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Supplements Print edition: 2026-01-26

Digitalization and governance: A giant leap of Pakistan Customs

  • Jeewan Lal, Assistant Collector Enforcement, Karachi
Published January 26, 2026 Updated January 26, 2026 08:41am

Digitalization has become a defining feature of modern governance, reshaping how modern economies regulate trade, deliver services, collect maximum revenue and ensure transparency. For customs administrations worldwide, the adoption of digital systems is essential to balance trade facilitation, revenue collection, and border security.

Pakistan Customs has made significant leap by transitioning from traditional, paper-based procedures to integrated digital platforms from One Paccs, One Customs to much integrated Web-Based One Customs (WeBOC), Pakistan Single Window (PSW) and then the Faceless Customs Assessment system (FCA) This transformation reflects Pakistan Customs’ commitment to efficiency, transparency, and good governance.Historically, customs operations in Pakistan relied on manual documentation and physical interaction between traders and customs officials. These practices resulted in prolonged clearance times, increased transaction costs, port congestion, and vulnerabilities to discretionary decision-making.

With growing trade volumes and increasing international expectations for efficiency, digitalization emerged as a strategic public administration reform rather than a mere technological upgrade.

The introduction of Web-Based One Customs (WeBOC) marked a major milestone in this journey. WeBOC enabled electronic filing of goods declarations, online submission of documents, automated duty and tax calculation, and electronic payment of duty and taxes. By standardizing procedures and creating verifiable audit trails, WeBOC improved transparency and consistency across customs formations. Its integration with the Pakistan Single Window further enhanced trade facilitation by allowing traders to submit regulatory information through a single digital interface, reducing duplication and improving inter-agency coordination.

Digital reforms under WeBOC significantly reduced dwell time and improved clearance efficiency.

Automation and risk management tools enabled faster clearance of low-risk consignments while allowing customs authorities to focus on profiling based efforts on high-risk cargo. Reduced dwell time has progressively lowered demurrage costs, improved port efficiency, and strengthened supply chain reliability, benefiting both the trading community and the national economy.

Building on these reforms, Pakistan Customs introduced the Faceless Customs Assessment system in December 2024 to further enhance governance and transparency and reduce dwell time.

Under this system, goods declarations are assessed remotely by centralized unit, eliminating physical interaction between traders, clearing agents and appraising officers. This structural reform reduced opportunities for undue influence and rent-seeking behavior while promoting uniformity, effectiveness and consistent assessment.

Early results demonstrated a substantial reduction in assessment and clearance times from 108 hours to 60 hours, easing port congestion and improving predictability for businesses.

Digitalization has also strengthened revenue collection by improving the accuracy of assessment and curbing under-invoicing and misdeclaration. Automated systems, centralized data, and reduced discretion have enhanced compliance while supporting post-clearance audit and risk-based enforcement. These developments demonstrate that trade facilitation and revenue collection and protection can progress simultaneously under a well-designed digital framework.

The digital transformation of Pakistan Customs illustrates the vital role of technology in modern public administration. From One-Customs to the Faceless Customs Assessment system, digital reforms have improved clearance times, facilitated trade, and strengthened revenue collection while enhancing transparency and accountability.

As Pakistan Customs continues to modernize, its digital journey stands as a testament to its commitment to protecting society, facilitating legitimate trade, and upholding the principles of good governance—values that align closely with the spirit of International Customs Day.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2026

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