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Dispute Resolution in Pakistan (2026): TDRC, Tax ADR & USD 5,000 Threshold

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Dispute resolution in Pakistan has entered a new phase. The Ministry of Commerce’s notification of SRO‑552 on 2 April 2026 introduced the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026, which operationalise the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission (TDRC) and set a USD 5,000 jurisdictional threshold for trade claims. Simultaneously, the Income Tax (Third Amendment) 2026 has restructured the constitution and procedural timelines of ADR committees for tax disputes, compressing resolution windows and changing how taxpayers access relief. For general counsel, exporters and commercial litigators, these twin reforms demand an immediate review of forum‑selection clauses, internal escalation protocols and enforcement strategies, this guide provides the practical roadmap.

Key Takeaways at a Glance

  • TDRC is now fully operational. The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026 (SRO‑552) prescribe filing procedures, evidence standards and timelines for claims routed through the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission.
  • USD 5,000 minimum claim value. Only trade disputes with a claimed value of at least USD 5,000 (or PKR equivalent at the State Bank of Pakistan’s prevailing rate) fall within TDRC jurisdiction.
  • Arbitration clauses remain relevant. Where a valid arbitration agreement exists, the Rules provide for allocation to arbitration, but parties must understand the procedural interplay to avoid jurisdictional challenges.
  • Tax ADR timelines are compressed. The Income Tax (Third Amendment) 2026 reforms reconstitute ADR committees and shorten the period for concluding proceedings, as detailed in KPMG’s analysis.
  • Enforcement pathways diverge. TDRC determinations, arbitral awards and tax ADR orders each follow distinct enforcement routes, counsel must map these before selecting a forum.

Background, The ADR Legal Framework in Pakistan

Pakistan’s modern alternative dispute resolution architecture rests on three legislative pillars. The Alternative Dispute Resolution Act 2017 established a voluntary, party‑driven framework for resolving civil and commercial disputes outside traditional courts. The Act empowered designated ADR centres and accredited neutrals to conduct mediation, conciliation and, where parties consent, binding arbitration. In 2023, the Ministry of Law and Justice supplemented this framework with the Mediation and Accreditation Rules, which introduced quality‑control standards for mediators and centres. The third pillar, and the one generating the most commercial attention in 2026, is the Trade Dispute Resolution Commission, created under the Trade Dispute Resolution Act 2022 and now fully operationalised by SRO‑552.

These layers sit alongside Pakistan’s long‑standing Arbitration Act 1940 (for domestic arbitrations) and the Recognition and Enforcement (Arbitration Agreements and Foreign Arbitral Awards) Act 2011, which gives domestic effect to the New York Convention. As GlobaLex’s overview of ADR in Pakistan notes, the practical uptake of ADR has historically been constrained by judicial culture and enforcement uncertainty, making the 2026 reforms all the more significant for dispute resolution in Pakistan.

Quick Definitions, Mediation, Arbitration and Conciliation

  • Mediation. A facilitated, non‑binding process in which a neutral mediator assists the parties in reaching a settlement. Under the ADR Act 2017, mediated settlements can be rendered enforceable by a court upon application.
  • Arbitration. A binding adjudicative process in which one or more arbitrators render an award. Domestic arbitrations follow the Arbitration Act 1940; international commercial arbitrations may be governed by party‑chosen institutional rules (ICC, LCIA, SIAC) and are enforceable under the New York Convention via the 2011 Act.
  • Conciliation. A hybrid process where the conciliator may propose settlement terms. Frequently used in labour and trade disputes, conciliation outcomes under the TDRC framework can become binding if accepted by both parties.

Where TDRC Sits in the Architecture

The Trade Dispute Resolution Commission was established under the Trade Dispute Resolution Act 2022 as a specialised body to resolve trade‑related commercial disputes, particularly those involving exporters, importers, trade bodies and their foreign counterparties. Unlike general ADR centres accredited under the 2017 Act, the TDRC exercises quasi‑judicial authority specifically over trade disputes and can allocate matters to arbitration panels or conciliators depending on the nature and value of the claim. The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026 now supply the procedural detail that the 2022 Act left to subsidiary legislation.

Key takeaway for counsel: the TDRC is not a replacement for commercial arbitration or court litigation, it is a parallel, specialised track with its own jurisdictional boundaries and procedural rules. Correct forum selection requires mapping the claim against all three options.

What the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026 Cover (SRO‑552)

The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026, notified via SRO‑552 on 2 April 2026, prescribe the operational framework for filing, processing and resolving claims before the TDRC. The Rules cover five core areas: eligible claimants and respondents, claim filing procedures, evidentiary standards, allocation to conciliation or arbitration, and timelines for each procedural stage. As The Friday Times noted, the framework represents the most significant structural change to Pakistan’s trade dispute resolution landscape in over a decade.

Rule Area Practical Effect Client Action Required
Eligible claimants Pakistani exporters, importers, trade bodies and their foreign counterparties may file claims involving goods, services or trade finance instruments Review whether existing and prospective disputes fall within the TDRC’s subject‑matter jurisdiction
Filing procedure Claims must be filed on prescribed forms with supporting documentary evidence, including contracts, invoices and correspondence Prepare a document bundle compliant with the SRO‑552 evidence schedule before filing
Mandatory conciliation stage The Rules require an initial conciliation attempt before allocation to arbitration, unless both parties opt out in writing Decide early whether to consent to or waive conciliation, document the decision in writing
Arbitration allocation If conciliation fails or is waived, the TDRC allocates the dispute to an arbitration panel drawn from its accredited roster Assess whether the TDRC arbitration panel or a party‑appointed arbitrator under an existing clause is more advantageous
Timelines Prescribed time limits for each stage, conciliation, arbitration hearings and award issuance, are set out in the Rules Map the TDRC timeline against contractual limitation periods and parallel proceedings deadlines

For a concise summary of SRO‑552’s notification and immediate implications, see our earlier alert on the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026.

Key takeaway for counsel: the mandatory conciliation stage is the most operationally significant feature, it creates both a procedural obligation and a strategic opportunity to resolve disputes before the cost and formality of arbitration.

Jurisdiction, The USD 5,000 Threshold and Claim Value Calculation

One of the most discussed provisions of the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026 is the minimum jurisdictional threshold: the TDRC will only accept claims where the disputed amount equals or exceeds USD 5,000. This USD 5,000 threshold is calculated by reference to the principal claim amount, that is, the value of the goods, services or trade finance instrument in dispute, converted to United States dollars at the State Bank of Pakistan’s prevailing mid‑rate on the date of filing.

What Counts Towards the Claim Value

  • Principal amount. The face value of unpaid invoices, undelivered goods, defective‑goods damages or other primary relief sought.
  • Contractual penalties and liquidated damages. Where the underlying contract specifies a penalty or liquidated damages clause, those amounts are included in the claim value calculation.
  • Interest. Pre‑filing accrued interest may be included if quantified and documented at the time of filing. Post‑filing interest is generally not counted towards the threshold.
  • Set‑offs and counterclaims. The threshold is applied to the gross claim amount, not the net amount after set‑offs. A respondent’s counterclaim is assessed independently for jurisdictional purposes.

Worked Example, Export Contract Dispute

Consider a Pakistani textile exporter (“Exporter A”) who ships goods worth PKR 2,100,000 to a buyer in the UAE. The buyer disputes quality and withholds payment. At the SBP mid‑rate on the filing date (assume PKR 280 = USD 1), the principal claim converts to USD 7,500, comfortably above the USD 5,000 threshold. Exporter A also claims liquidated damages of PKR 210,000 (USD 750), bringing the total claim to USD 8,250. The TDRC has jurisdiction.

Now consider a smaller dispute: a services invoice of PKR 1,260,000 at the same exchange rate converts to USD 4,500, below the threshold. This claim cannot be filed with the TDRC and must be pursued through the regular courts or, if a valid arbitration clause exists, through private arbitration.

Key takeaway for counsel: always convert the claim value at the prevailing SBP rate on the intended filing date. If the claim is close to the USD 5,000 line, consider whether including documented liquidated damages or accrued interest pushes it over the threshold.

Dispute Resolution in Pakistan: TDRC vs Arbitration vs Courts

Selecting the right forum is the single most consequential decision in any commercial dispute. The 2026 reforms have not eliminated choice, they have added a structured alternative. The following comparison addresses the core question practitioners face: when to use the TDRC, when to insist on arbitration and when court litigation remains the appropriate path.

Forum Typical Advantages Key Practical Limits
TDRC (Trade Dispute Resolution Commission) Specialised trade panel; prescribed timelines; mandatory conciliation stage may yield early settlement; lower procedural costs than court; government‑backed institutional framework USD 5,000 minimum threshold; limited to trade disputes; arbitration panel drawn from TDRC roster (less party autonomy); developing enforcement track record; no direct New York Convention enforceability for TDRC‑specific orders
Domestic / International Arbitration Full party autonomy (choice of arbitrator, seat, rules); international enforceability under the New York Convention (via the 2011 Act); confidentiality; ability to choose specialised arbitrators in complex sectors Potentially higher costs (institutional fees, arbitrator fees); no mandatory conciliation filter; enforcement still requires court application; Arbitration Act 1940 provisions can create procedural complexity for domestic seats
Civil Courts Full appellate hierarchy; broad jurisdictional reach; ability to grant injunctive and interim relief; established precedent base Significant delays (multi‑year timelines common); higher litigation costs; less specialisation in trade disputes; limited confidentiality; risk of judicial review adding layers of proceedings

Arbitration Agreements and TDRC Allocation

A critical question for parties with pre‑existing arbitration clauses is whether the TDRC Rules override or interact with those agreements. Under SRO‑552, the TDRC respects valid arbitration agreements: where both parties have agreed to arbitration in their underlying contract, the TDRC can allocate the dispute to arbitration rather than imposing its own conciliation–arbitration pathway. However, the allocation mechanism means the TDRC retains an initial gatekeeping role, it reviews the claim, confirms jurisdiction and then directs the matter to arbitration if a valid clause exists.

Industry observers expect this gatekeeping function to generate early jurisdictional challenges, particularly where one party wishes to use the TDRC’s conciliation stage while the other insists on proceeding directly to institutional arbitration under a clause specifying ICC or LCIA rules. The likely practical effect will be that parties with well‑drafted arbitration clauses retain the right to insist on their chosen forum, but they may need to engage with the TDRC’s initial procedural steps before the allocation is formalised.

Forum Selection Decision Tree

  1. Is the dispute trade‑related and above USD 5,000? If yes, TDRC jurisdiction exists. Proceed to step 2. If no, consider courts or private arbitration.
  2. Does a valid arbitration clause exist? If yes, the TDRC is likely to allocate to arbitration, but confirm whether the TDRC’s conciliation stage applies first. If no, the TDRC’s own conciliation–arbitration track is the default.
  3. Is early settlement likely? If yes, the TDRC’s mandatory conciliation stage offers a cost‑effective pathway. If no, direct arbitration may be faster for complex, high‑value claims.
  4. Is international enforceability critical? If yes, insist on arbitration with a seat in a New York Convention jurisdiction, TDRC orders alone may not enjoy automatic international recognition.
  5. Is interim relief urgently needed? If yes, consider court proceedings for injunctive relief, with arbitration or TDRC as the substantive forum.

For a deeper analysis of how TDRC allocation interacts with institutional arbitration clauses, see our coverage of top countries for international arbitration and dispute resolution.

Key takeaway for counsel: the existence of the TDRC does not extinguish arbitration rights. It adds a procedural layer that must be navigated, and may offer strategic advantages for certain trade disputes, particularly where early settlement is realistic.

Tax Dispute Resolution Pakistan: Income Tax Amendment 2026, Constitution, Timelines and Remedies

The second major reform affecting dispute resolution in Pakistan in 2026 concerns tax disputes. The Income Tax (Third Amendment) 2026, analysed in detail by KPMG, restructures the ADR committee mechanism for resolving income tax disputes between taxpayers and the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).

ADR Committee Constitution, What Has Changed

The amendment modifies the composition of ADR committees. Under the prior regime, committees were constituted on an ad hoc basis with significant discretion in member selection. The 2026 changes introduce more standardised criteria for committee membership, including requirements for representation from the FBR, a retired judicial officer and a chartered accountant or tax practitioner. Early indications suggest this is intended to improve both the perceived independence and the technical competence of the committees.

The amendment also introduces compressed procedural timelines. Previously, ADR proceedings could extend indefinitely in practice, undermining their utility as a fast‑track alternative to appellate tribunals. The 2026 changes impose stricter deadlines for the conclusion of ADR proceedings and the issuance of committee orders.

Procedural Timeline, New Deadlines

Stage Previous Position 2026 Amendment
Application filing No prescribed deadline from date of assessment order Application must be filed within a defined period following the assessment or amended assessment order
Committee constitution Ad hoc, significant delays common Committee to be constituted within a prescribed number of days of application acceptance
Hearing and conclusion No mandatory cut‑off Proceedings must conclude within a compressed window; failure to conclude within the deadline results in the matter reverting to the appellate tribunal track
Stay of recovery Discretionary Automatic stay of tax recovery during the pendency of ADR proceedings, subject to conditions

The automatic stay of recovery is particularly significant for corporate taxpayers. It means that once ADR proceedings are validly initiated, the FBR cannot enforce collection of the disputed amount, providing breathing room for businesses facing large reassessments.

Key takeaway for counsel: the compressed timelines are a double‑edged sword. Taxpayers gain faster resolution and automatic recovery stays, but must be prepared to present their case fully within a shorter window. Evidence gathering, expert reports and documentation must be front‑loaded.

Enforcement of ADR Awards in Pakistan

The value of any dispute resolution mechanism depends on whether its outcomes can be enforced. Pakistan’s enforcement landscape for ADR outcomes varies by forum, creating a patchwork that counsel must navigate carefully.

  • TDRC determinations. Orders and awards issued through the TDRC’s conciliation and arbitration processes are enforceable through the mechanisms prescribed in the Trade Dispute Resolution Act 2022 and the 2026 Rules. In practice, this means application to the designated court for execution. The enforcement track record is still developing, given the Commission’s recent operationalisation.
  • Domestic arbitration awards. Awards rendered under the Arbitration Act 1940 are enforceable as decrees of the court upon filing in the appropriate civil court. Grounds for setting aside are limited but well‑litigated.
  • International arbitration awards. Pakistan acceded to the New York Convention, and the Recognition and Enforcement (Arbitration Agreements and Foreign Arbitral Awards) Act 2011 provides the domestic enforcement mechanism. Awards from Convention states are enforceable through the High Court, subject to the standard Convention defences.
  • Tax ADR committee orders. Orders issued by reconstituted ADR committees under the Income Tax Ordinance are binding on both the taxpayer and the FBR. Non‑compliance by the FBR can be challenged through the appellate tribunal and, ultimately, the High Court.

Enforcement Checklist

  1. Confirm the legal basis of the award or order (TDRC Rules, Arbitration Act 1940, New York Convention 2011 Act, or Income Tax Ordinance).
  2. Identify the competent court for enforcement (designated court for TDRC; civil court for domestic arbitration; High Court for foreign awards; appellate tribunal for tax ADR).
  3. Assess whether interim measures are needed to preserve assets pending enforcement, apply for injunctive relief if dissipation risk exists.
  4. For cross‑border enforcement, confirm whether the award debtor holds assets in a New York Convention jurisdiction and prepare parallel enforcement applications as needed.
  5. Monitor developments in digital courts 2026, Pakistan’s ongoing digitisation of court filings and service may accelerate enforcement timelines for all categories.

Key takeaway for counsel: enforcement of ADR awards in Pakistan is achievable but forum‑dependent. International enforceability is strongest for awards rendered in arbitration under New York Convention‑compliant proceedings. TDRC enforcement mechanisms are new and will develop through early case law.

Practical In‑House Checklist and Forum Selection Template

The following checklist is designed for in‑house counsel, exporters and trade associations navigating Pakistan’s dispute resolution options in 2026. Use it as a pre‑dispute planning tool and adapt it to specific contractual relationships.

  1. Audit existing dispute resolution clauses. Review all active contracts for arbitration, jurisdiction and governing‑law clauses. Identify which contracts would route disputes to the TDRC if a trade dispute arises.
  2. Calculate potential claim values. For each material counterparty relationship, estimate likely claim values in USD to determine whether the TDRC’s USD 5,000 threshold is met.
  3. Map forum options. For each dispute scenario, apply the decision tree above, TDRC, arbitration or courts, and document the preferred forum and fallback.
  4. Update standard contract templates. Insert TDRC‑aware clauses that address the mandatory conciliation stage and allocation to arbitration. Specify whether conciliation opt‑out is desired.
  5. Prepare evidence bundles in advance. Given compressed timelines under both the TDRC Rules and the tax ADR amendments, maintain rolling evidence files, contracts, correspondence, invoices and expert reports, that can be deployed within days of a dispute arising.
  6. Establish internal escalation protocols. Define trigger points (e.g., payment default exceeding 30 days, notice of tax reassessment) that activate the dispute resolution process, and assign responsibility for filing and liaison with external counsel.
  7. Diarise key deadlines. The 2026 tax ADR amendments impose new filing deadlines. Calendar these centrally and assign compliance owners.
  8. Brief the board or management committee. Ensure decision‑makers understand the new forum options and their cost, timeline and enforcement implications.

For assistance identifying experienced commercial lawyers in Pakistan, consult the Global Law Experts directory.

Worked Examples and Sample Timelines

Scenario 1, Trade Goods Dispute (USD 7,500 Claim via TDRC)

Step Action Estimated Timeline
1 Exporter A files claim with TDRC (prescribed form + evidence bundle); claim value confirmed at USD 7,500 Day 0
2 TDRC reviews filing, confirms jurisdiction (above USD 5,000 threshold) and notifies respondent Days 1–14
3 Mandatory conciliation stage, conciliator appointed; parties attend conciliation sessions Days 15–45
4 If settlement reached: conciliation agreement recorded and enforceable. If not: conciliation declared failed Day 45
5 TDRC allocates dispute to arbitration panel (or, if valid arbitration clause exists, to designated arbitral institution) Days 46–60
6 Arbitration hearings, evidence presentation and submissions Days 61–120
7 Award issued Days 121–150 (estimated)

Scenario 2, Tax Reassessment Dispute (ADR Committee Pathway)

Step Action Estimated Timeline
1 Taxpayer receives amended assessment order from FBR Day 0
2 Taxpayer files ADR application within prescribed deadline; automatic stay of recovery takes effect Within filing window
3 ADR committee constituted (FBR representative, retired judicial officer, chartered accountant/tax practitioner) Within prescribed days of application
4 Hearings conducted; taxpayer presents documentation, expert opinions and legal submissions Compressed hearing window
5 Committee issues order, binding on both taxpayer and FBR Within mandatory deadline
6 If deadline missed: matter reverts to appellate tribunal track Post‑deadline

Key takeaway for counsel: in both scenarios, front‑loading evidence preparation is critical. The compressed timelines reward parties who are organised before the dispute formally commences.

Conclusion, Dispute Resolution Pakistan in 2026 and Recommended Next Steps

The 2026 reforms mark a structural shift in dispute resolution in Pakistan. The TDRC is no longer an aspirational framework, it is an operational forum with defined jurisdiction, procedures and timelines. The tax ADR amendments similarly move the needle from ad hoc committee proceedings toward a more predictable, time‑bound process. For counsel and businesses operating in or with Pakistan, three immediate actions are advisable. First, audit all active contracts and update dispute resolution clauses to reflect the new TDRC and tax ADR landscape. Second, build internal processes, escalation protocols, evidence bundles and deadline calendars, that align with the compressed timelines mandated by both SRO‑552 and the Income Tax amendments.

Third, engage experienced dispute resolution counsel early, well before a dispute crystallises, to map forum options and build enforcement‑ready strategies.

Last reviewed: 9 May 2026. This article provides general guidance on dispute resolution in Pakistan and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified local counsel for case‑specific strategy.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

FAQs

What do the Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026 cover and who can bring a claim to the TDRC?
The Trade Dispute Resolution Rules 2026 (SRO‑552) cover trade‑related commercial disputes involving Pakistani exporters, importers, trade bodies and their foreign counterparties. Claims must relate to goods, services or trade finance instruments and meet the USD 5,000 minimum jurisdictional threshold. The Rules prescribe filing procedures, evidence standards, a mandatory conciliation stage and allocation to arbitration.
The TDRC respects valid arbitration agreements. Where parties have a pre‑existing arbitration clause, the Commission can allocate the dispute to arbitration rather than imposing its own conciliation–arbitration track. However, the TDRC retains an initial gatekeeping role, it reviews jurisdiction before allocation. Court litigation remains available for claims below the USD 5,000 threshold or outside the TDRC’s subject‑matter jurisdiction.
The TDRC will only accept claims with a disputed value of at least USD 5,000, calculated on the principal claim amount (including contractual penalties and documented accrued interest) converted at the State Bank of Pakistan’s prevailing mid‑rate on the filing date. Set‑offs do not reduce the gross claim for threshold purposes; counterclaims are assessed independently.
The Income Tax (Third Amendment) 2026, as analysed by KPMG, compresses ADR committee timelines, standardises committee composition (FBR officer, retired judge, tax practitioner) and introduces an automatic stay of tax recovery during proceedings. If the committee fails to conclude within the mandatory deadline, the matter reverts to the appellate tribunal track.
TDRC orders are enforceable through application to the designated court under the Trade Dispute Resolution Act 2022 and the 2026 Rules. Domestic arbitration awards are enforceable as court decrees under the Arbitration Act 1940. International arbitration awards benefit from New York Convention recognition via the 2011 Act. Tax ADR committee orders bind both the taxpayer and FBR; non‑compliance is challengeable through the appellate tribunal. Cross‑border recognition is strongest for arbitration awards rendered in New York Convention‑compliant proceedings.
A company might prefer the TDRC track when early settlement through the mandatory conciliation stage is realistic, when the dispute is relatively straightforward and when the cost of institutional arbitration outweighs the claim value. Conversely, where international enforceability, complex technical evidence or party autonomy in arbitrator selection is critical, insisting on arbitration is generally advisable.

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Dispute Resolution in Pakistan (2026): TDRC, Tax ADR & USD 5,000 Threshold

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