source: whether a person is a tax resident of Pakistan, and whether income has its source in Pakistan, determine what Pakistan may tax. We advise individuals and businesses on their residence status and its consequences, on the source of particular income, and on relief from double taxation where the same income is taxed in two countries, through treaty relief, foreign tax credits, or exemptions. For internationally mobile individuals and overseas Pakistanis in particular, getting residence and double-taxation relief right can have a major impact on their overall tax position.
Cross-border payments and withholding
Payments crossing Pakistan's borders, dividends, interest, royalties, technical and service fees, and payments to non-residents, attract withholding tax, often at rates that treaties reduce. We advise payers and recipients on the correct withholding treatment of cross-border payments, on claiming reduced treaty rates and the documentation this requires, and on the issues that arise where the characterisation of a payment (for example, whether a fee is a royalty or a service payment) affects the rate. Correct withholding is both a compliance obligation for the payer and a cost issue for the recipient, and we help both sides get it right.
Transfer pricing and anti-avoidance
Transactions between related parties across borders must be priced on an arm's-length basis, and Pakistan's transfer-pricing rules require documentation and can be the subject of adjustment and dispute. We advise multinational groups on their transfer-pricing arrangements and documentation, on structuring intra-group transactions defensibly, and on responding to transfer-pricing scrutiny. We also advise on the general and specific anti-avoidance rules that can apply to international arrangements, ensuring that cross-border structures have genuine substance and can withstand challenge. In an environment of increasing scrutiny, defensible transfer pricing is essential for any group with cross-border related-party dealings.
Inbound and outbound structuring
For foreign investors coming into Pakistan and Pakistani businesses and individuals investing abroad, the structure of the investment drives the tax outcome. We advise on tax-efficient, transparent inbound structuring for foreign investors, including the use of treaties and the treatment of profits and repatriation, and on outbound structuring for Pakistani investment abroad, coordinated with the foreign-exchange and disclosure rules. Because international structures must today be both efficient and fully transparent under information-exchange regimes, we keep clients' cross-border arrangements on the right side of both the tax and the disclosure rules.
How Global Law Company helps
We advise clients across the full range of international tax matters connected with Pakistan, residence and double taxation, cross-border withholding, transfer pricing and anti-avoidance, and inbound and outbound structuring, and we defend international positions in audits and disputes. Because we combine deep knowledge of the Ordinance and the treaty network with full tax-dispute capability, we help clients claim the relief the system provides while staying compliant and defensible. Our focus is efficient, transparent international tax positions that hold up.
Why choose Global Law Company
International tax rewards advisers who understand both Pakistan's domestic rules and the treaty and information-exchange system, and who keep structures defensible, and clients value that we bring all three. We secure treaty relief, get cross-border withholding right, document transfer pricing defensibly, and structure inbound and outbound investment efficiently and transparently. For clients operating across borders, that technical depth and global awareness are exactly what is needed.
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Frequently Asked Questions
An agreement between Pakistan and another country that allocates taxing rights and provides relief from double taxation, including reduced withholding rates. We advise on claiming treaty relief.
Tax residents are generally taxed on their worldwide income, while non-residents are taxed on their Pakistan-source income. We advise on residence status and its consequences.
Payments such as dividends, interest, royalties, and service fees to non-residents attract withholding tax, often reduced by treaty. We advise payers and recipients on correct treatment and treaty rates.
The requirement that related-party cross-border transactions be priced at arm's length, with documentation. We advise on transfer-pricing arrangements, documentation, and disputes.
Yes. We advise on transparent, tax-efficient inbound structuring for foreign investors, including the use of treaties and the treatment of profits and repatriation.