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Why the Internet Is Slow in Pakistan

12 Mins read

Have you ever wondered why your video buffers, your video calls lag, or your uploads & downloads crawl—especially when everyone else seems to be streaming fine? If you live in Pakistan or rely on its internet, you’re not alone. Despite big claims of growth, many users still feel frustrated.

In this post I’ll walk you through what makes the internet slow in Pakistan. We’ll examine the technical causes, infrastructure & policy issues, real data that shows how Pakistan compares globally, some personal observations, and finally what can help improve things.


How Bad Is It? A Picture With Data

Before we diagnose causes, it helps to see where Pakistan stands:

MetricFixed broadband average speedMobile internet average speedGlobal rank (fixed / mobile)
Pakistan (2025)~16–18 Mbps PhoneWorld+2DigitalRights Monitor+2~25 Mbps Digital Rights Monitor+1Fixed: around 143-144th; Mobile: around 96-98th PhoneWorld+2Digital Rights Monitor+2

Some other outcomes:

  • Pakistan suffered over 9,700 hours of internet disruptions in 2024, affecting tens of millions of users. Arab News
  • Economic loss from shutdowns, slow speeds, etc., is estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Reuters+2Voice of America+2

These numbers show Pakistan is well behind many peers in South Asia and globally. For anyone doing remote work, online education, or streaming, this matters a lot.


What Causes Slow Internet in Pakistan

There isn’t one single culprit. Multiple factors interact. I’ll break them into categories: infrastructure, regulation & policy, technical & geographic constraints, demand & usage patterns, and other disruptions (political, outage, etc.).


Infrastructure and Backbone Issues

  1. Limited Undersea Cable Diversity & Faults
    Many of Pakistan’s international links depend on a small number of submarine cables landing in specific locations (mostly Karachi). When one cable is damaged or has a fault, international traffic slows or re-routes through longer paths. In recent cases, a submarine-cable fault was officially blamed for major slowdown. Wikipedia+3The Times of India+3subtelforum.com+3
  2. Backhaul Bottlenecks
    Even once data reaches Pakistan, distributing it within the country (the internal backbone, fiber optics, etc.) often has gaps. Many areas are still served by older technologies (DSL, copper), or by wireless links that can’t keep up with demand.
  3. Right-of-Way & Fiber Deployment Delays
    Running fiber requires permissions (Right of Way) from municipalities and private landowners. Delays and disputes over RoW significantly slow the laying of fiber optic cables in cities and rural areas. Wikipedia
  4. Limited Last-Mile Connectivity Quality
    In some urban areas you’re lucky to get real fiber to the home (FTTH); in many others, the “last mile” is old copper lines or wireless, which degrade speed and stability. In rural or semi-urban zones, infrastructure is often less robust.

Regulatory, Policy & Governance Challenges

  1. Internet Firewall / Web Monitoring System
    There is growing concern that government systems to monitor or filter content (often called a firewall or web management system) add latency or interfere with routing. Some businesses say speed has dropped 30-40% when certain filtering or traffic-inspection tools are in testing or active use. Reuters+3Voice of America+3The Guardian+3
  2. Limited Spectrum Allocation / Mobile Infrastructure Gaps
    Mobile broadband performance depends heavily on available radio spectrum, tower density, and quality of backhaul. Pakistan’s spectrum resources are more constrained than many peers. As demand rises (more users, more video, more streaming) congestion can get worse.
  3. Regulation & Policy Uncertainty
    Unclear or changing regulations (about content, censorship, licensing, permissions for infrastructure) discourage investment. If ISPs expect delays or unclear legal frameworks, they may avoid upgrading or expanding.
  4. Lack of Transparency & Coordination
    Sometimes when speed drops or outages happen, users are not informed, or reasons given are vague (e.g. “faulty cable”, “maintenance”). This reduces trust and makes it harder for businesses to plan.

Technical & Geographic Constraints

  1. Distance & Routing Inefficiencies
    Traffic to many global services is routed through distant hubs. If data has to travel via long, inefficient routes, latency increases. Undersea cable damage or lack of alternate paths exacerbates this.
  2. Electricity Reliability
    Power outages and load shedding (planned electricity cuts) happen in many regions. ISPs may have backups, but repeated outages can reduce network stability and force systems into conservative modes to avoid damage.
  3. Old Technology Still In Use
    Legacy systems like copper DSL, older wireless tech, outdated infrastructure all limit speed. In many urban areas, though there are newer fiber options, users may still be using ADSL or low-capacity wireless links.

Demand, Usage & User Behavior

  1. Rapid Growth in Internet Usage
    The number of internet users has soared. More people streaming video, using video conferencing, using cloud services, gaming. When demand rises without matching infrastructure upgrades, congestion is inevitable.
  2. Peak Usage Times & Congestion
    In the evenings or during major events (e.g. sports, popular TV shows, news events), many users are online simultaneously. Networks may get overloaded.
  3. Content & Servers Being Outside Pakistan
    If resources (video, software updates, content delivery networks, etc.) are hosted far away or not cached locally, data has to travel more hops, more undersea cable usage, etc. Local CDN presence helps, but not all services are cached locally.

Political & Unexpected Disruptions

  1. Cable Faults / Maintenance Events
    As mentioned, when submarine cable systems fail (due to damage, maintenance, natural causes), they cause international capacity reduction.
  2. Government-Ordered Restrictions, Outages or Throttling
    For security, political control, or during protests, there have been internet shutdowns or restrictions. These directly slow or block traffic, often unpredictably. Voice of America+2Arab News+2
  3. Firewall Testing & Surveillance Tools
    When content-filtering or surveillance tools are introduced or tested, there can be side effects: packets may be inspected, blocked, or re-routed in less optimal ways, causing latency and slower speeds.

Real Life Examples & Anecdotes

To illustrate, here are a few:

  • A freelancer in Lahore might find that in the early evening their Zoom calls become choppy. This could be due to network congestion + last-mile issues.
  • In July 2025, users of one ISP (Nayatel) in Pakistan reported slower speeds and unstable connections—later traced to problems with an upstream provider that affected eastbound internet traffic. ProPakistani
  • Businesses in the IT sector estimate losses of $300 million due to internet disruptions linked to firewall implementation and related restrictions. Reuters+2The Guardian+2

These are not just numbers—they affect incomes, education, remote work, global competitiveness.


How Pakistan Compares with Neighbors

Here are a few comparisons to show how Pakistan stacks up regionally:

CountryFixed broadband avg speed*Mobile avg speed*Notes
IndiaHigher than Pakistan on both fixed and mobile in most reports. Digital Rights Monitor+1Has more fiber deployment, more aggressive spectrum and infrastructure policies.
Bangladesh, Sri LankaTypically similar mobile speeds, sometimes better fixed speeds. Digital Rights Monitor+1Varying degrees of investment in fiber, CDNs, local data centers etc.
Pakistan~16-18 Mbps fixed, ~25 Mbps mobile Digital Rights Monitor+2PhoneWorld+2Lags global averages (fixed globally ~100 Mbps; mobile globally ~60 Mbps in many places) Digital Rights Monitor


What Can Be Done: Solutions & Improvements

Knowing the causes helps point toward what needs to be done. Here are actions Pakistan (government, ISPs, users) can take to speed things up.


Infrastructure Upgrades

  • More diverse submarine cable landing stations
    Having multiple landing points (not just Karachi) means redundancy. Gwadar, for example, has been proposed as a backup. This reduces downstream impact when one cable fails. PhoneWorld+1
  • Expand fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) networks
    Where possible replace old copper/wireless links with fiber for last-mile connections. This has huge speed & stability benefits.
  • Improve internal backbone & peering
    Building stronger regional/national data centers, better peering between ISPs, local caching (CDNs) so that content doesn’t always have to come from abroad.

Policy & Regulation Reforms

  • Clearer, more efficient Right of Way (RoW) policies
    Streamline permissions so laying fiber is faster, less costly, and more predictable.
  • Transparency from ISPs / PTA about slowdowns
    When there is a cable fault, or firewall activity, or maintenance, informing users helps maintain trust.
  • Regulate but with care
    If filtering/surveillance tools must exist (e.g. for national security), ensure they are not overly interfering with speed or routing, that they are audited, and that there are fallback or redundancy systems.
  • Allocate spectrum well
    Ensuring mobile network operators have enough radio spectrum to meet growing demand helps reduce congestion, especially in urban centers.
  • Incentivize local content & caching
    Encourage companies to host services locally or cache globally hosted content in Pakistan. This cuts down on distance and improves speed.

What Users Can Do

  • Choose better ISPs or plans (if available). Fiber / FTTH connections are usually more stable.
  • Run speed tests at different times to see when you get worst performance. Share that feedback with your ISP.
  • Use tools like VPNs or DNS-based optimization when services are blocked—but note these can sometimes slow things further depending on how they are routed.
  • If possible, prefer services that are locally hosted or cached. For example, local video servers, or content delivery networks serving Pakistan.

Challenges / What Holds Back Improvement

It’s not easy to fix everything fast. Some of the obstacles:

  • High cost of infrastructure
    Undersea cables, fiber deployment, etc. are expensive. Return on investment may be slow, especially in low-density or rural areas.
  • Geography
    Some terrain makes it harder to lay fiber or build towers. Rural & mountainous regions are tougher.
  • Political / security concerns
    Government’s need for surveillance, content control, or restrictions can conflict with internet performance. Also, political instability sometimes slows long-term planning.
  • Financial constraints
    Both ISPs and government have limited budgets. Sometimes investment goes into other priorities first.
  • Lack of skilled workforce or maintenance culture
    Building is one thing; maintaining networks, preventing faults, upgrading equipment regularly is another.

The Human Side of Slow Internet

Numbers tell part of the story, but the real impact is felt in daily life. Let’s look at how different groups experience slow internet in Pakistan.

Students and Online Learning

When schools shifted online during the pandemic, many students in Pakistan found themselves locked out. Classes on Zoom froze mid-sentence. Video lectures wouldn’t load. Exams delivered online were sometimes impossible to attempt. Even now, many universities rely on digital platforms for assignments, but students in smaller towns report that slow internet makes deadlines stressful.

Freelancers and Remote Workers

Pakistan has one of the fastest-growing freelancer economies, especially on platforms like Upwork and Fiverr. But many freelancers lose clients when video calls drop, large files fail to upload, or project deadlines are missed due to unstable connectivity. Some even pay for multiple connections (for example, a DSL line plus a mobile hotspot) just to have a backup.

Businesses and E-commerce

E-commerce is booming in Pakistan, but poor internet adds friction. Payment gateways time out. Live chat with customers gets disrupted. Warehouses connected to central servers face lag. This hurts not just small businesses but the overall trust in online commerce.

Entertainment and Social Life

From Netflix to cricket live streams, people want smooth entertainment. Yet buffering and quality drops are common. Social media apps often reduce video quality automatically when connections slow, which frustrates users who are paying for “high-speed” packages.


Future Outlook

There are signs that things could improve:

  • A growing number of fiber broadband subscribers in Pakistan. Wikipedia+1
  • Plans for new submarine cables (including ones that will land outside Karachi, or improve redundancy) are in progress. Wikipedia+1
  • Increasing pressure from business communities and tech industries for more reliable, high-speed internet. Economic losses from slow or disrupted internet are real, pushing for accountability.

If these efforts succeed, in a few years you might see stable fixed broadband speeds closer to global averages (50-100+ Mbps), better mobile performance, fewer outages.

Deep Dive: Submarine Cables and Why They Matter

You may hear “submarine cable fault” often in the news. Let’s unpack why these cables are so critical.

  • Pakistan is connected to the global internet through a handful of submarine cable systems (like SEA-ME-WE 5, AAE-1, IMEWE, and TW1).
  • Almost all of them land in Karachi. That means one coastal city is a single choke point for the entire nation’s international connectivity.
  • When one cable is cut (due to ship anchors, natural disasters, or maintenance), traffic shifts to others. If the remaining cables lack enough capacity, the whole country feels the slowdown.

Compare this with countries that have multiple geographically diverse landing stations. For example, India has over a dozen landing points along different coasts. This redundancy prevents a single fault from crippling connectivity.

Pakistan has discussed adding landing points in Gwadar or other locations, but progress has been slow. Until that happens, cable faults will remain a recurring nightmare.


Regulatory and Policy Realities

Pakistan’s telecom sector is heavily regulated by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA). Regulation isn’t inherently bad—it ensures security, consumer rights, and fair competition—but in Pakistan, some issues arise:

  • Right of Way Disputes: ISPs often struggle to get municipal permission to dig up roads and lay fiber. Sometimes city authorities demand high fees. This discourages fast expansion of fiber-to-the-home.
  • Firewall and Filtering Tools: Government systems meant to block harmful content can slow down normal traffic. Deep Packet Inspection (DPI), for example, introduces latency. Businesses argue these tools are too broad and harm productivity.
  • Policy Uncertainty: Telecom operators sometimes don’t know if their licenses will be renewed smoothly, or if sudden regulatory changes will affect pricing. This makes long-term investment risky.

The net effect is that ISPs hold back on aggressive upgrades, and consumers suffer.


Geographic and Rural Divide

Pakistan’s geography adds unique challenges:

  • Mountains and Valleys: In the north, terrain makes it difficult to lay fiber or build towers. Satellite links or microwave links are often used, but they can’t match fiber speeds.
  • Rural Areas: Around 63% of Pakistan’s population lives in rural areas. Many of these areas have only patchy mobile coverage, not reliable broadband. Where service exists, it’s often slower than in cities.
  • Urban Overload: On the other hand, big cities like Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad face congestion because too many users crowd onto networks during peak times.

This creates a digital divide: urban elites may enjoy fiber connections at 50–100 Mbps, while rural users struggle with under 5 Mbps.


Economic Cost of Slow Internet

It’s not just about convenience—slow internet costs money.

  • The Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA) estimates hundreds of millions of dollars lost annually due to outages and speed issues.
  • Startups struggle to pitch to international investors if video calls drop or demos lag.
  • E-commerce companies lose sales when customers abandon carts due to failed payment processing.
  • Remote jobs—one of Pakistan’s big hopes for employment—are harder to sustain with unreliable connectivity.

In short, internet quality is now a core economic factor, not just a tech issue.


Comparing ISPs in Pakistan

Consumers often debate which ISP is best. Experiences vary, but here are general trends:

  • PTCL: Oldest player, wide coverage, but often criticized for poor customer service and inconsistent speeds.
  • Nayatel: Known for quality fiber services in cities like Islamabad, but limited coverage outside main urban centers.
  • StormFiber (by Cybernet): Offers FTTH in some cities, often rated higher than PTCL.
  • Transworld: Runs its own submarine cable (TW1), giving it some advantages in international traffic.
  • Mobile operators (Jazz, Zong, Telenor, Ufone): Provide 4G broadband. Good for portability, but congestion at peak times can cause drops.

No ISP is perfect, but consumers often choose based on availability in their area rather than performance.


Lessons from Other Countries

Looking abroad helps identify what works:

  • India: Aggressive rollout of fiber and cheap mobile data pushed speeds higher. Reliance Jio’s entry shook the market, forcing all players to upgrade.
  • South Korea: Government prioritized internet as infrastructure, like roads. This led to world-leading speeds.
  • Bangladesh: Despite fewer resources, Bangladesh often outperforms Pakistan in mobile internet speeds because of better spectrum allocation and local caching.

The lesson: strong policy, competition, and infrastructure investment matter more than just geography or wealth.


Future Technologies That Could Help Pakistan

  1. 5G Rollout
    Pakistan has yet to launch commercial 5G nationwide. Done right, 5G could provide higher speeds and lower latency. But without enough spectrum and fiber backhaul, it may not deliver its promise.
  2. Satellite Internet (Starlink, etc.)
    Services like Starlink offer satellite-based internet. While expensive now, they could help rural areas where fiber is hard to deploy.
  3. Local Data Centers and CDNs
    If more companies host servers in Pakistan, users won’t need to fetch content from Singapore or Dubai. This cuts down latency dramatically.
  4. More Submarine Cables
    New cable projects (like PEACE Cable) promise to add capacity and redundancy. The sooner they’re operational, the better.

What Needs to Change

To make real progress, three things must align:

  1. Government Commitment
    Treat internet as critical infrastructure. Speed up permissions for fiber, invest in redundancy, ensure filtering doesn’t cripple speed.
  2. Private Sector Investment
    ISPs and telecom operators must expand coverage, improve quality, and compete fairly on service.
  3. Public Pressure and Awareness
    Users should demand transparency. When speeds drop, ISPs and regulators should be accountable. Civil society groups can push for digital rights and better policy.

Tips for Users Struggling With Slow Internet

While structural issues take time to fix, individuals can do a few things:

  • Use wired connections where possible (Ethernet instead of Wi-Fi).
  • Restart routers periodically to clear congestion.
  • Check peak vs. off-peak speeds—schedule heavy downloads for night or early morning.
  • Consider dual connections (a fiber line plus mobile data backup).
  • Enable local caching on devices for software updates.
  • Use video at lower resolution during calls if stability matters more than HD quality.

These are not perfect fixes, but they help you get the most out of what you have.


Conclusion

To sum up:

  • The internet in Pakistan is generally slower than global averages, especially for fixed broadband.
  • The causes are many: limited infrastructure / undersea cable redundancy, old last-mile technologies, regulatory / policy bottlenecks, filtering/firewall tools, high demand, and outage/disruption events.
  • There are real human costs: businesses lose money, remote workers and students suffer, daily convenience drops.

But improvements are possible, and some are already underway: more fiber, more cable capacity, better regulation, and better communication with users.

FAQs:

Why is internet so slow in Pakistan compared to other countries?

Pakistan relies on a small number of submarine cables, outdated last-mile infrastructure, and has regulatory bottlenecks. Combined with high demand and occasional government restrictions, these factors keep speeds below global averages.

Which internet provider is fastest in Pakistan?

It depends on location. In major cities, fiber providers like Nayatel and StormFiber often deliver better stability and speed than PTCL. In areas without fiber, mobile networks like Jazz or Zong may be the only option, though performance varies at peak hours.

Does Pakistan have 5G internet?

As of 2025, Pakistan has not rolled out nationwide 5G services. Trials have taken place, but full commercial deployment is pending due to spectrum auctions, infrastructure readiness, and investment challenges.

Why do submarine cable faults affect the whole country?

Most of Pakistan’s international internet traffic passes through a few cables landing in Karachi. When a cable is cut or under maintenance, traffic reroutes through limited remaining capacity, causing slow speeds nationwide.

How can I improve my internet speed at home?

You can use a wired connection instead of Wi-Fi, upgrade to fiber if available, restart your router often, avoid peak usage hours for large downloads, and consider having a backup mobile connection to switch when one network is congested.

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