Pakistan announces price cap for Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine

A woman receives a dose of COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination centre in Karachi on March 10, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 21 March 2021
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Pakistan announces price cap for Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine

  • Maximum sale price of Sputnik V is fixed at Rs8,449 ($54) for two doses, local media reports
  • Drug regulator recommends the price of imported vaccines as landed cost plus a 40% markup

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government has announced a price cap for shots of the privately imported Russian Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the local media reported on Sunday.

A private pharmaceutical company, AGP Limited, last week imported the first shipment of 50,000 doses of the Russian vaccine to Pakistan.

In February, Pakistan said it would allow private companies to import coronavirus vaccines and agreed to exempt such imports from price caps, but on Thursday the country's health chief said that decision was being reversed and the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP) would recommend a price, which the cabinet would approve.

"The government has fixed the maximum sale price of Sputnik V Russian vaccine at Rs8,449 ($54) for two doses," the Express Tribune reported, quoting a health ministry circular issued on Saturday.

According to the report, China’s Convidecia vaccine produced by CansinoBio, will cost maximum Rs4,225 per injection.

China’s Sinopharm and CansinoBio, Sputnik-V and the British AstraZeneca vaccines are approved for emergency use in Pakistan, whose government has not secured any vaccine from manufacturing companies yet and is relying so far on donations. 

The Russian vaccine that arrived in Karachi on Wednesday night is the first private batch purchased and imported by a private company.

Dr. Rana Muhammad Safdar, director-general of health at the Ministry of National Health Services and Regulations, said that following a request from AGP Limited, a DRAP pricing committee had on Friday recommended the price tag for each dose of the vaccine and forwarded the recommendation to the federal cabinet for approval.

"DRAP has submitted a summary to fix price; that requires approval of the cabinet," Safdar told Arab News."

A DRAP notification, which is available with Arab News, recommends a price formula for imported vaccines as the vaccine's landed cost plus a 40% markup.  

The maximum retail price will be calculated by "grossing up trade price to provide for retail discount at 15%," according to the notification.

Levies will "not exceed 10% of the cost of freight price by the importer."

A spokesperson for DRAP said a “robust mechanism” was in place to ensure the vaccine would only be sold at the government-fixed price.

“Let me tell you that the Sputnik vaccine won’t be available over the counter as it will be inoculated through government-authorized facilities only, at a fixed price,” Akhtar Abbas, DRAP spokesperson, told Arab News.

He ruled out any possibility of the black marketing of the vaccine: “This will be available through the government authorized mechanism only, and thus absolutely no chance of any black market (deals).”

The South Asian nation of 220 million rolled out its COVID-19 vaccination for frontline health care workers in the first week of February after receiving a donation of 500,000 doses of the Sinopharm vaccine from China. This month, it started vaccinating people above the age of 60. On Wednesday, the government received another Chinese donation of 500,000 million doses of the Sinopharm.

According to official data, the government has vaccinated more than 450,000 people so far across the country.

Pakistan is also expected to receive its first shipment of the AstraZeneca vaccine this month through the COVAX vaccine sharing initiative for poorer nations.


Pakistan urges pilgrims to complete Saudi biometrics as Hajj preparations gain pace

Updated 30 January 2026
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Pakistan urges pilgrims to complete Saudi biometrics as Hajj preparations gain pace

  • Government warns pilgrims biometric verification is required for Hajj visas
  • Step follows tighter oversight after last year’s Hajj travel disruptions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government on Friday urged aspiring pilgrims to complete mandatory Saudi biometric verification for Hajj visas, as preparations for the 2026 pilgrimage gather pace following stricter oversight of the Hajj process.

The announcement comes only a day after Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Sardar Muhammad Yousuf said regulations for private Hajj operators had been tightened, reducing their quota following widespread complaints last year, when tens of thousands of pilgrims were unable to travel under the private Hajj scheme.

“Saudi biometric verification is mandatory for the issuance of Hajj visas,” the Ministry of Religious Affairs said in a statement, urging pilgrims to complete the process promptly to avoid delays.

“Hajj pilgrims should complete their biometric verification at home using the ‘Saudi Visa Bio’ app as soon as possible,” it added.

The statement said the pilgrims who were unable to complete biometric verification through the mobile application should visit designated Saudi Tasheer centers before Feb. 8, adding that details of the centers were available on Pakistan’s official Hajj mobile application.

Pakistan has been steadily implementing digital and procedural requirements for pilgrims ahead of Hajj 2026, including mandatory training sessions, biometric checks and greater use of mobile applications, as part of efforts to reduce mismanagement.

Saudi Arabia has allocated Pakistan a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026, with the majority of seats reserved under the government scheme and the remainder allocated to private tour operators.