The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has proposed a major regulatory shift. It wants to declare “Corporate SMS” a distinct telecommunications market. Moreover, the regulator signaled it may designate all Cellular Mobile Operators (CMOs) as operators with Significant Market Power (SMP) in this segment. Ultimately, this move could completely reshape the enterprise messaging landscape in Pakistan.
Why the Push for Regulation Against Corporate SMS?
Currently, banks, fintechs, and service providers are filing mounting complaints. They argue that mobile operators charge excessive tariffs for Corporate SMS. Meanwhile, these operators use the exact same network infrastructure that carries ordinary text messages. Consequently, these rising costs are driving up operational expenses across the entire financial sector.
Corporate SMS serves as a highly specialized business tool. Enterprises use it extensively for one-time passwords (OTPs), transaction alerts, and public service notifications. Furthermore, the PTA assessment shows that platforms like WhatsApp Business or email cannot easily replace SMS. These alternatives require smartphones, app installations, and active internet access. In contrast, SMS reaches virtually every mobile subscriber regardless of their device or connectivity.
Additionally, enterprises face massive switching costs. They have already integrated SMS gateways tightly into their authentication systems. Therefore, migrating to new communication channels just to avoid price increases is highly unlikely.
The “Termination Monopoly” Problem
Under normal telecom rules, an operator holds SMP if it controls over 25% of a market. However, the PTA argues that Corporate SMS termination works differently. Each mobile operator holds exclusive control over message delivery to its own subscribers. As a result, no competitor can bypass the operator to reach that network’s users.
Because of this setup, the PTA considers each CMO to hold a “termination monopoly”. They effectively control 100% of the market share for delivering Corporate SMS on their specific network. Furthermore, third-party SMS aggregators and licensed service providers remain entirely dependent on these CMOs. They cannot terminate their traffic without commercial connectivity agreements with the operators.
Mandated Audits & Next Steps
To build its case, the PTA has issued a strict directive. All mobile operators must submit audit-certified data covering the period from January 1, 2023, to December 31, 2025. Operators must detail their average SMS rates and revenue figures for banking transactional messages, marketing campaigns, and other enterprise services.
This consultation carries heavy implications for competition policy. If the PTA formalizes the SMP declaration, it paves the way for direct intervention in tariff structures. Market participants believe this oversight will finally reduce wholesale access costs for the major corporate SMS users across the country.

