Serving Pakistan

Outsourced & Nearshore Accounting Services — Pakistan

Outsource accounting to Pakistan: senior ACCA/CA talent delivering GAAP/IFRS-standard books to US, UK & AU firms at nearshore rates — plus full accounting services for businesses in Pakistan.

Book a free books review

Outsource your accounting to Pakistan — without outsourcing the standard

For US, UK, Canadian, and Australian firms, Pakistan is one of the strongest nearshore accounting markets in the world: deep ACCA/CA talent, full working-hours overlap with Europe and workable overlap with North America, and costs 50–70% below onshore rates. That’s the model Tallmont runs on — senior Pakistani accounting talent, delivering to Western standards, managed as one accountable firm rather than a staffing marketplace. If you’re a foreign firm looking to outsource your accounting function to Pakistan, the rest of this site is the offer: GAAP/IFRS-fluent monthly closes, NetSuite and QuickBooks systems work, and reporting your lenders will actually read.

International-grade accounting discipline, for businesses in Pakistan

Pakistan’s growing companies — exporters, IT houses, manufacturers, developers, retail groups — typically see their true numbers once a year, when the auditors arrive. Between audits: books maintained for compliance rather than decisions, sales tax reconciliations done under deadline pressure, and financing conversations that stall because the accounts aren’t current.

We bring the same monthly discipline we deliver to US, UK, and Australian clients — to businesses at home.

IFRS-consistent monthly books. Records kept in line with IFRS / IFRS for SMEs as adopted by SECP and ICAP, so statutory audits start from reconciled books instead of a shoebox — cutting audit time, fees, and findings.

Tax-ready by construction. Withholding tax (deducted and suffered) tracked cleanly, input/output sales tax reconciled monthly, provincial services tax (SRB, PRA, KPRA, BRA) handled correctly by jurisdiction. Your tax consultant files from the ledger, not from bank-statement archaeology.

Built for exporters. PKR books with multi-currency receivables, State Bank remittance trails, exchange gain/loss isolated properly — and channel-level margins for businesses selling through international marketplaces and platforms.

Group and family-business structures. Multiple companies, related-party transactions, director loans, and intercompany balances — documented and reconciled with the same rigor we apply to 20-entity groups abroad. When the group needs consolidated numbers for a bank or an investor, they exist.

Modern systems. QuickBooks and Xero done properly, NetSuite for groups that have outgrown them, and dashboards that put cash, receivables, and profitability in front of leadership every week.

Financing-ready output. Bank facility renewals, SBP-refinance scheme applications, and investor conversations all move faster when consolidated, current, reconciled financials appear on request.

Common questions from Pakistan

Which accounting standards do you follow for Pakistani companies?

SECP-registered companies report under IFRS or IFRS for SMEs as adopted in Pakistan (per ICAP guidance). We keep monthly books consistent with the framework your statutory auditor uses, so year-end audits start from clean, reconciled records.

Can you keep our books tax-ready for FBR?

Yes — books structured so income tax filings, withholding statements, and sales tax returns reconcile to the ledger. We maintain clean records of withholding (WHT) deducted and suffered, input/output sales tax, and provincial services tax (SRB, PRA, KPRA, BRA) — your tax consultant files from real numbers instead of reconstructions.

We're an exporter earning in USD. Can you handle that?

That's a sweet spot — PKR books with USD (and other currency) receivables, proper exchange-gain/loss treatment, and reporting that shows performance in both currencies. Essential for IT/services exporters and anyone selling on international marketplaces.

Do Pakistani businesses really need monthly closes?

The ones that grow do. Most Pakistani SMEs see real numbers once a year at audit time — far too late to act. A disciplined monthly close changes pricing, hiring, and expansion decisions the month they matter, and makes bank financing dramatically easier.

Book your free books review (PK)

Thirty minutes, your current setup, and a candid read on what it would take.

No retainers pitched, no obligation. You'll get a findings memo either way.