ISLAMABAD: The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has proposed a major shift toward digital tax administration through the Finance Bill 2026, making electronic filing of income tax returns mandatory and requiring companies to submit financial statements in machine-readable formats from Tax Year 2026 onward.
The proposed amendment to Section 114 of the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 is aimed at enhancing automation, improving data analysis capabilities, and strengthening compliance monitoring through digital reporting standards.
All Tax Returns to Be Filed Through IRIS
Under the proposed changes, all income tax returns will be required to be submitted electronically through the FBR’s IRIS portal in the manner prescribed by the Board.
The amendment formally establishes electronic filing as the standard method for submitting tax returns, statements, and supporting documents, further reducing reliance on manual or paper-based submissions.
FBR Empowered to Set Digital Filing Rules
The Finance Bill also grants the FBR broader authority to issue regulations governing electronic filing procedures.
The Board will be empowered to prescribe rules regarding:
Verification procedures for returns
Use of digital signatures
Submission requirements for supporting documents
Other administrative matters related to electronic tax compliance
These regulations will be notified through the official Gazette.
Companies Must Submit Financial Statements in Machine-Readable Formats
One of the most significant changes introduced through the Finance Bill concerns the submission of corporate financial statements.
From Tax Year 2026, companies will no longer be allowed to upload financial statements solely in traditional human-readable formats such as PDF documents or scanned copies.
Instead, audited financial statements must be submitted in an electronically readable format that allows automated processing by computer systems.
Approved and Prohibited File Formats
The Finance Bill introduces a new definition of “electronically readable format” under Section 2(19DA).
According to the proposed definition, approved formats include:
Filer Banen, Tax Bachayen
CSV
XLSX (Microsoft Excel)
XML
XBRL
JSON
These formats enable data to be automatically extracted, validated, analyzed, and processed without manual intervention.
However, the following formats will not meet the new compliance requirements:
PDF files
Scanned documents
Image files
Photographs of financial statements
The government believes structured digital reporting will significantly improve tax administration and reduce compliance gaps.
FBR to Use Automated Data Analysis
The move is part of the government’s broader strategy to modernize Pakistan’s tax system through technology and automation.
By receiving financial data in structured formats, the FBR will be able to conduct automated cross-matching, identify discrepancies more efficiently, and improve risk-based audits.
Tax experts view the amendment as a major step toward data-driven tax enforcement and enhanced corporate transparency.
Heavy Penalties Proposed for Non-Compliance
The Finance Bill also proposes strict penalties for companies that fail to comply with the new reporting standards.
Under the proposed amendment to Section 182, audited financial statements submitted as:
Image files
Scanned documents
Password-protected files
Other unreadable formats
will be treated as blank or incomplete submissions.
As a result, taxpayers may face penalties equivalent to those applicable for failure to furnish required documents or returns.
Digital Tax Compliance Enters a New Era
The proposed amendments signal a significant transformation in Pakistan’s tax compliance framework, with technology and automation becoming central components of tax administration.
If approved by Parliament, the new requirements will take effect from Tax Year 2026, requiring companies to review their accounting and reporting systems to ensure compliance with the FBR’s new digital filing standards.







