Compliantly Engage Contractors in Pakistan
Our workforce compliance guide to Pakistan covers everything you need to compliantly hire, onboard, manage and pay independent contractors in Pakistan.
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Our workforce compliance guide to Pakistan covers everything you need to compliantly hire, onboard, manage and pay independent contractors in Pakistan.
Worksuite offers a whole range of professional services and compliance tools, making it easy to compliantly engage independent contractors in Pakistan.
We work with the best legal partners in Pakistan to create contract templates that are compliant with local laws to protect you and your contractors from fines and penalties.
Our bespoke onboarding workflows and screening questionnaires will help you determine the worker status in compliance with Pakistani law, based on which you can decide to engage a worker as a contractor or full-time worker—all without needing to set up your business entity.
Any business hiring in Pakistan should understand the important legal distinction between who classifies as an independent contractor and who can be hired as an employee. Fines or penalties may be issued to businesses that are hiring independent contractors under the guise of employment.
Understanding the distinctions between employees and independent contractors is critical to compliantly engaging workers in Pakistan. It is important to work with a partner like Worksuite to ensure you put in place an engagement framework that accurately classifies freelancers as independent contractors for you and lets you know when freelance talent must be engaged as an independent contractor or employed directly.
This is critical to compliantly engaging workers in Pakistan and thereby avoiding severe legal, financial, and other penalties.
Employment laws include: West Pakistan Industrial and Commercial Employment (Standing Orders) Ordinance 1968; West Pakistan Shops and Establishments Ordinance 1969; The Provincial Employees Social Security Ordinance 1965; amongst others. Acts are published in the Official Gazette. However, labor laws can also differ by province.
There are no employment laws directly governing the hiring of independent contractors in Pakistan.
Hiring practices are generally not regulated by employment laws in Pakistan. Candidates typically must undergo a pre-employment medical check-up and present a clear criminal record. Employers cannot discriminate against individuals with disabilities. All employment contracts must contain certain mandatory information, including: employer and employee names; commencement date (and duration, if fixed-term); job title and description of work; place of work; salary; termination notice period.
Independent contractors can be hired directly or via an intermediary, such as a staffing agency or umbrella company. Independent contractors may be found via word of mouth, job boards, social networks, industry bodies, or other forums. Online freelance job boards are hugely popular in Pakistan. Although hiring practices vary, the contractor may be asked to provide a CV, portfolio and references, and possibly sign an NDA.
Three categories of independent contractor are:
Employees are subject to income tax which is withheld at source. However, all individuals are still required to submit tax returns if their salary exceeds PKR 400,000.
Pakistan has a progressive tax rate, which includes a lump sum plus a specific percentage for each tax band.
Contractors and companies can file their tax returns online via the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), or in paper via one of the Taxpayer Facilitation Counters of the relevant Regional Tax Office.
Companies must typically file their corporate taxes by 31 December for the previous year, and are required to pay advance tax in quarterly installments.
Note: In early 2022 the government announced a 0% tax rate for freelancers working in IT.
The tax year is 1 July to 30 June. Employees’ income tax is deducted from their salary at source and remitted by their employer.
Employers with more than five employees must make social security contributions towards their employees’ Old-Age Pension. Companies with an income of more than PKR 500,000 must contribute 2% towards the Pakistan’s Workers Welfare Fund.
There are no specific additional requirements levied upon companies who hire contractors.
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Employees are paid according to a schedule defined within their contract.
Independent contractors are paid according to a schedule defined within their contract.
Workers’ rights include: maximum 48 hours per week; minimum wage of PKR 15,000 per month (with further adjustments varying by province); maximum weekly overtime of 12 hours, and yearly of 624 hours; paid holiday leave (after one year’s service); bereavement leave; marriage leave; paid national and public holidays; maternity leave.
Employees who are classified as “workman” (see the explanation below this table) enjoy additional rights protected by Pakistani labor law. For other employees, their employment contract is the main determinant of any additional rights.
There are no statutory benefits for independent contractors.
Statutory benefits include overtime pay of 2x normal wages, and public holiday pay of 3x normal wages.
Independent contractors’ benefits (if any) are defined in the contract.
Employees are typically paid in cash or via bank transfer, and on an hourly, weekly, monthly, or yearly basis. Employees paid on a yearly or monthly basis must receive at least one payment month.
Independent contractors typically send an invoice (or another form of payment request) and typically require payment within 14 days or 28 days of submission unless stipulated otherwise in the contract. Independent contractors are not paid by payroll in most cases
Employment laws include: West Pakistan Industrial and Commercial Employment (Standing Orders) Ordinance 1968; West Pakistan Shops and Establishments Ordinance 1969; The Provincial Employees Social Security Ordinance 1965; amongst others. Acts are published in the Official Gazette. However, labor laws can also differ by province.
Hiring practices are generally not regulated by employment laws in Pakistan. Candidates typically must undergo a pre-employment medical check-up and present a clear criminal record. Employers cannot discriminate against individuals with disabilities. All employment contracts must contain certain mandatory information, including: employer and employee names; commencement date (and duration, if fixed-term); job title and description of work; place of work; salary; termination notice period.
Employees are subject to income tax which is withheld at source. However, all individuals are still required to submit tax returns if their salary exceeds PKR 400,000.
Pakistan has a progressive tax rate, which includes a lump sum plus a specific percentage for each tax band.
The tax year is 1 July to 30 June. Employees’ income tax is deducted from their salary at source and remitted by their employer.
Employers with more than five employees must make social security contributions towards their employees’ Old-Age Pension. Companies with an income of more than PKR 500,000 must contribute 2% towards the Pakistan’s Workers Welfare Fund.
N/A
Employees are paid according to a schedule defined within their contract.
Workers’ rights include: maximum 48 hours per week; minimum wage of PKR 15,000 per month (with further adjustments varying by province); maximum weekly overtime of 12 hours, and yearly of 624 hours; paid holiday leave (after one year’s service); bereavement leave; marriage leave; paid national and public holidays; maternity leave.
Employees who are classified as “workman” (see the explanation below this table) enjoy additional rights protected by Pakistani labor law. For other employees, their employment contract is the main determinant of any additional rights.
Statutory benefits include overtime pay of 2x normal wages, and public holiday pay of 3x normal wages.
Employees are typically paid in cash or via bank transfer, and on an hourly, weekly, monthly, or yearly basis. Employees paid on a yearly or monthly basis must receive at least one payment month.
There are no employment laws directly governing the hiring of independent contractors in Pakistan.
Independent contractors can be hired directly or via an intermediary, such as a staffing agency or umbrella company. Independent contractors may be found via word of mouth, job boards, social networks, industry bodies, or other forums. Online freelance job boards are hugely popular in Pakistan. Although hiring practices vary, the contractor may be asked to provide a CV, portfolio and references, and possibly sign an NDA.
Three categories of independent contractor are:
Contractors and companies can file their tax returns online via the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), or in paper via one of the Taxpayer Facilitation Counters of the relevant Regional Tax Office.
Companies must typically file their corporate taxes by 31 December for the previous year, and are required to pay advance tax in quarterly installments.
Note: In early 2022 the government announced a 0% tax rate for freelancers working in IT.
There are no specific additional requirements levied upon companies who hire contractors.
N/A
Independent contractors are paid according to a schedule defined within their contract.
There are no statutory benefits for independent contractors.
Independent contractors’ benefits (if any) are defined in the contract.
Independent contractors typically send an invoice (or another form of payment request) and typically require payment within 14 days or 28 days of submission unless stipulated otherwise in the contract. Independent contractors are not paid by payroll in most cases
Self-employment is high in Pakistan, with a large proportion of the population increasingly using digital tools and online freelance platforms to find work. The World Bank estimates that 56% of Pakistan’s population are self-employed (as of 2019). However, compared to many other countries, Pakistan’s employment laws (including case law and precedent) remain under-developed regarding employment classifications.
Pakistan doesn’t legally distinguish between an “independent contractor” and an “employee”, although it does differentiate between an “employee” and a “workman”. According to the West Pakistan Industrial and Commercial Employment (Standing Orders) Ordinance of 1968, a workman is “any person employed in any industrial or commercial establishment to do any skilled or unskilled, manual or clerical work for hire or reward”. That said, employment classifications are often fluid.
Nevertheless, if the real substance of the company-contractor relationship proves to effectively be an employment relationship, the hiring company may suffer legal and financial penalties. It is especially important to leverage an employment service partner like Worksuite when hiring in Pakistan in order to ensure that independent contractors fall under the correct working relationship with your business.
Who is an independent contractor?
As explained above, the legal framework around the classification of independent contractors is under-developed in Pakistan. However, an individual is more likely to be considered a contractor than an employee if they:
There are three main categories under which independent contractors are likely to operate in Pakistan:
There are two main types of contracting models for working with independent contractors in Pakistan.
A. Direct engagement of the contractor as self-employed or registered via their own company. Under this model, the hiring company engages directly with the independent contractor – either as an individual sole trader or as a limited company (see above) – and establishes a direct contract for the provision of services. The hiring company then pays the independent contractor directly, in accordance with the terms of the contract.
B. Third party. These firms come in two forms and both are specially designed to vet and engage freelancers compliantly as either contract employees or independent contractors on your behalf.
Companies hiring independent contractors in Pakistan should avoid making payments directly through their payroll system. Beyond these guidelines, there are no specific legal requirements related to paying contractors in Pakistan. The contract should stipulate the preferred payment method agreed upon by both parties.
The tax year in Pakistan is 1 July to 30 June. Pakistan has a progressive tax rate which includes a lump sum plus a percentage for each tax band, and employees are taxed at source. All individuals – including those taxed at source – are required to submit tax returns if their salary exceeds PKR 400,000, although in early 2022 the government announced a 0% tax rate for self-employed freelancers working in IT.
Independent contractors must file and pay their own income taxes or must pay business taxes if they run a registered company (LLC or non-LLC). Companies must typically file their business taxes by 31 December for the previous year and are required to pay advance tax in quarterly installments.
Employers with more than five employees must make social security contributions to their employees’ Old-Age Pension. Other social security benefits include: Survivors’ Pension, Invalidity Pension, and Old-Age Grant, each of which has its own criteria and requirements. Companies with an income of more than PKR 500,000 must also pay 2% to Pakistan’s Workers Welfare Fund.