Credit Cards, Loans, and Debt in Pakistan: The Honest Guide

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute registered financial advice. Interest rates, markup rates, and fees mentioned below are illustrative and move with the State Bank of Pakistan’s policy rate and KIBOR — always confirm current rates directly with your bank or lender, via SBP’s KIBOR data, before borrowing.

Debt in Pakistan has quietly gotten easier to take on — a phone can be bought in installments at checkout in thirty seconds, a credit card arrives with a credit limit that feels generous, and a bank personal loan is one branch visit away. Almost none of this comes with an honest breakdown of what it actually costs or how quickly it can compound. Credit cards, loans, and debt in Pakistan deserve the same brutally honest treatment we give investing and trading on this site — because owing money is a financial decision just like investing money is, and it deserves the same scrutiny.

Key Takeaways

  • Not all debt costs the same — BNPL, credit cards, bank loans, and informal lending carry very different real costs and risks
  • Credit card markup can run into the 24%-45% per year range on unpaid balances — paying the statement in full avoids it entirely
  • Bank personal loan rates are generally tied to KIBOR plus a spread, meaning your cost moves with the broader interest rate environment
  • “0% markup” BNPL offers aren’t always what they seem — the cost can be built into the listed price instead of charged separately

The Forms Debt Takes in Pakistan

Checklist of common forms of consumer debt in Pakistan: Buy Now Pay Later and retail installment plans, credit cards, bank personal loans, employer advance salary, informal lending through committees or friends and family, and auto financing.
Different types of consumer debt available in Pakistan today.

Each of these has a genuinely different cost structure and risk profile — treating them as interchangeable “debt” is exactly how people end up choosing the most convenient option at checkout rather than the cheapest one over the life of the payment.

What Borrowing Actually Costs

Bar chart showing illustrative annual borrowing cost ranges in Pakistan: credit card unpaid balances at roughly 24 to 45 percent, and bank personal loans for salaried individuals at roughly 26 to 28 percent, both varying with the bank and current KIBOR rate.
Illustrative approximate annual rate ranges — confirm current rates with your specific bank or card issuer.

These ranges move with the State Bank of Pakistan’s policy rate and KIBOR, and vary by specific bank and product — but the broad picture holds: unmanaged credit card debt is generally the most expensive form of consumer borrowing available, while bank personal loans, tied to KIBOR plus a spread, tend to sit somewhat lower but still substantial.

Buy Now Pay Later — Read the Fine Print

BNPL and retail installment plans have become the easiest way to take on debt in Pakistan, often requiring nothing more than a down payment at checkout. Some plans genuinely charge no markup because the cost is subsidized by the manufacturer or bank partner; others build the cost into a higher total price than paying cash upfront would. See our full breakdown, Buy Now Pay Later in Pakistan: Convenience or Debt Trap?, for how to tell the difference before you check out.

Credit Cards — A Tool, Not Free Money

A credit card paid in full every month can be a genuinely useful tool — rewards, purchase protection, and a grace period with zero markup. The same card carrying a rolling unpaid balance is one of the more expensive ways to owe money in Pakistan. See Credit Cards in Pakistan: Are They Worth It for the Average Salaried Person? for the honest breakdown of when a card helps and when it quietly costs more than it’s worth.

Personal Loans and Their Alternatives

When a larger, planned expense needs financing, a bank personal loan isn’t the only option — an employer advance, a family loan, or a committee (beesakhi) scheme are all common alternatives in Pakistan, each with a very different cost and risk profile. See Personal Loans in Pakistan Compared for how these stack up against each other.

If You’re Already in Over Your Head

If reading this and recognizing your own situation in the “signs of trouble” checklist feels uncomfortable, that discomfort is useful information, not something to push away. See How to Get Out of Debt in Pakistan: A Realistic Step-by-Step Plan for a genuinely workable path forward, rather than vague advice to “just budget better.”

What This Means for You — Practical Steps

  1. Before using BNPL, compare the total installment price to the cash price for the same item
  2. Pay your credit card statement in full each month whenever possible — this is the single biggest lever you control
  3. Before a bank personal loan, check whether an employer advance or a lower-cost alternative could cover the same need
  4. If you’re carrying debt across multiple sources, list everything in one place before deciding what to tackle first

Frequently Asked Questions

Is all debt bad?

No — a credit card paid in full, or a loan financing something that genuinely improves your income or situation, can be reasonable. The problem is usually unmanaged, high-cost, revolving debt taken on without comparing the real alternatives.

Does using BNPL affect my ability to get a bank loan later?

This depends on whether the specific BNPL provider reports to a credit bureau or scoring system — check this directly with the provider rather than assuming either way.

Conclusion

Debt isn’t inherently reckless, but it deserves the same honest, numbers-first scrutiny this site applies to investing — because the cost of getting it wrong compounds just as fast in the opposite direction. Use the four detailed guides linked throughout this article for whichever form of debt is actually relevant to your situation right now.

Source references: State Bank of Pakistan — KIBOR Data | State Bank of Pakistan

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