Trade Secrets and Confidential Information in Pakistan

Some of a business's most valuable assets are never registered, its formulas, processes, methods, customer lists, pricing, strategies, and know-how. These trade secrets and confidential information give a business its competitive edge, and protecting them depends not on registration but on contracts, internal measures, and the law's protection against breach of confidence. Global Law Company advises businesses across Pakistan on protecting their trade secrets and confidential information and on acting when that information is misused.
Unlike patents or trademarks, trade secrets are protected only so long as they remain secret and the business takes reasonable steps to keep them so. The law will help a business that has protected its confidential information properly; it offers far less to one that has been careless. We help businesses put the right protections in place and enforce them.
How confidential information is protected in Pakistan
Pakistan does not have a single dedicated trade-secrets statute; instead, trade secrets and confidential information are protected through a combination of contract law (under the Contract Act 1872), the equitable doctrine of breach of confidence, and related principles, supported by the contractual and employment arrangements a business puts in place. Confidential information disclosed in circumstances importing an obligation of confidence, to employees, contractors, partners, or counterparties, is protected against unauthorised use and disclosure, and the courts can grant injunctions and damages for breach. Because the protection rests heavily on the arrangements and measures the business adopts, the strength of protection is largely in the business's own hands.
Contracts: NDAs and confidentiality provisions
The first line of defence is contractual. We draft and review the confidentiality arrangements through which a business protects its information: non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) for discussions with counterparties, investors, and partners; confidentiality and intellectual-property clauses in employment and contractor agreements; and confidentiality provisions in commercial contracts. Well-drafted confidentiality terms define what is protected, the permitted use, the duration of the obligation, and the consequences of breach, giving the business a clear contractual basis to act. For most businesses, sound NDAs and employment confidentiality clauses are the most important protection they can put in place.
Employees, departures, and non-compete issues
The greatest threat to confidential information is often a departing employee who takes know-how, customer relationships, or data to a competitor or a new venture. We advise businesses on protecting their information through the employment relationship, confidentiality and IP-assignment clauses, garden-leave and post-termination obligations, and, where appropriate and enforceable, restrictive covenants, and on acting when an employee misuses confidential information on or after departure. We also advise employees and new employers on the limits of these obligations. Managing the confidentiality and competitive issues around employee departures is one of the most common and important parts of this practice.
Enforcement: injunctions and misuse claims
When confidential information is misused or threatened, swift action is essential, because once a secret is disclosed it cannot be made secret again. We act quickly to protect confidential information through injunctions restraining its use or disclosure, and we pursue claims for breach of confidence and breach of contract, seeking injunctions, damages, and the delivery up or destruction of misused information. We also defend businesses and individuals accused of misusing confidential information. Because the value of a trade secret can be destroyed by disclosure, the speed and decisiveness of the enforcement response is often what determines whether the business is protected.
Internal measures and information governance
Legal protection works best alongside practical measures, and the law expects a business to take reasonable steps to keep its secrets secret. We advise businesses on the internal measures that support trade-secret protection, identifying and classifying confidential information, controlling access, marking and handling sensitive material, and managing data security and the information held about customers and operations. These measures both reduce the risk of leakage and strengthen the business's position if it has to enforce its rights, since a court is far more sympathetic to a business that has clearly treated its information as confidential.
How Global Law Company helps
We advise businesses on protecting their trade secrets and confidential information end to end, drafting NDAs and confidentiality and IP clauses, managing the confidentiality and competitive issues around employees and departures, advising on internal protective measures, and enforcing rights swiftly when information is misused. Because we combine contract, employment, and litigation capability, we can both put the protections in place and act decisively when they are breached. Our focus is protecting the unregistered assets that give our clients their competitive edge.
Why choose Global Law Company
Trade-secret protection rewards advisers who combine sound contractual drafting with the ability to enforce quickly, and clients value that we bring both. We draft the NDAs and confidentiality arrangements that protect information, manage the employee and departure issues that threaten it, and act fast for injunctions when it is misused. For businesses whose edge lies in know-how and information, that combination of protection and enforcement is exactly what is needed.
Talk to us about protecting trade secrets in Pakistan
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Frequently Asked Questions
Through contract law, the doctrine of breach of confidence, and the confidentiality arrangements a business puts in place, rather than a single dedicated statute. Protection depends on keeping the information secret and taking reasonable steps to protect it.
For any discussion or relationship where you share confidential information, with counterparties, investors, employees, or contractors, a well-drafted NDA or confidentiality clause is the most important protection. We draft these.
Often yes, through confidentiality obligations and, where enforceable, restrictive covenants, backed by injunctions and breach-of-confidence claims. We advise on and enforce these.
Act quickly. We seek injunctions to restrain use or disclosure and pursue claims for breach of confidence and contract, including damages and delivery up of misused information.
Identify and classify confidential information, control access, mark sensitive material, and manage data security. These reduce leakage and strengthen your position if you must enforce your rights.