SadaPay users waking up to refund notifications this week have every right to be pleased—but the celebration has quickly revealed a deeper structural issue inside Pakistan’s digital banking ecosystem: what happens when your money is legally yours, but your account is blocked?
Thousands of Pakistani users received “WHT Refund” credits from SadaPay as previously deducted withholding tax on international transactions was reversed. For many, this was a welcome surprise. For others, especially users whose accounts had been suspended or blocked, it triggered a far more uncomfortable question:
If the refunded amount was always the customer’s money, how can a platform hold it hostage behind an inaccessible account?
That is no longer a customer support inconvenience. It is a consumer rights issue.
What Happened With the Refunds?
The refund relates to withholding tax previously deducted on certain international card transactions before regulatory changes and supervisory intervention led to reversals. SadaPay began crediting eligible users automatically, with many reporting refunds ranging from a few rupees to tens of thousands.
For active users, the process was smooth.
For blocked users, there was silence.
Social media and comment sections rapidly filled with complaints from long-time customers asking the same unanswered question: How do blocked-account holders recover their refunds?
Why This Matters More Than the Refund Itself
This is not about whether SadaPay deserves praise for processing refunds efficiently. It processed funds that were due back to users. That is expected.
The real story is what happens when operational efficiency benefits only users whose accounts remain active, while blocked-account customers—many of whom claim accounts were suspended without satisfactory explanation—are left in procedural limbo.
A fintech platform cannot market itself as the future of banking while operating without the dispute-resolution accessibility of traditional banking.
If a conventional bank freezes your account, you can escalate through branch channels, compliance departments, and physical escalation points. With app-only fintechs, users often have:
