Hiring your first employees is one of the most exciting milestones for any startup. But without proper employment contracts, HR policies, and legal compliance, founders often face disputes, liabilities, and financial losses.
In Pakistan, most startups begin operations without any formal HR structure. This leads to problems such as unclear job roles, unexpected resignations, conflicts, data theft, misuse of company assets, and even lawsuits.
This guide explains everything a startup in Pakistan needs from drafting employment contracts to setting up complete HR policies according to Pakistani labor laws.
Whether you are a founder, HR manager, or SME owner, here’s why employment documentation is critical.
A written contract reduces misunderstandings and protects you under Pakistani labor laws.
Clear job descriptions = better performance + fewer conflicts.
Non compliance can result in penalties, lawsuits, and reputational damage.
Essential for tech startups, agencies, SaaS companies, and e-commerce businesses.
Employees feel secure and perform better when their terms of employment are documented.
Pakistan’s labor laws are a combination of.
Industrial and Commercial Employment (Standing Orders) Ordinance
Shops and Establishment Ordinance
Factories Act
Payment of Wages Act
Social security laws (EOBI, PESSI/SESSI)
Women’s Rights & Workplace Harassment Laws
Income tax withholding rules
Startups are legally required to comply with these when hiring employees.
A legally strong employment contract for startups should include.
Avoid vague roles like “marketing guy” or “office assistant.”
Be specific.
Break it down into.
Basic salary
Allowances
Bonuses/commissions
Tax deductions (advance income tax)
Define:
Shift timings
Remote vs office
Overtime rules (as per labor law)
Legally allowed, Up to 3 months (extendable).
Standard practice in Pakistan:
30 days for employees
30 to 60 days for employers
As per law:
Casual leaves: 10
Sick leaves: 8
Annual leaves: 14
Critical for protecting:
Client data
Business ideas
Financial information
Codes & systems
Especially important for tech startups.
Clarify that all work produced belongs to the company.
Covers:
Discipline
Workplace behavior
Anti harassment compliance
Safety rules
Clearly mention:
Termination grounds
Final settlement rules
Handover of company assets
Connect performance reviews to:
Bonuses
Raises
Promotions
Defines how internal disputes will be resolved helps avoid lawsuits.
Here are the core policies recommended for startups.
Should include.!
Company values
Dress code
Attendance
Safety rules
Leave standards
Code of ethics
Critical in Pakistan’s emerging tech culture.
Should include.!
Working hours
Monitoring tools
Confidentiality
Equipment usage
Reporting method
Under the Protection Against Harassment Act, every organization must have.!
Internal Harassment Committee
Reporting mechanism
Inquiry procedure
Important due to increasing cyber threats.
Covers:
Password rules
Device protection
Email security
Data access levels
Use of personal devices (BYOD)
Defines:
Late arrival rules
Absence policy
Annual leaves
Sick leaves
Unpaid leaves
To avoid misuse of company devices and ensure productivity.
Helps maintain a respectful workplace.
Explains how employees can submit complaints.
An employment contract is a legally binding agreement that outlines the employee’s job role, salary, duties, working hours, leaves, confidentiality, and other conditions. Startups need it to avoid disputes, define expectations, and stay compliant with Pakistani labor laws.
Yes. Under Pakistani labor laws, every employer must provide a written appointment letter or employment contract to all employees, including probationers and temporary staff.
A strong contract must include: job title, salary structure, working hours, leave entitlements, probation period, termination rules, confidentiality, intellectual property ownership, non-compete clause, and code of conduct.
Mandatory policies include:
Workplace harassment policy (required under 2010 Act)
Leave and attendance policy
Code of conduct & ethics policy
Anti-discrimination and equal opportunity policy
Health & safety policy
Plus best-practice policies like remote work, performance, and data protection.
Yes. Under labor regulations, a probation period of up to 3 months is allowed, and it can be extended if mentioned in writing. Startups commonly use probation for new hires.
Yes. Any business employing full-time staff must register with EOBI and contribute to employee pension funds. It’s a legal requirement, not optional.