Pakistan 5G pilot projects start next week following $507M spectrum auction. How 5G will change internet speeds Pakistan from 4 Mbps to 20 Mbps—analysis of rollout challenges.
Standfirst: After years of regulatory delays and industry scepticism, Pakistan has concluded its most lucrative spectrum auction to date, netting $510 million and paving the way for pilot 5G launches from next week. IT Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja tells operators the transition must balance technological leap with the reality of the world’s lowest ARPU—while a new smartphone leasing policy aims to bridge the device gap.
The announcement came not with the usual fanfare of a gleaming telecom expo, but in a packed Islamabad news conference where the mood was one of guarded optimism. Flanked by PTA Chairman Hafeez Ur Rehman and representatives from Jazz, Ufone, and Zong, Minister for Information Technology and Telecommunication Shaza Fatima Khawaja delivered the news that an industry—and a nation of 240 million—had been awaiting for half a decade.
“I was very happy to hear the day before yesterday that some of our operators are ready for 5G services,” she told reporters on March 12, 2026. “So, its pilot will start in some cities next week. And in the next six to eight months, in five of our capitals of all provinces and in the federal capital, 5G services will be available to all of you people.”
Behind that understated delivery lies a telecom auction that defied expectations. When the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) opened bidding on March 10, few anticipated the ferocity of competition that would follow. Across three rounds of electronic bidding, conducted via a secure Electronic Auction System with live results broadcast on Pakistan Television, three operators—Jazz, Ufone, and Zong—contested 480 MHz of spectrum across six bands. The result: $510 million in government revenue, with Jazz emerging as the dominant bidder, securing 190 MHz including the prized 700 MHz band. Ufone claimed 180 MHz, while Zong took 110 MHz.
For context, this surpasses every previous Pakistani spectrum auction. It signals something deeper: after years of circling each other warily, the government and mobile operators have finally found common ground.
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To understand why this auction represents more than a revenue line, one must revisit the landscape of just eight months ago. At the GSMA’s Digital Nation Summit in Islamabad in August 2025, the industry’s frustrations were laid bare. Julian Gorman, the GSMA’s Head of Asia Pacific, warned that Pakistan risked missing the digital transformation wave entirely, citing “high spectrum prices, heavy sector-specific taxes and regulatory uncertainty” as barriers limiting investment.
The operators had been blunter still. In a report released by the Asian Development Bank in mid-2025, they argued that 5G rollout was “almost impossible” under prevailing conditions. “With the lowest-in-the-world average revenue per user (ARPU), exorbitantly high taxes, low adoption of 4G/smartphones, and multiple other outstanding sector issues, it will be extremely challenging to convince our parent companies to invest in 5G roll out in Pakistan,” the submission read.
What changed? The answer lies in the auction design itself. Speaking at the launch ceremony, Minister Khawaja emphasized that the government had deliberately avoided the temptation to maximise upfront revenues. “The aim is not to maximise upfront auction revenues,” she stated, “but to provide operators with the opportunity to invest in network expansion and infrastructure so that improved and high-quality digital services can be delivered to consumers across Pakistan.”
PTA Chairman Hafeez Ur Rehman reinforced this message, noting that the Authority had taken “consumer-centric regulatory measures, including bringing Right of Way (RoW) charges to zero, in order to facilitate faster network rollout and reduce barriers for telecom operators.”
The result was a delicate compromise: operators secured spectrum at sustainable prices, while the government achieved both revenue targets and a credible path to 5G.
| Operator | Spectrum Acquired | Key Band Secured | Strategic Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jazz | 190 MHz | 700 MHz | Dominant low-band coverage |
| Ufone | 180 MHz | Mid-band | Aggressive challenger |
| Zong | 110 MHz | 2600/3500 MHz | Capacity-focused |
The assignment stage, scheduled for March 12, will determine specific frequency positions within each band, with an additional $3 million expected from position assignment fees.
Beyond the boardroom negotiations and spectrum lots, a more fundamental question lingers for Pakistan’s 190 million mobile subscribers: what will 5G actually change?
The government projects that average internet speeds will climb from the current 4 Mbps to approximately 20 Mbps once networks are fully operational. For a country where video streaming often buffers and large file downloads test patience, this leap carries tangible implications. But the transformation runs deeper than faster Netflix queues.
The World Bank’s 2024 report “The Path to 5G in the Developing World” identifies three distinct tiers of 5G value for emerging economies. The first is enhanced mobile broadband—precisely the speed improvement Pakistan now anticipates. The second is ultra-reliable low-latency communications, which enables industrial applications: remote machinery operation, real-time quality control in manufacturing, and precision agriculture. The third, massive machine-type communications, underpins smart city sensors, utility grid management, and logistics tracking.
For Pakistan, with its ambitions of becoming a regional data hub and IT outsourcing destination, the second and third tiers represent the true prize. But they remain distant without corresponding investments in fibre backhaul, data centre capacity, and—critically—devices.
Here lies the industry’s Achilles heel: you cannot consume 5G on a 4G device, and Pakistan’s smartphone penetration tells a troubling story. According to GSMA data presented at the August 2025 summit, while 68% of Pakistanis own a smartphone, only 29% actively use mobile internet—a usage gap of 52%, the highest among major regional markets. Nearly 40% of mobile users still rely on feature phones.
Enter the “Smartphone for All” initiative, a government-backed leasing scheme announced in February 2026 that now assumes urgent relevance. Under the programme, citizens can acquire smartphones valued between Rs10,000 and Rs100,000 through interest-free instalments spanning three to twelve months, with a minimum 20% down payment. Students, low-income individuals, and professionals are all eligible.
Minister Khawaja has framed the scheme as essential to 5G’s success. “Officials have said the government is also encouraging wider adoption of 5G-compatible devices to support the transition to faster mobile networks, noting that a large share of phones used in Pakistan are locally manufactured while premium models are imported,” Arab News reported following her briefing.
The arithmetic is straightforward: without affordable 5G handsets in Pakistani hands, the billions spent on spectrum will yield little beyond faster connections for an urban elite.
Yet even if devices materialise, the industry must confront its existential challenge: Pakistan’s average revenue per user (ARPU) remains the lowest globally. Operators extract a fraction of the monthly revenue that Indian or Bangladeshi carriers achieve, and a tiny sliver of developed-world averages. This fundamentally constrains the investment case.
The government has offered assurances that consumer packages will not see immediate price hikes, but operators face an unsustainable calculus. Nikkei Asia noted that “some experts skeptical about demand” remain unconvinced that Pakistani consumers will pay premiums for 5G when 4G meets most basic needs.
The sector’s tax burden compounds the challenge. Combined taxes on mobile usage reach 33%, among the highest in the region, increasing consumer costs and suppressing demand. The GSMA has repeatedly called for rationalisation, arguing that lower taxes would stimulate usage, expand the taxable base, and ultimately increase government revenues.
For now, the government has signalled no immediate tax relief. But Minister Khawaja’s emphasis on sustainable sector growth suggests a recognition that the current model cannot persist indefinitely.
Despite these structural headwinds, Pakistan’s 5G auction has attracted international attention that extends far beyond its borders. At the recent Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, multiple inquiries centred on the Pakistani market—its scale, its trajectory, and its potential as a manufacturing hub.
The interest is not merely academic. With India’s 5G rollout now well advanced and Bangladesh preparing its own auction, investors view South Asia as the next great connectivity battleground. Pakistan, with its young population, rising IT exports, and strategic location, represents a critical piece of that puzzle.
The armed forces’ vacation of spectrum in the 700 MHz band proved pivotal in unlocking this interest. That band, prized for its propagation characteristics that enable wider coverage with fewer towers, formed the cornerstone of Jazz’s successful bid. It also signals a mature approach to civil-military coordination on digital infrastructure—a prerequisite for any emerging market seeking serious foreign investment.
How does Pakistan’s 5G entry compare with its peers?
India conducted its 5G auctions in 2022, raising $19 billion and launching services later that year. By early 2026, coverage extends to most major cities, though adoption remains constrained by device costs similar to Pakistan’s. Bangladesh has announced plans for 2026 auctions but faces political uncertainty. Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, launched 5G in 2022 and now counts over two million subscribers.
Pakistan thus enters the 5G race as a late adopter but not a laggard. Its advantage lies in learning from others’ mistakes: India’s high reserve prices initially deterred participation, requiring subsequent reductions. Pakistan’s more measured approach, emphasising sustainable pricing, reflects those lessons.
Yet Pakistan also carries unique burdens. No other major market combines such low ARPU with such high taxation. No other faces the same intensity of energy reliability challenges, with operators paying commercial tariffs for power while enduring frequent outages.
Government briefings have cited a target of $10 billion in GDP contribution from 5G over the next five to seven years. The figure derives from Ericsson’s modelling of 5G economic impacts in emerging markets, which estimates that every dollar invested in 5G infrastructure generates multiples in downstream economic activity.
The transmission mechanism runs through several channels: productivity gains in manufacturing and logistics, new business models enabled by reliable high-speed connectivity, expanded IT exports, and formalisation of economic activity. Each requires not just spectrum, but the entire ecosystem of fibre, data centres, skills, and regulation.
Here, the GSMA’s “Unlocking Pakistan’s Digital Potential” report provides a sobering checklist of remaining reforms: releasing additional mid-band spectrum, permitting spectrum sharing and trading, reducing sector-specific taxes, expanding anti-fraud initiatives, and accelerating digital literacy programmes, especially for women and rural communities.
Next week’s pilot launches in select cities will mark Pakistan’s first encounter with live 5G networks. For the technologists who have laboured through years of policy uncertainty, it will be a moment of vindication. For consumers, the immediate experience may underwhelm: early pilots typically showcase capabilities rather than deliver ubiquitous coverage.
The true test comes in the six-to-eight month window that follows, as operators extend coverage to provincial capitals and—eventually—secondary cities. By year-end 2026, Pakistan will have a clearer sense of whether its 5G gamble pays off.
Minister Khawaja captured the balancing act required when she addressed operators alongside the PTA chief. “The auction process was designed to protect the rights of both the industry and consumers,” she said. That compact—sustainable returns for operators, affordable access for citizens, and reasonable revenues for the state—represents the holy grail of telecommunications policy.
Pakistan has secured the spectrum. It has unlocked the investment. It has signalled, through the smartphone leasing scheme, a recognition that connectivity without devices is infrastructure without purpose. Now begins the harder work: building the networks, acquiring the customers, and proving that 5G can deliver not just faster speeds, but genuine economic transformation.
For a nation of 240 million, with the world’s lowest ARPU but among its highest reserves of youthful ambition, the stakes could scarcely be higher.
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