General Property Laws of Pakistan
Pakistan's property law framework is built on a foundation of British-era statutes (many still in force) combined with post-independence legislation. This section provides a comprehensive reference to the key laws that govern property rights in Pakistan.
§📚 Core Property Legislation
§1. Transfer of Property Act 1882
Applicability: All provinces of Pakistan (federal law)
Purpose
Governs the transfer of property between living persons (as opposed to inheritance, which is governed by personal law).
Key Provisions
| Section | Subject |
|---|---|
| Section 5 | Definition of "transfer of property" |
| Section 6 | What property may be transferred |
| Section 7 | Competency to transfer |
| Section 8 | Operation of transfer |
| Section 9 | Oral transfer |
| Section 10 | Condition restraining alienation (void) |
| Section 17 | Accumulation of income |
| Section 54 | Sale of immovable property — must be by deed |
| Section 55 | Rights and liabilities of buyer and seller |
| Section 58 | Definition of mortgage |
| Section 59 | Mortgage to be by registered instrument |
| Section 100 | Charges on immovable property |
| Section 105 | Lease of immovable property |
| Section 111 | Determination of lease |
| Section 118 | Exchange |
| Section 122 | Gift — definition |
| Section 123 | Gift of immovable property — must be registered |
| Section 129 | Saving of donations mortis causa |
Section 54 — Sale
"A sale of immovable property can only be made by a registered instrument and a sale of movable property may be made either by a registered instrument or by delivery."
This means verbal sales of property are void. You must have a registered deed.
Section 55 — Rights and Liabilities
Key rights of the buyer:
- •Right to receive sale deed and title documents
- •Right to receive property free from encumbrances not disclosed
- •Right to rents accruing after date of sale
Key rights of the seller:
- •Right to receive sale consideration
- •Right to rents before sale date
- •Right to rescind if buyer fails to pay
§2. Registration Act 1908
Applicability: All provinces
Purpose
Provides for the registration of documents relating to immovable property.
Documents That Must Be Registered
Under Section 17 (compulsory registration):
- •Instruments of gift of immovable property
- •Sale deeds for immovable property worth more than PKR 100
- •Leases of immovable property for more than 1 year
- •Instruments creating or extinguishing rights in immovable property
Documents That May Be Registered (Optional)
Under Section 18:
- •Wills
- •Powers of attorney
- •Agreements to sell (optional but recommended)
Effect of Non-Registration (Section 49)
An unregistered document which ought to have been registered shall not be received as evidence of any transaction affecting immovable property.
Exception: An unregistered document can be used as evidence of a contract in a suit for specific performance.
Registration Procedure
- •Present document at Sub-Registrar's office of district where property is located
- •All executants (parties) appear in person (or authorized POA)
- •Sub-Registrar verifies identity (CNIC)
- •Document read and signed
- •Witnesses sign
- •Sub-Registrar issues endorsement and returns registered copy
Time for Registration (Section 23)
Documents must be presented for registration within 4 months of execution. Delay results in additional fees and may require special application.
§3. Stamp Act 1899
Applicability: Federal, with provincial schedules
Purpose
Imposes duty on instruments (documents) used in property transactions.
Key Instruments and Duties
| Instrument | Duty Rate |
|---|---|
| Sale Deed | 3% of market value |
| Gift Deed | 2–3% |
| Mortgage Deed | 0.25% |
| Lease (1–3 years) | 1% of annual rent |
| Power of Attorney | PKR 200–500 |
| Agreement to Sell | PKR 50–200 (nominal) |
Under-Stamping
- •Using insufficient stamps renders a document inadmissible until deficiency is paid
- •Court can impound under-stamped documents
- •Penalty: Up to 10× the deficient stamp duty
§4. Land Revenue Act 1967 (Punjab)
Applicability: Punjab (each province has its own version)
Purpose
Governs land records, mutation, patwari system, and revenue administration.
Key Provisions
| Section | Subject |
|---|---|
| Section 35 | Mutation — when required |
| Section 36 | Application for mutation |
| Section 37 | Inquiry into mutation |
| Section 38 | Order on mutation |
| Section 42 | Effect of entries in record of rights |
| Section 108 | Revenue officers and their powers |
| Section 158 | Revenue appeals |
Revenue Officers Hierarchy
Patwari (Field Level)
↓
Girdawar/Kanungo (Circle Level)
↓
Tehsildar (Tehsil Level)
↓
Assistant Collector / SDM (Sub-Division)
↓
Collector / Deputy Commissioner (District Level)
↓
Commissioner (Division Level)
↓
Board of Revenue (Provincial)
Appeals in Revenue Matters
Revenue orders are subject to a hierarchy of appeals within the revenue system, ultimately to the Board of Revenue. Decisions of Board of Revenue can be challenged in High Court by writ.
§5. Specific Relief Act 1877
Purpose
Provides for enforcement of specific contracts (as opposed to only damages).
Key Provisions for Property
Section 12 — Specific Performance of Contracts: Court can order a party to specifically perform a contract for sale/purchase of immovable property when:
- •Damages are not adequate remedy
- •The property is unique or has special value
Section 42 — Declaratory Decrees: Courts can declare rights of a person in property without any additional relief. Used to:
- •Declare ownership
- •Declare a transfer void
- •Declare inheritance rights
Section 39 — Cancellation of Instruments: Courts can cancel a document (deed, mutation) if it is void or voidable and its existence causes damage to the applicant.
Practical Use: If a fraudulent sale deed has been registered in your property, you can file a suit for cancellation of instrument under Section 39 to have it declared null and void.
§6. Pakistan Penal Code 1860 — Property Offences
| Section | Offence | Punishment |
|---|---|---|
| Section 378 | Theft | Up to 3 years + fine |
| Section 383 | Extortion | Up to 3 years + fine |
| Section 392 | Robbery | Up to 10 years + fine |
| Section 405 | Criminal Breach of Trust | Up to 3 years + fine |
| Section 415 | Cheating | Up to 1 year + fine |
| Section 420 | Cheating with dishonest intention (property fraud) | Up to 7 years + fine |
| Section 441 | Criminal Trespass | Up to 3 months + fine |
| Section 442 | House Trespass | Up to 1 year + fine |
| Section 447 | Trespass punishment | Fine of PKR 500 |
| Section 463 | Forgery | Up to 2 years + fine |
| Section 468 | Forgery for property fraud | Up to 7 years + fine |
| Section 471 | Using forged documents | Up to 2 years + fine |
§7. Income Tax Ordinance 2001
Relevance to property (see full Taxes guide for detail):
| Section | Subject |
|---|---|
| Section 15 | Rental income taxable |
| Section 37 | Capital gains on immovable property |
| Section 68 | FBR valuation of property |
| Section 111 | Unexplained income/assets (property) |
| Section 155 | Withholding on rent by companies |
| Section 236C | Withholding at sale |
| Section 236K | Withholding at purchase |
§8. Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act 2017
Purpose
Prohibits holding property in another's name (benami) to evade taxes or laws.
Key Provisions
- •Benami transactions are void
- •Property held benami can be confiscated by the government
- •Criminal punishment: 1–7 years imprisonment + fine up to 25% of property value
- •FBR has powers to investigate and prosecute
What Is Benami?
A transaction is benami if:
- •Property is held by one person
- •But consideration is paid by another person
- •The property is held for the benefit of the actual payer
Exceptions
- •Property held by a Karta of a Hindu undivided family
- •Property held by a person in his fiduciary capacity (trustee)
- •Property held by a person on behalf of a spouse/children where income is from known sources
§9. Punjab Pre-emption Act 1991
Purpose
Gives certain persons a preferential right to purchase property before it is sold to an outsider.
Who Has Pre-emption Right?
Priority order in Punjab:
- •Co-sharers (people who own undivided shares in the same property)
- •Participators (those with rights in common water, pasture, etc.)
- •Neighbors (adjacent property owners — only for agricultural land)
How Pre-emption Works
- •Property is sold to an outsider
- •Pre-emptor files suit for pre-emption within 1 year of sale
- •Pre-emptor must deposit the full sale price in court
- •Court considers whether the right exists and was exercised timely
Abolition for Urban Property
The Punjab Pre-emption Act does not apply to urban properties in many situations. Pre-emption is most relevant for agricultural land and rural property.
§10. Muslim Family Laws Ordinance 1961
Relevance to Property
| Issue | MFLO Provision |
|---|---|
| Marriage and property rights | Mehr (dower) — wife's property right |
| Divorce and property | Division depends on what was agreed |
| Remarriage | Does not affect inheritance shares |
| Orphaned grandchildren | Pre-deceasing child's share passes to grandchildren (S.4) |
Section 4 — Orphaned Grandchildren
A son's share in the grandfather's estate passes to the son's children (grandchildren) even if the son predeceased the grandfather. This was a significant reform of classical Islamic inheritance law.
§11. Waqf Properties Ordinance 1979
Purpose
Governs religious endowments (Waqf). Waqf property:
- •Cannot be sold or transferred
- •Must be used for the religious/charitable purpose specified
- •Administered by Auqaf Department (provincial)
If someone tries to sell you Waqf property — it is illegal and void. Always check whether a property has a Waqf status.
§12. Trust Act 1882
Trust property (property held in trust for a beneficiary) can only be transferred by the trustee with legal authority to do so. Individual beneficiaries cannot sell trust property independently.
§🗺️ Provincial Land Laws Quick Reference
| Province | Primary Land Law |
|---|---|
| Punjab | Punjab Land Revenue Act 1967 |
| Sindh | Sindh Land Revenue Act 1967 |
| KPK | KPK Land Revenue Act |
| Balochistan | Balochistan Land Revenue Regulation |
| Islamabad | CDA Ordinance 1960 (for planned areas) |
§📋 Key Legal Principles Summary
| Principle | Statute |
|---|---|
| Sale must be registered | Registration Act 1908, S.17 |
| Unregistered deed not admissible for title | Registration Act 1908, S.49 |
| Mutation is not title | Case law (SC PLD 1990) |
| Specific performance available | Specific Relief Act 1877, S.12 |
| Benami transactions are void and criminal | Benami Act 2017 |
| Pre-emption right for co-sharers | Punjab Pre-emption Act 1991 |
| Daughters' inheritance is mandatory | Islamic law + SC |
| Waqf property cannot be sold | Waqf Ordinance 1979 |
| Landlord must use Rent Controller for eviction | Provincial Rent Ordinances |
| Forged documents — criminal offence | PPC S.468 |
Related: Property Cases | Transfer Laws | Taxes
PPG Legal Team
Pakistan Property Guide