Even if someone moves or shifts assets, owing taxes in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) or Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) doesn’t just disappear. Pakistan’s tax system has a special mechanism that allows the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to step in and help recover unpaid taxes on behalf of these regions.
How It Works
If a person or company has been assessed for taxes in AJK or GB but hasn’t paid, recovery can become tricky—especially if the taxpayer lives in Pakistan or doesn’t have any property left in AJK or GB. In such cases, the local tax authorities in AJK or GB can send a formal notice to the FBR in Pakistan, asking them to recover the tax just like it were their own.
The notice includes important details such as the taxpayer’s address in Pakistan, any movable or immovable property they own, and the exact amount of unpaid taxes. This allows Pakistani authorities to take effective action without rechecking the original assessment.
Legal Power and Enforcement
Once the recovery notice is received in Pakistan, the taxpayer cannot challenge the correctness of the original assessment in AJK or GB at this stage. The Pakistani tax authorities can use any available legal means—such as attaching property, freezing bank accounts, or other enforcement actions—to collect the unpaid taxes.
Why This Matters
This mechanism ensures that taxes owed in AJK or GB cannot be avoided simply by moving to Pakistan. It reinforces the principle that tax obligations follow the taxpayer, not the location. For anyone running a business or owning property in multiple regions, timely payment and compliance are essential, because once the authorities act, borders don’t protect against recovery.
Real-Life Examples
Resident of Lahore with Business in AJK
Imagine someone living in Lahore running a tourism business in Muzaffarabad. If the person ignores a tax bill of Rs. 500,000 in AJK and has no assets there, the AJK tax authorities can ask the Lahore tax office to recover the amount. Pakistani authorities can then attach bank accounts or other assets to settle the debt.
Company Assets in Islamabad
A construction firm finishes a project in Gilgit-Baltistan and moves all its machinery to Islamabad, leaving behind a tax bill of Rs. 2 million. The GB authorities can notify the FBR, which can then seize and sell the machinery in Islamabad to recover the tax.







