Our Expert in Pakistan
No results available
Last reviewed: 28 May 2026
If you are asking how do I set up an ESOP for a Pakistan-based startup, the short answer is that the legal framework now firmly supports it, but the execution demands careful navigation of the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) guidelines, the Companies Act 2017, shareholder approval mechanics, and income-tax timing. Pakistan’s tech ecosystem has matured rapidly, and an employee stock option plan in Pakistan has become the default equity-incentive tool for founders competing for scarce AI, fintech, and deep-tech talent.
This guide walks through every approval, document, vesting design choice, valuation step, and tax trigger you need to move from boardroom concept to fully implemented ESOP, with sample resolution language and a worked tax example you can adapt today.
Yes. The SECP has published dedicated Guidelines for Structuring and Offering of the Employees Stock Option Schemes, and the Companies Act 2017 provides the statutory machinery for issuing shares to employees. A private company ESOP in Pakistan requires a board resolution, a shareholder special resolution authorising the share reserve, a formal plan document that complies with the SECP ESOP guidelines, and, where new shares are issued, compliance with the Companies (Further Issue of Shares) Regulations. Listed and public-unlisted companies face additional Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) disclosure requirements, but the underlying corporate-approval pathway is the same. In practical terms, a well-prepared startup can move from plan design to first grant letters in as little as four to eight weeks.
An ESOP, also referred to as an Employees’ Stock Option Scheme (ESOS), is a contractual arrangement under which a company grants selected employees the right to purchase shares at a pre-agreed exercise price after specified vesting conditions are met. The scheme is governed primarily by the SECP ESOP guidelines and underpinned by the share-issuance provisions of the Companies Act 2017. Unlike a direct share allotment, an option grants no ownership until the employee exercises it; until that point, the employee holds a conditional right, not an equity stake.
In Pakistan’s regulatory vocabulary, ESOP and ESOS are used interchangeably to describe the overall scheme. An option unit is the individual right granted to an employee to acquire one underlying share. One option unit is not the same as one share: the option is a right to buy; the share is delivered only upon exercise and payment of the exercise price. Companies may structure the scheme as a direct-grant model (the company issues shares upon exercise) or a trust-based model (a trust holds shares that are transferred to employees on exercise). Most Pakistan startups use the direct-grant model because it avoids the cost and complexity of establishing and administering a separate trust.
Dilution occurs at the point of exercise, not at grant, and founders should model the fully diluted cap table from day one.
Both private and public companies formed under the Companies Act 2017 may implement an ESOP, but the regulatory burden differs materially. A private limited company follows the SECP ESOP guidelines and the Companies (Further Issue of Shares) Regulations where new shares are to be issued, with no PSX involvement. A public unlisted company must additionally comply with SECP reporting obligations, and a listed company must satisfy PSX Listing Regulations, including caps on the ESOS pool (commonly expressed as a percentage of issued share capital) and prospectus-level disclosure to shareholders.
Founders at the pre-Series A to Series B stage, the core audience for this guide, will almost always be operating a private limited company and should focus on the SECP guideline pathway plus the Companies Act 2017 share-issuance mechanics described below.
Under the SECP guidelines, eligible participants typically include permanent employees, whole-time directors (excluding independent directors in listed companies), and, at the company’s discretion, key managerial personnel. Consultants, advisors, and part-time contractors are generally not eligible unless the plan document and articles of association expressly provide otherwise. Founders should define eligibility criteria clearly in the plan document to avoid disputes at exercise.
The following five-step checklist answers the core question of how do I set up an ESOP under Pakistan law. Each step references the governing rule and the deliverable document.
Begin by deciding the size of the option pool (typically 10 – 15 % of issued share capital for early-stage startups) and whether the pool will be sourced from newly issued shares, treasury shares, or a combination. Draft the ESOP Plan Document covering: pool size, eligibility criteria, vesting schedule, exercise price methodology, exercise window, lapse and forfeiture rules, and change-of-control provisions. The plan document is the master legal instrument and must conform to the structural requirements set out in the SECP’s Guidelines for Structuring and Offering of the Employees Stock Option Schemes.
If new shares are to be issued, confirm that the company’s authorised share capital is sufficient; if not, pass a resolution to increase it under Section 92 of the Companies Act 2017 before proceeding.
ESOP approval under SECP requirements involves two tiers of corporate authority. The board of directors must first approve the plan by resolution, and then the shareholders must authorise it, typically by special resolution at a general meeting, because the scheme involves the further issue of shares (or the reservation of shares for future issue). Below is sample resolution language that can be adapted for either tier.
Sample board resolution (extract):
“RESOLVED THAT, pursuant to the Companies Act 2017 and the SECP Guidelines for Structuring and Offering of the Employees Stock Option Schemes, the Board hereby approves the [Company Name] Employees’ Stock Option Scheme 2026 (the ‘Scheme’), substantially in the form tabled before this meeting, under which up to [number] option units, each entitling the holder to subscribe for one ordinary share at the exercise price determined in accordance with the Scheme, may be granted to eligible employees.”
Sample shareholder special resolution (extract):
“RESOLVED AS A SPECIAL RESOLUTION THAT the Company be and is hereby authorised to create a reserve of [number] ordinary shares of PKR [face value] each under the [Company Name] Employees’ Stock Option Scheme 2026, and to issue and allot such shares to option holders upon exercise in accordance with the Scheme and the Companies Act 2017.”
The exercise price is the price an employee pays to convert an option into a share. For ESOP valuation in Pakistan, the SECP guidelines contemplate that companies may set the exercise price at fair market value, at a discount, or at nominal (par) value, provided the methodology is disclosed in the plan document. An independent valuation by a chartered accountant firm or SECP-registered valuer is strongly recommended, and, for listed companies, is effectively mandatory under PSX rules. Common approaches include the discounted-cash-flow method, the comparable-transactions method, and, for later-stage startups, the most recent priced funding round (often called the “409A-equivalent” in international venture practice). Valuations should be refreshed at least annually or at each new grant window.
Private companies must ensure the plan document conforms to the SECP ESOP guidelines and retain it in the company’s statutory records for inspection. Where the Companies (Further Issue of Shares) Regulations apply to the allotment, the company must file the return of allotment (Form 3) with the SECP within the prescribed period after shares are actually issued upon exercise. Listed companies face additional SECP and PSX notification obligations, including scheme-specific disclosures in the annual report. All filings are typically processed through the SECP’s eZfile or LEAP portal.
Once approvals are in place, the company issues individual grant letters (also called option agreements) to each eligible employee. The grant letter specifies the number of options, the exercise price, the vesting schedule, the exercise window, and lapse conditions. When an employee’s options vest and the employee elects to exercise, the company collects the exercise price and issues or transfers shares. For companies using the Central Depository Company of Pakistan (CDC) for book-entry share records, the new shares are credited to the employee’s CDC sub-account. The company then files the return of allotment with the SECP and updates its register of members.
| Entity Type | Required Corporate Approval(s) | SECP / Regulatory Filing & Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Private company (unlisted) | Board resolution; shareholder special resolution to authorise share reserve; amend articles if necessary | No public-listing filing; file return of allotment (Form 3) with SECP upon share issuance; implement via company secretariat (typical internal time: 2–8 weeks) |
| Public company (unlisted / transitioning) | Board + shareholder approvals; comply with Listing Rules / Exchange requirements for ESOS | Filing to SECP and PSX / Exchange; prospectus / disclosure obligations and PSX notification where applicable (timelines vary by exchange rules) |
| Listed company | Board + shareholder approvals; listing-rules caps (often a set % of issued shares) | Exchange approval, disclosure, prospectus / notice to shareholders; PSX form filings and public circulars (4–12+ weeks) |
Vesting design is where legal structure meets talent-retention strategy. The vesting schedule determines when options become exercisable and is the primary mechanism founders use to align incentives over time.
Single-trigger acceleration accelerates vesting upon a single event, usually a change of control (acquisition or merger). Double-trigger acceleration requires both a change of control and the employee’s termination without cause within a defined window (commonly 12 months). Double-trigger is the investor-friendly default because it prevents a full acceleration windfall that might deter acquirers. On termination for cause, unvested and typically even vested-but-unexercised options should lapse immediately, spell this out in the plan document and grant letter to avoid litigation.
The following clause can be adapted for a standard four-year schedule with a one-year cliff:
“Subject to the Participant’s continued employment with the Company, the Options shall vest as follows: (a) twenty-five percent (25 %) of the total Options granted shall vest on the first anniversary of the Grant Date (the ‘Cliff Date’); and (b) the remaining seventy-five percent (75 %) of the total Options granted shall vest in twelve (12) equal quarterly instalments commencing on the first day of the calendar quarter following the Cliff Date, such that all Options shall be fully vested on the fourth anniversary of the Grant Date. Upon a Termination for Cause, all unvested Options, and any vested but unexercised Options, shall lapse immediately and without compensation.”
Getting the valuation right protects founders from tax disputes, investor pushback, and employee dissatisfaction. For ESOP valuation in Pakistan, the key decisions are: (1) who performs the valuation (an independent chartered accountant firm or SECP-registered valuer is best practice), (2) the valuation date (typically the grant date for setting the exercise price, and the exercise date for tax purposes), and (3) the method (DCF, comparable transactions, or last-round pricing). From an accounting perspective, share-based payments must be recognised in the financial statements in accordance with IFRS 2 (applicable in Pakistan under SECP’s adoption of IFRS). The expense is recognised over the vesting period, with the fair value measured at the grant date.
Founders should model the fully diluted cap table, including the entire ESOP pool, not just granted options, to give investors an accurate ownership picture during due diligence.
Important: Tax rules are subject to change. The following summarises prevailing practice as of 28 May 2026. Founders and employees should confirm current positions with the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) and a qualified chartered tax adviser before relying on this guidance.
Under prevailing practice, ESOP tax in Pakistan crystallises at two points in time:
| Event | Value / Price | Tax Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Grant date, 1,000 options at exercise price PKR 50 / share | FMV at grant: PKR 50 | No tax at grant |
| Exercise date (Year 2), employee exercises all 1,000 options | FMV at exercise: PKR 200 / share | Perquisite = (PKR 200 − PKR 50) × 1,000 = PKR 150,000 taxed as salary income; employer withholds tax at applicable slab rate |
| Sale date (Year 4), employee sells all 1,000 shares | Sale price: PKR 350 / share | Capital gain = (PKR 350 − PKR 200) × 1,000 = PKR 150,000 taxed at applicable capital-gains rate |
The total economic gain of PKR 300,000 is thus split across two tax events. Founders should budget for the withholding obligation at exercise, as failure to withhold exposes the company to penalties under the Income Tax Ordinance.
Below are abridged template extracts that founders can use as starting points. Each should be customised to the company’s specific articles of association, share structure, and investor agreements.
For full, execution-ready templates, including the complete plan document, trust deed (if applicable), and CDC transfer instructions, founders are advised to engage experienced Pakistan corporate counsel.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shazil Ibrahim at Chima & Ibrahim, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 13 minutes ago
posted 18 minutes ago
posted 39 minutes ago
posted 41 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message