
By Faraz Mustafa
In today’s increasingly digital world, the internet has quietly shifted from being a convenience to becoming a basic requirement of daily life. In Pakistan, this shift is especially visible. Whether it is a student attending an online class, a freelancer working for clients abroad, a small business managing sales through social media, or a family simply trying to stay connected with relatives overseas, the expectation is the same: the internet should work, and it should work reliably. Yet for millions across the country, that expectation remains frustratingly unmet.
Despite years of promises, investment announcements, and the gradual arrival of newer technologies, internet connectivity in Pakistan continues to be marked by inconsistency. The experience for most users is not defined by steady performance, but by fluctuation. At times, connections appear adequate; at others, they slow to a crawl without warning. The problem becomes most visible during peak hours, particularly in the evenings, when networks become congested. Videos fail to load smoothly, online classes freeze mid-lecture, and video calls drop or turn into distorted audio exchanges. What should be seamless digital interaction instead becomes an exercise in patience and improvisation.
For many, these disruptions are more than an inconvenience. They carry real economic and educational consequences. Students preparing for examinations increasingly depend on online platforms for learning, revision, and access to academic resources. A stalled connection can mean missed lectures or incomplete assignments. Freelancers, who represent a growing segment of Pakistan’s workforce, often depend on strict deadlines and uninterrupted communication with international clients. A dropped connection during a meeting or a failed file upload can damage credibility and result in lost income. In a global digital economy where reliability is currency, such interruptions place Pakistani workers at a structural disadvantage.
Alongside internet instability, voice call quality has also deteriorated in noticeable ways. Calls that fail to connect, sudden drops in signal, and unclear audio have become common complaints, even in urban centers. This erosion of basic telecommunication quality is particularly striking given the expansion of mobile networks across the country over the past decade. While coverage maps may suggest widespread availability, the lived experience of users tells a more complicated story. Connectivity exists in theory, but not always in practice.
The contrast between urban and rural regions further deepens this divide. In major cities such as Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad, users may still manage to access relatively stable 4G services, though even these are not immune to congestion and outages. In many rural areas of Sindh, Balochistan, and parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, however, connectivity remains fragile at best. Signals fluctuate unpredictably, internet speeds are often insufficient for basic tasks, and in some locations, access drops entirely for extended periods. For communities already facing economic and infrastructural disadvantages, poor connectivity reinforces isolation rather than alleviating it.
The introduction of 5G technology has been announced with considerable optimism, but its practical impact remains limited. At present, coverage is confined to select urban pockets, leaving the vast majority of the population reliant on older and less efficient networks. Even in areas where newer technologies are technically available, affordability and device compatibility remain barriers to access. Industry observers suggest that widespread, meaningful 5G rollout across the country could still take years, particularly in underserved regions. Until then, expectations of a digital leap forward remain largely aspirational.
At the heart of the issue lies infrastructure. Pakistan’s growing digital demand has not been matched by equivalent investment in network capacity, fiber-optic expansion, or system resilience. Telecom operators face the challenge of managing increasing traffic on systems that are often stretched beyond optimal limits. Peak-time congestion is not simply a technical glitch; it is a structural symptom of underdeveloped infrastructure struggling to keep pace with user demand.
Pakistan stands at such a crossroads. The demand for reliable internet is no longer emerging; it is already fully present and expanding. What is required now is not incremental adjustment, but decisive and coordinated action. Investment in fiber networks, expansion of cellular infrastructure, and improvement in service regulation are not optional upgrades but essential components of national development.
Without addressing these issues with urgency and seriousness, the digital divide within the country will continue to widen. For many Pakistanis, the internet is already an essential part of work, education, and communication. Ensuring that this essential service is stable, accessible, and fair is no longer a future ambition. It is a present necessity.
(The writer is a university student, mostly writes on geopolitics and international affairs. He can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)



