ISLAMABAD: The federal government on Friday night announced a significant reduction in petrol and diesel prices in Pakistan, with the new rates taking effect today, i.e. Saturday, 11 April 2026 — offering a measure of economic relief to millions of consumers grappling with persistent inflationary pressures.
According to the official press release issued by the Petroleum Division, the petrol price in Pakistan today, 11 April 2026, has been revised downward by Rs.11.83 per litre, bringing Motor Spirit (MS) from Rs.378.41 to Rs366.58 per litre. The more dramatic cut, however, came for High Speed Diesel (HSD) — a fuel critical to Pakistan’s transport, agriculture, and industrial sectors — which saw a reduction of Rs.134.81 per litre, slashing its price from Rs.520.32 down to Rs.385.54 per litre.
The new diesel and petrol prices are applicable nationwide, including Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, and all other major cities, effective midnight between Thursday and Friday.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, in a late-night address on Thursday evening, 10 April, personally announced the forthcoming price cuts — framing the decision as a direct relief measure for the common citizen.
“We are passing on the benefit of falling international oil prices directly to the people of Pakistan,” the Prime Minister said, adding that the government remained committed to reducing the cost of living.
The announcement came as a continuation of a downward pricing trend that had already begun in early April, when the government had revised diesel and petrol prices for the fortnight beginning 4 April 2026. Friday’s notification represents a further, and considerably steeper, round of reductions — particularly for HSD, whose cut of over Rs134 per litre is among the largest single-fortnight reductions in recent memory.
The reduction in today’s diesel price in Pakistan largely reflects the significant decline in international crude oil benchmarks in recent weeks. Global oil markets have been under sustained downward pressure, driven by a combination of softening demand forecasts, increased supply from key producers, and broader macroeconomic uncertainty weighing on energy consumption worldwide.
The Petroleum Division, in its official notification, confirmed that the new prices incorporate adjustments to both the petroleum levy and import parity pricing — the mechanism through which international oil market fluctuations are translated into domestic pump prices.
Analysts noted that the HSD cut is particularly consequential as diesel is the lifeblood of Pakistan’s freight and logistics network, and any meaningful reduction in today’s diesel price in Pakistan tends to have a cascading effect on the cost of goods, food transportation, and agricultural inputs such as tube-well operations — benefits that, in theory, should gradually filter down to the consumer level.














