What Is the Literacy Rate in Pakistan?
The latest official figures from the PSLM 2024-25 survey, with gender, provincial, and regional context
Pakistan’s literacy rate is currently 63%, the lowest in South Asia according to the latest official survey
The Current Figure: 63% Overall
According to the most recent official data from the Pakistan Social and Living Standards Measurement–Household Integrated Economic Survey (PSLM–HEIS) 2024–2025, Pakistan’s overall literacy rate stands at 63% among people aged 10 and above. This figure reflects modest progress, having risen from 60% in 2018–2019 to 63% in 2024–2025 — an increase of just three percentage points over roughly six years, a pace that analysts have widely described as too slow for a country with a population of over 240 million people.
The survey defines a “literate” person as someone aged 10 or above who can read and understand a simple statement and write a simple sentence — a basic threshold, not a measure of full educational attainment. This means even the 63% figure represents only the ability to handle elementary reading and writing, not necessarily full functional or advanced literacy. The number gives an important snapshot of where Pakistan stands, but it also points to the significant work still needed to bring literacy in line with regional and global standards.
PSLM 2024-25 is the official source for Pakistan’s current literacy figures
The Gender Gap: A Significant Divide
One of the most striking aspects of Pakistan’s literacy figures is the gender disparity. According to PSLM 2024–25, male literacy stands at 73% while female literacy is only 54% — a gap of nearly 20 percentage points. This means roughly one in four Pakistani men cannot read and write, while almost half of Pakistani women lack basic literacy. This is one of the widest gender gaps in literacy in the region and reflects deep-rooted challenges in girls’ access to and completion of education across many parts of the country.
The gender gap is widely recognized as one of the most pressing issues in Pakistan’s education landscape. As discussed in broader education reports, factors include lower enrollment of girls in school (especially in rural areas), higher dropout rates for girls — particularly at the secondary level — and various social, economic, and infrastructural barriers that disproportionately affect girls’ education. Closing this gap is widely seen as essential not just for women’s rights but for broader development, since higher female literacy is strongly linked to better health outcomes, lower poverty rates, and stronger economic growth.
Male literacy is 73% while female literacy is just 54%, a nearly 20-point gender gap
The Provincial Picture: Wide Variation
Literacy rates vary significantly between Pakistan’s provinces. According to PSLM 2024–25, Punjab leads with the highest provincial literacy rate at 68%, while Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa each stand at 58%. Balochistan, the country’s largest province by area but smallest by population, records the lowest literacy rate at just 49% — meaning more than half of its population cannot read and write at a basic level.
These provincial gaps reflect broader inequalities in education infrastructure, economic development, urbanization, and the historic distribution of educational resources. Balochistan in particular faces unique challenges including a sparse, scattered population across a vast area, fewer schools per district, security issues in some regions, and lower historical investment in education infrastructure. Addressing these provincial disparities is a major component of any meaningful effort to improve Pakistan’s overall literacy figures, since national averages can mask serious gaps in the most underserved regions.
Punjab leads at 68% while Balochistan trails at 49% — a wide provincial gap
Age Differences: Youth Doing Better
Looking at age groups, there’s better news among younger Pakistanis. According to PSLM 2024–25, youth literacy (ages 15 to 24) stands at 77%, up from 72% in 2018–2019, indicating real progress among younger generations. By comparison, the overall adult literacy rate (ages 15 and above) is just 60%, up from 56%. This gap between youth literacy and broader adult literacy reflects the fact that older generations — particularly women who didn’t have educational opportunities in earlier decades — bring down the overall adult average.
This pattern suggests that Pakistan’s education improvements over time are gradually working their way through the population, with each younger cohort having somewhat better access to education than the one before. However, 77% youth literacy still means that roughly one in four young Pakistanis (ages 15–24) lacks basic reading and writing skills, which is concerning given how much of their working lives lie ahead. The youth figure represents progress but still falls well short of universal literacy for young people, signaling continued challenges that need addressing.
Youth literacy (ages 15-24) reaches 77%, higher than the 60% adult rate
How Pakistan Compares Regionally
Compared to other countries in South Asia, Pakistan’s literacy rate of 63% is the lowest in the region. According to World Bank figures cited alongside the PSLM data, the Maldives leads South Asia with over 98% adult literacy, followed by Sri Lanka at 93%, India at 87%, and Bangladesh at 79%. Nepal stands at 68% and Bhutan at 65%, both still above Pakistan’s figure. The regional South Asian average is around 78%, meaning Pakistan trails the regional average by approximately 15 percentage points.
This regional comparison highlights how much catching up Pakistan needs to do. Countries that started from similar or comparable baselines decades ago, such as Bangladesh, have significantly outpaced Pakistan in literacy gains over recent years. Analysts often cite this comparison when discussing the urgency of education reform, pointing to other South Asian countries as proof that meaningful progress is achievable with sustained policy effort, investment, and focus — and that Pakistan’s slow pace is not inevitable but reflects specific choices and challenges that can be addressed with the right approaches.
Pakistan trails the South Asian regional average by about 15 percentage points
Why Progress Has Been Slow
Several factors contribute to Pakistan’s slow literacy gains. These include relatively low public spending on education as a share of GDP compared to many other countries, weak implementation of education policies despite legal commitments like Article 25-A guaranteeing free education, the large out-of-school children population (estimated in tens of millions), persistent gender and provincial disparities, quality issues in the government school system, and the sheer scale of the population needing services. After the 18th Amendment to the constitution, education became primarily a provincial subject, which has affected coordination and accountability for nationwide improvement.
Pakistan is also a signatory to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, including Goal 4, which aims to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning opportunities for all. Meeting these international commitments will require significantly accelerating the pace of literacy improvement — far faster than the modest three-percentage-point gain seen over the last six years. Increased investment, focused policy interventions targeting the largest gaps (especially female and Balochistan literacy), and stronger implementation of existing education laws are widely seen as essential to bridging Pakistan’s literacy gap with the rest of the region.
Faster progress will require focused policy, investment, and stronger implementation
The Bottom Line
So, what is the literacy rate in Pakistan? According to the most recent official data from the PSLM 2024–25 survey, Pakistan’s overall literacy rate is 63% among people aged 10 and above — a modest improvement from 60% in 2018–19, but still the lowest in South Asia. The headline figure conceals significant disparities: male literacy is 73% versus female literacy at 54%, Punjab leads provinces at 68% while Balochistan trails at 49%, and youth (15–24) literacy reaches 77% compared to broader adult literacy at 60%. Regionally, Pakistan trails behind every other major South Asian country, including Bangladesh, Nepal, and Bhutan. Closing the gender gap, addressing provincial inequalities, reducing the out-of-school children population, and accelerating overall progress remain major challenges. While the current 63% figure represents real, if slow, progress, reaching internationally comparable literacy levels will require significantly more focused effort, investment, and reform than has been seen in recent years.
Real progress will require addressing gender, provincial, and access gaps together
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is Pakistan’s current literacy rate?
According to PSLM 2024-25, the overall literacy rate is 63% among people aged 10 and above.
2. How is “literate” defined in Pakistan’s survey?
Someone aged 10 or above who can read and understand a simple statement and write a simple sentence.
3. What is the gender gap in literacy?
Male literacy is 73% while female literacy is 54%, a gap of nearly 20 percentage points.
4. Which province has the highest literacy rate?
Punjab leads with 68%, followed by Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa at 58% each, and Balochistan at 49%.
5. What is the youth literacy rate in Pakistan?
Youth literacy (ages 15-24) is 77%, up from 72% in 2018-2019, showing some progress among younger generations.
6. How does Pakistan compare to other South Asian countries?
Pakistan’s 63% is the lowest in South Asia, behind Bangladesh (79%), Nepal (68%), and Bhutan (65%).
7. How much has literacy improved recently?
It rose from 60% in 2018-19 to 63% in 2024-25, a slow gain of three percentage points over six years.
8. Why is Pakistan’s literacy progress so slow?
Factors include low education spending, gender and provincial gaps, large out-of-school populations, and implementation challenges.
9. Does Pakistan have legal commitments to education?
Yes, Article 25-A guarantees free and compulsory education for children aged 5 to 16, and SDG 4 commits to inclusive quality education.
10. What’s the regional South Asian average?
About 78%, around 15 percentage points higher than Pakistan’s 63% figure.
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