Pakistan’s economy offers exceptional opportunities, with one of South Asia’s most dynamic markets and an English-speaking workforce. However, foreign employers face regulatory hurdles, including establishing a legal entity and complying with complex federal and provincial labor laws, such as the Industrial Relations Act and the Minimum Wages Ordinance.
Key authorities include the Ministry of Interior, Employees’ Old-Age Benefits Institution (EOBI), and provincial departments.
An Employer of Record service helps overcome these hurdles by providing local compliance and administrative expertise.
Pakistan: Employment laws at a glance
| Currency Pakistani Rupee (PKR) | Minimum monthly salary $132 (PKR 37,000) | Working hours 48 hours per week |
Overtime Double the rate (200% of the normal wage) | Annual leave 14 days minimum | Probation period 3-6 months private sector |
Note: For comprehensive details on Pakistan’s employment regulations, refer to the Pakistan employment law guide.
What does Employer of Record mean in Pakistan?
An EOR in Pakistan is a third-party service provider that legally employs workers on behalf of another company. The EOR manages all employment-related responsibilities, including contracts, payroll, taxes, benefits, and compliance with Pakistani labor laws.
Is hiring through an EOR regulated by law?
The term “Employer of Record” is not explicitly defined in Pakistani national law. However, using EOR services in Pakistan is completely legal. The main responsibility of your EOR provider will be ensuring your compliance with local labor laws.
EOR services fall under general employment and business service regulations. These are managed by the Ministry of Interior (MoI) along with other relevant provincial departments. EOR providers must comply with The Factories Act of 1934 and the Shops and Establishments Ordinance of 1969, which form the core of Pakistan labor law.
Only companies registered with Pakistan’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SECP) can sponsor foreign employees.
Division of responsibilities: What your company does vs what the EOR handles
This table clarifies the legal and administrative responsibilities between the client company and the EOR in Pakistan:
| Responsibility | EOR role | Your company’s role |
|---|---|---|
| Employment contracts | Issues compliant contracts under Pakistan’s labor laws | Defines job roles, descriptions, and reporting structure |
| Payroll and taxes | Processes payroll, withholds income tax, and remits contributions to the Employees Old-Age Benefits Institution (EOBI) and Social Security (where applicable) | Funds salaries and reviews payroll reports |
| Employee benefits | Administers statutory benefits such as paid leave, sick leave, maternity/paternity leave, and EOBI/social security coverage | Approves benefit usage and communicates internal policies |
| Work management | Not involved in daily supervision or performance tracking | Manages day-to-day tasks, KPIs, and deliverables |
| Legal compliance | Ensures adherence to Pakistan’s labor laws, tax regulations, and mandatory employment filings | Not responsible for statutory compliance |
Essentially, with an EOR, your company avoids all the headaches of compliance and payroll. In the next section, we explore exactly how you work with an EOR to manage your teams in Pakistan.
How do EOR services work in Pakistan?
The process follows a structured compliance workflow, ensuring adherence to local labor laws:
Step 1: Plan and prepare
Government wage requirements are set at $132 (PKR 37,000) for unskilled workers, with skilled workers at PKR 45,910 ($162), coordinating with provincial labor departments.
Step 2: Hire and onboard
Employment contracts must include a complete description of job roles and responsibilities, working hours, probationary period, leave schemes, and other benefits, in accordance with the Factories Act of 1934 and the Shops and Establishments Ordinance of 1969.
Step 3: Set up and run payroll
Register with the Employees Old-Age Benefits Institution (EOBI) with employers contributing 5% and employees 1%.
Step 4: Ensure support and compliance
Submit employer and employee EOBI contributions before the 15th of every month at 5% and 1% of the minimum wage, respectively.
Step 5: Terminate and offboard
Provide at least one month’s notice before dismissing permanent employees, with easier termination processes for non-misconduct cases.
Each step helps you meet critical compliance, payroll, and documentation requirements under Pakistani labor law. Let’s explore each of these aspects in detail.
Employment contracts through EOR
EORs manage employment contracts in compliance with Pakistan’s complex labor law framework, spanning federal and provincial regulations.
Probationary period 3-6 months private sector, 1-2 years public sector | Termination notice 30 days for confirmed employees or pay in lieu | Severance pay Based on the last drawn basic salary and length of service |
In Pakistan, employers can terminate employees during the probation period without notice or reason. If an employee resigns during probation, they must give 1–15 days’ notice. Employment contracts must be in writing and include details such as job description, salary, benefits, notice period, and termination terms. English is widely accepted for documentation, with no mandatory translation requirements.
Create Pakistani employment contracts in minutes
Multiplier’s EOR can help you generate compliant contracts for your workers in Pakistan within minutes.
Payroll and tax compliance with EOR
Pakistan requires mandatory employer and employee contributions to social security systems, with EORs managing all statutory obligations and filing requirements.
| Payroll cycle | Monthly, with employees being paid as stipulated in employment contract |
|---|---|
| Employer social security | EOBI: 5% of minimum wage; SESSI: 6% for salaries below PKR 30,000 |
| Employee contributions | EOBI: 1% of minimum wage (approximately PKR 250) |
| Tax year and filings | 1 July – 30 June; monthly withholdings required |
| 13th and 14th salary | Not mandatory unless specified in contracts or company policy; profit sharing required for companies with 20+ employees |
Benefits and leave via EOR
Pakistan mandates comprehensive statutory benefits with EORs ensuring full compliance with federal and provincial regulations.
Annual leave 14 days minimum | Public holidays Kashmir Day, Pakistan Day, Labour Day, Independence Day, Iqbal Day, Christmas | Sick leave 10 days casual leave, full pay, 16 days sick leave, 50% pay |
Maternity leave 180 days for the first child, 120 days for the second, 90 days for the third – fully paid | Paternity leave Up to 30 days full salary for the first three children | Special leave Iddat leave: 130 days fully paid for widows |
Employer Social Security EOBI: 5% employer, 1% employee on a minimum wage basis | Pension Minimum pension PKR 8,500, maximum based on average wages and contribution years | Health Insurance Provincial social security for employees with monthly earnings up to PKR 18,000-22,000 |
Statutory benefits framework: Mandatory benefits include paid annual leave, sick leave, maternity leave, social security contributions, gratuity or provident fund, and compensation for workplace injuries, providing financial security and health protections.
Work permits, visas, and foreign hires
Pakistan allows foreign nationals to work under several visa types:
- Entry work visa: Single-entry, valid for 3 months for first-timers
- Extension work visa: Multiple entry, up to 2 years for renewal cases
- Business visa, Official visa, Diplomatic visa, Work visa, CPEC work visa for Chinese citizens
Processing authority: The Ministry of Interior, in coordination with Pakistan’s Board of Investment (BOI), oversees the issuance of work visas.
How EOR simplifies work authorization:
- Employer acts as sponsor for the foreign employee’s work visa, submitting a formal employment offer and necessary documentation to BOI and MOI
- BOI processes the application, the Visa Committee, and the Chairman provide recommendations to the MOI for final authorization
- Processing time: 3-4 months typically
- Work permits take 24 hours to several weeks; Common fees: Work Visa PKR 5,000, Business Visa PKR 10,000
- Employee must have a confirmed job offer from a company registered in Pakistan
EOR vs PEO vs legal entity: What are your other options for hiring in Pakistan?
The three models differ significantly in legal responsibilities, setup complexity, and operational control, with each serving different business expansion strategies.
PEO: You can hire through a PEO only if you already have a Pakistani entity. A PEO shares employment responsibilities but cannot hire on your behalf without a local company.
Set up a legal entity: This is the slowest and costliest route. You’ll need to register a company, manage compliance in-house, and handle ongoing legal, HR, and tax obligations.
| Aspect | EOR | PEO | Set up an entity in Pakistan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal employer | EOR acts as the legal employer | Co-employs workers with the client | The company is direct employer |
| Setup time | Days or weeks | No legal setup required, manages HR benefits and compliance | Months to establish |
| Compliance responsibility | EOR assumes legal responsibility for all local labor laws | Shared compliance management | Company assumes all obligations |
| Control level | Less direct HR control, maintains day-to-day work management | PEO manages payroll and compliance needs | Complete control over all operational aspects |
| Best for | Small teams, avoiding significant upfront costs | Medium-term projects | Large employee hiring and significant long-term expansion |
When expanding into Pakistan, your choice between establishing a legal entity or partnering with an EOR depends on long-term goals, speed-to-market needs, and risk tolerance.
For businesses looking to test new markets or scale teams across borders with confidence, EORs offer a flexible, low-risk solution. Stronger local presence and permanent market commitment favor legal entity establishment for growth potential, facilitating large employee hiring.
Can I employ people as independent contractors in Pakistan?
Yes, you can hire independent contractors in Pakistan for short-term or project-based work. However, proper classification is essential to avoid legal and financial risks. Pakistani authorities focus on the actual working relationship, not just the contract, to determine whether a worker is genuinely self-employed or should be considered an employee.
If a contractor works under your company’s supervision, follows your schedule, or is economically dependent on your business, they may be reclassified as an employee. Using contractors for ongoing or long-term roles can lead to compliance issues, including fines, back taxes, and reputational damage.
To stay compliant, ensure contractors maintain independence in how and when they work, and avoid integrating them into your company’s daily operations like permanent staff. For clarity and risk management, it’s best to consult legal experts familiar with Pakistan’s contractor regulations.
How much does it cost to employ someone in Pakistan?
Employment costs include mandatory statutory contributions, provincial variations, and administrative compliance expenses that vary significantly across Pakistan’s federal system.
Mandatory statutory costs:
- EOBI contributions: Employers 5%, employees 1% of minimum wage
- Provincial SESSI contribution: 6% for salaries below PKR 30,000 ($105.93)
- Progressive income tax up to 35%, with no tax on first PKR 600,000 ($2118.55)
Entity setup expenses compared to EOR: Legal entity registration with SECP, work permit fees, government application processing fees, and variable processing times depending on complexity and security clearances create significant upfront and ongoing costs.
Cost savings with an EOR
| Cost item (Entity setup) | Typical range in Pakistan | With EOR |
|---|---|---|
| Company registration and legal setup fees | $1,800 – $5,500 | $0 |
| Legal and accounting advisory (setup) | $800 – $1,500 | $0 |
| Ongoing HR and compliance management | $350 – $700 per month | Included in EOR fee |
| Payroll processing and software costs | $180 – $250 per month | Included in EOR fee |
| Time-to-hire cost (lost productivity) | 2–3 months to register and onboard | Hire in 24–72 hours |
By using an EOR, you avoid thousands of dollars in upfront costs and cut your time-to-hire from months to days, while staying fully compliant with Pakistan’s strict labor laws. Beyond cost savings, you reduce risk and improve the effectiveness of global hiring for the company and employees.
Why use an EOR in Pakistan? Risks you avoid + benefits you gain
“A lot of our clients are looking to global talent hubs now — countries like Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Philippines, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. There’s some incredible talent, and a lot of people don’t even know that.” – Jeff Lam, Arc.dev
Understanding these challenges helps businesses make informed decisions about their expansion strategy.
Key risks you avoid:
- Non-compliance with labor registration: All private sector offices with more than nine employees must legally register with EOBI
- Misclassification penalties: Significant legal and financial risks from employee misclassification
- Late tax or social filing fines: EOBI contributions must be submitted before 15th of every month
- Illegal employment of foreigners: Work permit violations carry serious legal consequences
- Breach of probation and termination rules: Improper dismissal procedures can result in costly disputes
- Currency or payroll reporting errors: Incorrect tax withholdings and social security calculations
Benefits you gain with an EOR:
- Fast onboarding and payroll setup: Deploy teams within weeks rather than months
- Full legal compliance: Expert management of federal and provincial labor laws
- Reduced admin burden: Eliminate complex registration and filing requirements
- Access to local expertise: Navigate Pakistan’s unique regulatory environment
- Lower setup costs: Avoid substantial entity establishment expenses
- Scalable employment management: Easily adjust team size based on business needs
How to choose the best EOR provider in Pakistan? A checklist
Selecting the right EOR partner requires evaluating their local expertise, compliance track record, and service quality.
- Valid licensing and registrations: Verify SECP registration and authorized sponsorship capabilities
- Proven local legal and payroll expertise: Track record with Pakistan’s complex federal and provincial laws
- Data protection and GDPR compliance: Secure handling of employee and company information
- Payroll accuracy and transparent reporting: Reliable processing with clear documentation
- Clear and transparent pricing structure: No hidden fees with comprehensive service coverage
Why choose Multiplier’s EOR in Pakistan?
Multiplier offers end-to-end EOR services in Pakistan, managing contracts, payroll, benefits, and work permits. With local expertise in labor laws, EOBI, and tax compliance, Multiplier helps you hire talent in days while staying fully compliant and minimizing admin work.
What G2 users say about Multiplier
“What I appreciate the most is the support team. Whenever issues come up, it’s really easy to reach them. They’re always helpful and quick to resolve problems, so I don’t have to worry about anything dragging on. It gives me peace of mind knowing that if something goes wrong, they’ve got it covered.”- Francyne Clare P.
That’s why Multiplier is ranked the most implementation-ready EOR on G2 — our customers consistently highlight the platform’s simplicity, responsive support, and deep compliance expertise. For example, one client saved 40% annually on payroll and operations costs through our global EOR solution.
Ready to hire top talent in Pakistan without the complexity of entity setup? Book a demo with Multiplier today.
FAQs
What is the minimum wage in Pakistan?
The current minimum wage is PKR 37,000 ($130.64) per month for unskilled workers, with skilled workers earning PKR 45,910 ($162.10) minimum.
How long does it take to get a work permit in Pakistan?
Work permits typically take 3-4 months to process through the Ministry of Interior and Board of Investment.
Are EOR services legal in Pakistan?
Yes, EOR services are completely legal. The EOR provider ensures compliance with all local labor laws and regulations.
What are the main employment benefits required in Pakistan?
Mandatory benefits include 14 days of annual leave, EOBI contributions, maternity leave up to 180 days, and provincial social security coverage.