Pakistan received $12.106 billion in foreign assistance during the first 11 months of fiscal year 2025-26, up 75.7 percent from $6.891 billion in the same period last year, according to data released by the Ministry of Economic Affairs.
The figure does not include $2 billion disbursed by the International Monetary Fund under its $7 billion Extended Fund Facility. With those inflows included, Pakistan secured more than $14.2 billion in external financing during July-May.
The State Bank of Pakistan records disbursements under the Extended Fund Facility separately, while climate-related support is booked by the Economic Affairs Division.
Foreign loans rose 76.4 percent to $11.97 billion from $6.7 billion a year earlier, while grants fell 19 percent to $136 million.
Pakistan has budgeted total external inflows of $19.9 billion for FY26, slightly higher than the $19.4 billion target set for the previous fiscal year.
Of the total inflows during July-May, project financing accounted for $3 billion, while non-project assistance stood at $9.1 billion.
Budgetary support loans reached $7.287 billion against a full-year target of $13.5 billion. Pakistan also received the entire $1 billion available under the Saudi Oil Facility during the period.
Disbursements from multilateral lenders, excluding the IMF, totalled $3.1 billion, lower than the $3.367 billion received in the same period last year.
Bilateral inflows surged to $3 billion, largely on the back of additional Saudi time deposits. Pakistan also raised $1 billion through Eurobonds, secured a $202 million commercial loan from Standard Chartered Bank, London, and received $421 million from the IMF under its climate resilience facility.
Inflows slowed to $1.03 billion in May from $4.4 billion in April, mainly because the country did not receive fresh Saudi deposits during the month.
However, the May inflows were still 29 percent higher than the $797 million recorded in the same month last year.





