Compare your options before you commit — for the decisions Pakistani households make every week.
Telecom packages, household calculators, and buying-decision guides — each one framed as a choice between two or three options, with a verdict at the top and the reasoning right below it.
Start with the calculator hub if you already know what number you need — electricity bill, income tax, Zakat. Start with the telecom hub if you are choosing a package this week. Start with the latest guides if you are comparing two products or two neighbourhoods and want a balanced read before spending money.
Most useful right now
6 hand-pickedThese are the pages that get reached for first — the ones that answer a question with one number or one short verdict.
Telecom packages — Jazz, Telenor, Ufone, Warid, Zong, and the broadband three
18 comparisonsEvery carrier page lists the active call, internet, or SMS bundles, shows the activation code, and ends with a Pick-Which guide for students, families, and heavy users.
Calculators — for the household numbers that change every month
40 toolsEach calculator runs in your browser. Nothing is sent anywhere. Tax tools use current FBR slabs; energy tools use NEPRA slab rates; property converters use the standard Pakistani Marla and Kanal definitions.
Latest guides — comparisons across construction, phones, perfume, pets, and property
8 of 27Long-form comparisons that take the same Verdict → Compare Table → Pick-Which structure as the rest of the site, but covering buying decisions rather than government processes.
About this site
LGD Sindh is a reference site for the everyday decisions a Pakistani household makes — which mobile package to load this month, which calculator to trust when computing the electricity slab, which neighbourhood to compare against another before signing a plot file. The site has a fixed structural identity that you will see on every article: a clearly labelled verdict at the top in two or three lines, a comparison table right after it with the four to six criteria that matter, a detailed breakdown of each option, a Pick-Which guide that matches options to typical situations, and a short FAQ at the end.
The fixed structure is deliberate. Most search traffic landing on a comparison page is in a hurry — the verdict at the top respects that. Most readers who scroll past the verdict are the ones whose situation is slightly unusual, and the detailed breakdown plus the Pick-Which guide is where they spend their time. Both reader profiles get what they came for without wading through filler.
The site is informational only. There are no forms, no lead capture, no newsletter pop-ups, no affiliate auto-redirects. Calculators run in your browser. External links are clearly editorial — they point to portals you would have looked up anyway (FBR, NEPRA, MTMIS) or to a relevant commercial source when a topic genuinely calls for one.
About this site — common questions
What does LGD Sindh actually do?
It is a comparison-first reference site for Pakistani households. Every page on the site frames a topic — a telecom package, a calculator output, a buying decision — as a choice between two or three options. You read the verdict, scan the comparison table, and decide. The site does not sell anything, does not have a login, and does not ask you to register before showing rates or running a calculation.
Are the calculators accurate enough to make a real decision?
The calculators use the same formulas published by the relevant Pakistani authority — NEPRA slab rates for electricity, FBR tax slabs for income, the standard Marla and Kanal definitions for property, and so on. Where rates are likely to drift (annual budgets change tax slabs, NEPRA revises tariffs), the page tells you the calculation date and points you to the official source for the latest number. Use the results as a planning estimate, not as an exact bill or tax liability.
Why does every page have a verdict at the top?
Most people who land here are mid-decision — they have already searched for the topic and now want to know what to actually do. Putting a clear recommendation at the top respects that. The detailed breakdown below the verdict shows the reasoning, the trade-offs, and the cases where the recommendation flips. If your situation is unusual, the comparison table and the Pick-Which guide are where you should spend your time.
How current is the package and rate information?
Telecom rates, tax slabs, and government scheme details are reviewed and updated periodically — usually after the federal or provincial budget, and whenever a carrier or DISCO publishes new tariffs. Where exact figures matter (token tax, customs duty, PTA tax), each page links to the official portal so you can verify the live number. The site never quotes a number it cannot ground in a published source.
Do the calculators send my inputs anywhere?
No. Every calculator on the site is plain client-side JavaScript — it runs entirely in your browser, with no server, no tracking, no third-party API. Close the tab and the values are gone. This matters for the tax calculators in particular, where people enter income and salary numbers they would not want logged.
Why do some categories look greyed out or missing?
The site is being rolled out in two batches. The first batch covers telecom packages, all 40 calculators, and the guide articles. The second batch — covering electricity bills, NADRA processes, passport, vehicle, driving licence, solar, tax filing, mobile wallets, BISP, and housing — is in production and will be linked in once each section passes editorial review. The reserved category slugs already exist behind the scenes so the URLs do not change between batches.