The Sindh Revenue Board (SRB) has just reported its highest-ever year: around Rs 370 billion collected in FY 2025-26, a jump of roughly 20% over the previous year, including a record single month of about Rs 45 billion in June. For businesses providing services in Sindh, a record collection year sends a clear signal - enforcement is tightening, and compliance matters more than ever.
What the numbers tell you
Record collection doesn't happen by accident. It reflects a wider tax net, better data and stronger enforcement. For service businesses, that means SRB is more likely to notice gaps - unregistered providers, under-reported turnover or invoices without correct Sindh sales tax. Getting your house in order now is far cheaper than a later assessment.
Who pays SRB, and how much?
SRB collects Sindh sales tax on services (SST), separate from FBR, which handles sales tax on goods. The general Sindh sales tax rate on services is 15% (telecommunication services are taxed higher, at 19.5%). If your business provides taxable services in Sindh, you generally need to register with SRB, charge SST on your invoices, and file returns.
SRB vs FBR - don't confuse them
This trips up many businesses: goods are taxed by FBR, services by the relevant provincial authority - SRB in Sindh. If you sell both goods and services, you may deal with both. Your software should handle each correctly so your invoices and returns line up with the right authority.
What service businesses should do
- If you provide taxable services in Sindh, make sure you're registered with SRB.
- Charge the correct Sindh sales tax on every service invoice.
- Keep clean, digital records so returns are quick and defensible.
- File on time - late or missing returns are exactly what tighter enforcement catches.
How AmalERP helps
AmalERP has SRB support for Sindh services built into the same double-entry system that runs your accounting, invoicing and reporting - alongside FBR for goods. So whether you bill services, goods, or both, your tax is handled correctly and your records stay filing-ready. See how it fits service businesses.
This article is general information, not tax advice. Confirm your SRB registration and rates with SRB's latest rules or your tax advisor.
