Subsidies, tax breaks, and skill-building programs are on the horizon as the Government pushes to make AI a cornerstone of Pakistan’s digital future.
The federal government is racing to roll out a package of financial incentives from subsidies and tax breaks to large-scale workforce training aimed at fast-tracking artificial intelligence (AI) adoption across Pakistan’s public and private sectors. Ministry planning documents, recently surfaced in state-run media and business press reports, reveal that these measures are a central piece of a sweeping national roadmap to weave AI into government operations, industry, and education.
What the draft roadmap says
According to the documents, the incentive measures will prioritise locally developed AI solutions (giving them preference over imports), and will target sectoral pilots in education, healthcare, record digitisation, agriculture, manufacturing, energy management and heritage preservation. The draft envisions a network-model approach to support the full life cycle of industrial AI projects, strengthened intellectual-property protections for AI innovations, and a push to combine AI with IoT for predictive maintenance, energy efficiency and quality control. (Read more about Pakistan’s spectrum challenges The timeline described in the documents points to a staged rollout across 2025–26.
The plan also includes capacity-building measures: awareness campaigns, workshops, and sector-specific certification programs designed by provincial IT boards, with the first courses aimed at launch in 2026. The documents set out an AI maturity model and project-management guidelines to be implemented in at least 50 public institutions, and propose a government-run Ranking Management System (RMS) to evaluate AI solutions and publish an annual “trust index.”
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The government’s National Artificial Intelligence Fund (NAIF) is singled out in the documents as the primary financing vehicle for research and innovation under the new policy framework. Earlier policy reporting indicates the National AI Policy, approved by the federal cabinet in mid-2025, proposes creating NAIF and channeling dedicated R&D resources including a planned set-aside from Ignite’s research budget to support startups, centres of excellence and pilot projects.
Cabinet approval of the National AI Policy in 2025 laid out a wider six-pillar framework covering innovation, public awareness, secure systems, sectoral transformation, infrastructure and international partnerships and set ambitious capacity targets such as large-scale training and scholarship programmes to develop AI talent.
Why this matters and the caveats
If implemented, the incentives package could reduce the upfront cost of adopting AI for Pakistani firms and public bodies, encourage local product development, and accelerate sector pilots (health, education, agriculture, governance) already flagged in the National AI Policy. The NAIF and a coordinated push by a Centre of Excellence for AI (COE-AI) and a proposed AI Directorate aim to combine financial, technical and regulatory support in one ecosystem.
Important caveats: the measures described in the reporting are drawn from ministry planning documents and monitoring reports and therefore describe proposals and a draft roadmap rather than final, fully funded programmes. Specifics on programme design, eligibility criteria for subsidies or tax exemptions, the total fiscal cost, and the mechanics of disbursing support (for example, how NAIF will be capitalised and governed) remain to be finalised and publicly released. Observers will be watching for budget allocations, implementing regulations and timelines from the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunications.
Related moves and context
The National AI Policy and the incentives discussion arrive amid other government steps to build digital infrastructure and capacity from plans for AI regulatory sandboxes and centres of excellence to earlier announcements about allocating power and infrastructure for data centres and high-computer projects. These complementary measures are intended to ensure that incentives translate into deployable systems rather than isolated pilots.
What to watch next
- Publication of the final incentive regulations and the legal/administrative mechanism for subsidies and tax breaks.
- Official details on the National AI Fund’s capitalisation, governance and grant/loan criteria.
- Timelines and curricula for the workforce training and certification programmes promised for 2026.
- How the RMS and AI maturity model will be operationalised across federal and provincial institutions.
FAQ
The government is preparing subsidies, tax exemptions, and workforce training programs to lower the cost of AI adoption and encourage innovation.
Priority areas include education, healthcare, agriculture, manufacturing, energy management, record digitisation, and heritage preservation.
The draft roadmap states that locally built AI solutions will be given preference over imports, alongside enhanced intellectual property protections.
NAIF will serve as the main financing vehicle for startups, R&D initiatives, and pilot projects, providing dedicated support for innovation.
Provincial IT boards are tasked with launching AI-specific certification courses by 2026, as part of broader skill-building and capacity-development efforts.