Last reviewed: 2 May 2026
Pakistan’s dispute resolution landscape shifted materially in the first quarter of 2026 with two reforms that every general counsel, compliance officer and cross-border investor needs to understand. The Pakistan trade dispute resolution rules 2026, notified through SRO‑552 on 2 April 2026, operationalise the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission (TDRC) and establish detailed procedures for filing, processing and adjudicating trade disputes. Separately, the Income Tax Ordinance (Third Amendment) Act, 2026, passed by the National Assembly on 23 January 2026, restructures the ADR Committee for tax disputes, tightens timelines and introduces revised appointment procedures designed to reduce delays.
Together, these instruments create new pre-litigation pathways that directly affect how commercial contracts, SOE agreements and international arbitration clauses should be drafted and managed going forward.
The 2026 reforms touch two distinct but converging areas of Pakistani ADR law. Below is a concise summary of what changed, who is affected and what to do now.
Key changes at a glance:
What to do in the next 30 days:
The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules, 2026 were notified via SRO‑552 in the Gazette of Pakistan on 2 April 2026. They run to ten pages and establish the procedural architecture for the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission (TDRC) created under the Trade Dispute Resolution Act, 2022. The Rules lay down comprehensive procedures for filing, processing and adjudicating trade disputes through the TDRC framework.
Rule 1 confirms the short title (“Trade Dispute Resolution Rules, 2026”) and immediate commencement. Rule 2 sets out definitions that align with the parent Trade Dispute Resolution Act, 2022. The Rules apply to disputes arising from cross-border and domestic trade transactions that fall within the TDRC’s subject-matter jurisdiction. Industry observers expect the broad definitional language to draw in a wide range of commercial disagreements, from tariff classification disputes to contractual defaults on import/export obligations, though judicial interpretation will ultimately settle the outer boundaries.
The SRO prescribes a structured complaint process. Aggrieved parties must submit a complaint using the prescribed Trade Complaint Pro forma (available on the TDRC website) with supporting documentation. The TDRC then undertakes preliminary examination, issues notices and proceeds to investigation and adjudication within specified deadlines.
| Procedure Step | Responsible Body | Key Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Filing of trade complaint (prescribed pro forma) | Complainant / TDRC Registry | Must include supporting documentation; filed with the TDRC |
| Preliminary examination and notice | TDRC | TDRC screens complaint and issues notice to respondent |
| Investigation and evidence gathering | TDRC / designated officers | Parties provide evidence; TDRC may request additional information |
| Adjudication / determination | TDRC | Determination issued within the timeline prescribed by the Rules |
| Remedies and enforcement | TDRC / Ministry of Commerce | Remedies as specified under the TDR Act, 2022 and the Rules |
The Rules aim to establish a fast and transparent system for resolving trade disputes. The likely practical effect will be that parties with disputes falling within the TDRC’s jurisdiction will face pressure, from counterparties and from procedural efficiency, to use this channel rather than default to the civil courts.
The second major reform concerns Pakistan ADR amendments 2026 on the tax side. The Income Tax Ordinance (Third Amendment) Act, 2026 was passed by the National Assembly on 23 January 2026 with the stated purpose of strengthening the Alternative Dispute Resolution mechanism for resolving tax disputes. The changes were subsequently analysed by KPMG in a February 2026 advisory confirming their operational significance.
The amendment restructures the constitution and composition of the ADR Committee Pakistan. Key changes include revised procedures for appointing the ADR Committee chairperson, designed to increase the independence and credibility of the committee. The amendment also introduces tighter timelines for the committee to conclude its proceedings, addressing one of the most persistent criticisms of the old regime, that cases languished without resolution. Early indications suggest these timeline provisions will impose genuine discipline, though enforcement of procedural deadlines within government machinery will remain the critical test.
For in-house tax teams and compliance officers, the practical steps under the Income Tax ADR amendments 2026 can be summarised as follows:
The practical effect for taxpayers is that the ADR route has become a more structured and time-bound alternative to lengthy appellate tribunal proceedings. Industry observers expect uptake to increase, particularly among corporate taxpayers facing large assessments where a negotiated settlement is commercially preferable to multi-year litigation.
One of the most pressing questions for practitioners is how the Pakistan trade dispute resolution rules 2026 and the tax ADR changes interact with existing legal infrastructure, principally the Arbitration Act, 1940, the Trade Dispute Resolution Act, 2022 and Pakistan’s international arbitration treaty obligations.
The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules operate under the umbrella of the TDR Act, 2022. They do not expressly repeal or override existing arbitration agreements between private parties. Where a valid arbitration clause exists in a commercial contract and the dispute is not one that falls exclusively within the TDRC’s statutory mandate, the arbitration agreement should, in principle, be honoured, consistent with Pakistan’s obligations under the New York Convention. However, where a dispute is characterised as a “trade dispute” within the TDRC’s defined jurisdiction, the likely practical effect is that a party may be expected to engage with the TDRC process, particularly if the counterparty invokes it.
Counsel should assess, on a case-by-case basis, whether exhausting the TDRC route is a procedural precondition or merely an optional parallel channel.
For international arbitration Pakistan 2026, the critical consideration is seat selection and enforcement. A foreign-seated arbitration award remains enforceable in Pakistan under existing recognition and enforcement laws, but the existence of a parallel TDRC process could create tactical complications, including stay applications and jurisdictional challenges.
| Entity Type | Default ADR Pathway Under 2026 Rules | Practical Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Private commercial parties (domestic) | TDRC for trade disputes; courts/arbitration for other commercial disputes | Review contracts; add TDRC carve-in or carve-out language depending on dispute type |
| Private commercial parties (cross-border) | TDRC where trade dispute criteria met; foreign arbitration preserved if validly agreed | Maintain foreign-seat arbitration clause; add express waiver of TDRC for non-trade disputes |
| State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) | TDRC for trade disputes; tax ADR for FBR assessments; domestic arbitration subject to consent requirements | Obtain internal approvals for forum selection; consider hybrid clauses with domestic pre-ADR step |
| Taxpayer vs. FBR | Revised ADR Committee under Income Tax Ordinance amendments | Invoke ADR early; use tighter timelines to lock FBR into structured negotiation before tribunal |
The practical imperative for any in-house team is to update dispute resolution clause Pakistan language in both new and existing contracts. The 2026 reforms introduce new forums and procedural pathways that, if not addressed in the contract, could create ambiguity, jurisdictional overlap or unintended waiver of rights. Below are three ready-to-use clause redlines.
Redline A, Cross-Border Arbitration (Seat Outside Pakistan)
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the [LCIA/ICC/SIAC] Rules. The seat of arbitration shall be [London/Singapore/Dubai]. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The parties expressly agree that any trade dispute falling within the jurisdiction of the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission under the Trade Dispute Resolution Act, 2022 and the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules, 2026 shall not displace this arbitration agreement, which shall take precedence to the fullest extent permitted by law.”
Negotiation note: This clause is strongest where both parties are private commercial entities. For SOE counterparties, expect pushback on the express TDRC carve-out, be prepared to negotiate a tiered approach (see Redline C).
Redline B, Hybrid Clause (Mediation, Then Arbitration, With TDRC Opt-In)
“The parties shall first attempt to resolve any dispute through good-faith mediation within [30] days of written notice. If mediation fails, the dispute shall be referred to arbitration under the [specified] rules, seated in [city]. Notwithstanding the foregoing, either party may elect to refer a trade dispute to the TDRC under the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules, 2026, provided such referral does not prejudice the other party’s right to commence or continue arbitration proceedings.”
Negotiation note: This preserves flexibility. The TDRC opt-in is non-exclusive, meaning it does not create a mandatory gateway. Useful for joint ventures and long-term supply agreements where preserving the commercial relationship matters.
Redline C, SOE-Specific Clause (Domestic Pre-ADR With Consent Mechanism)
“Prior to commencing any arbitration or litigation, the parties shall submit the dispute to the relevant ADR mechanism prescribed by applicable Pakistani law, including where applicable the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission or the ADR Committee under the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 (as amended). Such pre-ADR step shall be completed or deemed exhausted within [60] days. Thereafter, any unresolved dispute shall be referred to arbitration seated in [Islamabad/Karachi], conducted under [specified] rules. [Party A] confirms that it has obtained all necessary internal approvals and consents for this dispute resolution mechanism.”
Negotiation note: This clause addresses SOE dispute resolution Pakistan requirements by incorporating a domestic pre-ADR step and an express consent confirmation, critical for state entities that may face internal governance constraints on agreeing foreign fora.
What to keep vs. what to remove in existing clauses:
General counsels and litigation teams need a structured decision framework to navigate the overlapping ADR regimes now in force. The decision tree below provides a starting point.
Tactical considerations for litigators and arbitration practitioners:
| Date / Instrument | Event | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 23 January 2026 | National Assembly passes Income Tax (Third Amendment) Act, 2026 | ADR Committee composition and timelines for tax disputes changed, new pre-litigation steps for taxpayers |
| 2 April 2026 | SRO‑552, Trade Dispute Resolution Rules, 2026 notified (Ministry of Commerce, Gazette of Pakistan) | TDRC operational rules in force immediately, procedures for filing and adjudicating trade disputes now prescribed |
| 2022 (baseline) | Trade Dispute Resolution Act, 2022 | Legislative framework for TDRC and trade dispute jurisdiction; the 2026 Rules operationalise key provisions of this Act |
The 2026 reforms carry sector-specific implications that merit careful attention. SOE dispute resolution Pakistan issues are particularly acute: state-owned entities face internal governance constraints, public procurement regulations and potential state immunity considerations when selecting dispute resolution fora. The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules may, in practice, channel SOE trade disputes toward the TDRC rather than international arbitration, even absent an express statutory prohibition, because internal approval processes for foreign fora may become more difficult to satisfy.
In the energy and oil & gas sector, where contracts routinely include ICC or LCIA arbitration clauses, the key risk is that a trade-related component of a broader contractual dispute could be carved out and referred to the TDRC by a counterparty seeking tactical advantage. Construction contracts, particularly those involving government agencies, should incorporate pre-ADR steps that satisfy the 2026 requirements while preserving access to arbitration for technical disputes. In banking and financial services, the tax ADR amendments are the more relevant reform: banks facing large tax assessments should evaluate the revised ADR Committee route as a potentially faster alternative to prolonged appellate proceedings.
To assist in-house legal teams with immediate compliance, the following resources should be obtained and adapted:
The Pakistan trade dispute resolution rules 2026 and the parallel Income Tax ADR amendments represent the most significant reconfiguration of Pakistan’s ADR infrastructure in recent years. For general counsels, compliance officers and cross-border investors, the message is clear: dispute resolution clauses drafted before April 2026 almost certainly need updating, pending tax assessments should be evaluated against the faster ADR Committee timelines, and SOEs must formalise forum-selection approvals before disputes arise.
The reforms are still in their early operational phase, and the first TDRC determinations and reconstituted ADR Committee proceedings will set important precedents. Industry observers expect that parties who engage proactively, by updating contracts, filing early ADR applications and monitoring procedural developments, will be best positioned to benefit from the faster, more structured resolution pathways that these reforms are designed to deliver.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Haider Waheed at HWP Law , a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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