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Understanding how to apply for Indus AI Week and the Pakistan Startup Fund process in 2026 is essential for any AI or tech startup seeking national-stage visibility and public co‑investment. Indus AI Week, held from 9–15 February 2026 under the auspices of the Ministry of IT & Telecom and organised by Ignite (National Technology Fund), offered startups a dedicated Technology & Innovation Hub pavilion alongside a pipeline into PSF funding. This guide sets out the eligibility criteria, required documents, step‑by‑step application procedure, selection timeline and funding terms that founders, in‑house counsel and seed investors need to navigate, including the 2026 procedural changes introduced by Pakistan’s National AI Policy and heightened due‑diligence standards.
Whether you are preparing for the next intake cycle or assembling materials for a future PSF co‑investment round, the process described below remains the operative framework.
There are two parallel pathways that converge around Indus AI Week, and applicants may pursue one or both simultaneously.
Pathway A, Startup Pavilion Exhibition. Apply to exhibit in the Technology & Innovation Hub at Indus AI Week. This involves completing the official online application form on the Indus AI startup application portal, uploading supporting materials, and, if shortlisted, presenting a live demo during the event. Acceptance gives a startup exhibition space, access to investor meetups and media exposure curated by Ignite.
Pathway B, Pakistan Startup Fund (PSF) Funding. Apply for PSF co‑investment, which may be linked to Indus AI Week showcases or pursued through an independent PSF intake cycle. The PSF model typically requires the startup to have secured, or be in the process of securing, a lead investor willing to co‑invest alongside the Fund. PSF support may take the form of a grant, convertible instrument or equity investment, and disbursement is usually milestone‑based.
This guide is designed for:
The Indus AI Week application and the Pakistan Startup Fund application are separate submissions, but shortlisting for the pavilion frequently surfaces startups to PSF evaluators. Founders should treat both as complementary rather than mutually exclusive.
Eligibility requirements differ slightly between the pavilion showcase and PSF funding. Meeting both sets of criteria from the outset avoids duplication of effort later in the process.
International startups may apply to the pavilion, but PSF co‑investment generally requires a Pakistan‑incorporated entity. Foreign founders should confirm visa requirements with the relevant Pakistani diplomatic mission and consider registering a local subsidiary or branch office with SECP before the application deadline. Industry observers expect that future intake cycles will continue to require a local corporate presence for PSF disbursements.
The procedure below consolidates both the pavilion application and the PSF funding track into a single sequenced workflow. Where a step is specific to one track only, this is noted.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Prepare application package (deck, one‑pager, demo video, corporate docs) | Startup / Founder / Legal counsel | 3–14 days |
| 2. Submit Indus AI pavilion application via online form | Startup | Instant submission; review begins within 1 week |
| 3. PSF pre‑qualification, secure lead investor commitment (PSF track only) | Startup + prospective lead investor | 2–6 weeks |
| 4. Shortlisting, interview and demo‑day selection | Indus AI / Ignite / PSF panel | 2–4 weeks after submission |
| 5. Due diligence, legal, financial, IP & data checks (PSF track) | PSF / panel / third‑party advisers | 2–6 weeks |
| 6. Offer, pavilion acceptance and/or PSF term sheet | Indus AI / PSF | 1–2 weeks |
| 7. Contracting, logistics and event preparation | Startup + organisers | 2–6 weeks before event |
| 8. Disbursement of PSF funding (PSF track only) | PSF (post‑contract) | Staged or milestone‑based, per PSF schedule |
Assemble the full document set before touching the online form. At a minimum, prepare a 10–12 slide pitch deck in PDF format, a one‑page company summary, a short demo video (hosted on YouTube, Vimeo or a private link), and scanned copies of your SECP incorporation certificate, shareholder register and founder identification. If you are pursuing PSF funding simultaneously, secure a signed lead‑investor commitment letter or preliminary term sheet at this stage. Legal counsel should review IP assignment agreements and data‑source documentation before upload, the 2026 intake cycle introduced model safety attestation requirements (see the 2026 changes section below).
Navigate to the official Indus AI Week startup application page and complete every field. Upload the materials prepared in Step 1. The form captures company details, founder profiles, product description, traction metrics and the demo‑video link. Submission is electronic and typically free of charge. Confirmation of receipt is usually generated automatically. Retain a copy of the submission confirmation and all uploaded files for your records.
If you intend to apply for Pakistan Startup Fund co‑investment, this step runs in parallel with, or immediately after, the pavilion submission. Contact Ignite or the PSF programme office to confirm the current intake window and any supplementary application form. The critical deliverable is a signed commitment letter or term sheet from a lead investor. PSF evaluators use this to confirm that private capital is committed before public funds are allocated. Allow 2–6 weeks for investor negotiations and term‑sheet drafting. Engage a lawyer experienced in startup financing to review the investor term sheet before it is submitted to PSF, terms relating to liquidation preference, anti‑dilution and board seats will directly affect the PSF co‑investment structure.
The Indus AI / Ignite selection panel reviews applications and shortlists candidates for interview or live demo. For the pavilion, shortlisted startups are typically notified 2–4 weeks after submission. For PSF, shortlisting may follow a separate evaluation timeline. Prepare a concise five‑minute pitch and anticipate technical questions on your AI model architecture, data sourcing and commercial viability. If shortlisted for both tracks, coordinate scheduling, demo‑day slots and PSF panel interviews may overlap.
PSF-shortlisted startups undergo formal due diligence. Expect requests for audited or management accounts, IP ownership evidence, data protection declarations and a technical whitepaper describing datasets, model architecture and safety mitigations. Third‑party advisers retained by PSF may conduct independent checks. This phase typically takes 2–6 weeks. Delays almost always stem from incomplete IP chain‑of‑title documentation or missing data‑consent records, resolve these before reaching this stage.
Successful pavilion applicants receive an acceptance notice with exhibition logistics and booth details. PSF applicants receive a term sheet specifying the investment amount, instrument type (grant, convertible note, SAFE or equity), milestone schedule and reporting obligations. Do not sign the PSF term sheet without independent legal review. Key areas to scrutinise include disbursement conditions, intellectual property warranties, data compliance representations, and any claw‑back provisions.
Finalise exhibition agreements with the event organisers (booth allocation, AV requirements, insurance). For PSF, negotiate and execute the investment or grant agreement. Ensure that IP assignment agreements between the company and its founders and contractors are completed before the PSF agreement is signed, PSF may require representations that all core IP is owned by the company.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Company incorporation certificate / Memorandum & Articles | Issued by SECP; PDF copy; include Registrar filing date |
| Shareholder register / list of directors | Company records; annotated PDF; translate if not in English |
| Recent audited accounts or management accounts | Required if revenue exceeds evaluation threshold; indicate currency and reporting period |
| Founder IDs and passports | Scanned colour copies; notarisation may be required for foreign founders |
| Pitch deck (10–12 slides) | PDF format; include traction metrics and technical architecture diagram |
| One‑pager and demo video link | One‑page PDF summary; video hosted on YouTube/Vimeo (private link accepted) |
| Lead investor commitment letter / term sheet (PSF track) | Signed and dated; must specify lead‑investment amount |
| IP ownership evidence | Patent/trademark registrations, IP assignment agreements between founders/contractors and company |
| Data protection & model safety attestation | Declaration describing data sources, consent mechanisms and compliance steps, required from 2026 onward |
| Technical whitepaper / model description | Describes datasets, model architecture, safety mitigations; omit commercially sensitive data |
| Bank account details and proof of funds | Bank statement or letter for disbursement setup (PSF track) |
| Tax registration (NTN) or tax waiver documentation | Issued by FBR; confirms good standing |
The 2026 application cycle introduced a specific data protection and model safety attestation requirement. This is a short written declaration, typically one to two pages, in which the startup describes its data sources, confirms that data was obtained with appropriate consent or under a lawful basis, and outlines the steps taken to mitigate bias, safety and security risks in its AI model. Industry observers expect this attestation to become a standard due‑diligence item in all future PSF and Ignite‑backed intake cycles. Founders should prepare this document early, ideally with input from legal counsel, and retain supporting evidence (consent records, data‑processing agreements, third‑party licence terms) in a due‑diligence data room.
Indus AI Week 2026 took place from 9–15 February 2026, with expo and pavilion dates varying by city. The following backward‑planning timeline illustrates how applicants should schedule preparation.
| Milestone | Indicative Timing |
|---|---|
| Pavilion application window opens | Approximately 8–10 weeks before event (late November / early December 2025) |
| Application deadline (pavilion) | Typically 4–6 weeks before event; deadline extensions were announced by some partners as late as 31 January 2026 |
| Shortlisting notifications | 2–4 weeks after submission deadline |
| PSF lead‑investor commitment secured | Ideally 6–8 weeks before event; allow 2–6 weeks for negotiation |
| PSF due diligence | 2–6 weeks (runs in parallel with pavilion preparation) |
| Contracting and logistics finalised | 2–3 weeks before event opening |
| Event, Indus AI Week 2026 | 9–15 February 2026 |
| PSF disbursement (post‑contract) | Staged per milestone schedule agreed in term sheet |
For founders targeting future cycles, the key lesson is to begin preparation at least 10–12 weeks before the expected event date. Securing a lead investor is typically the longest lead‑time item and should be initiated first. Retain all application materials in a centralised data room, they will be reusable for subsequent intake windows.
| Item | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Indus AI pavilion application fee | Free | No fee is charged on the official application portal; confirm on indusai.gov.pk for future cycles |
| Exhibition booth and logistics upgrades | PKR 50,000–200,000+ (approx.) | Travel, booth build and shipping are not usually covered by organisers; verify with Ignite for subsidised booth options |
| Legal and due‑diligence costs | PKR 100,000–500,000+ (or equivalent) | Covers term‑sheet review, IP audit, data compliance checklist and contract negotiation |
| Travel and team costs for demo day | Variable | Flights, accommodation; visa costs for foreign founders |
| PSF co‑investment, lead investor minimum | Variable | PSF co‑invests alongside a lead investor; verify minimum thresholds with PSF programme office |
Tax and accounting considerations. The tax treatment of PSF disbursements depends on whether the support is structured as a grant, a convertible note, a SAFE or an equity investment. Grants may be treated as taxable income; equity investments trigger different reporting obligations. Founders should engage both a qualified tax adviser and legal counsel at the offer stage, before signing the PSF term sheet, to confirm the correct treatment under the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 and any applicable FBR rulings.
The 2025–2026 period introduced material changes to the procedural landscape for AI startups applying through Indus AI Week and the Pakistan Startup Fund process in 2026. Founders should be aware of the following developments.
Action required for founders:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shazil Ibrahim at Chima & Ibrahim, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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