Hinduisme adalah agama terbesar kedua di Pakistan[5] Hindus meliputi 1.85% populasi Pakistan menurut sensus 1998.[7][8] Namun, Dewan Hindu Pakistan mengambil persentase sekitar 4%, dengan mengambil jumlah sekitar 8 juta[8] Pada 2010, Pakistan memiliki populasi Hindu terbesar kelima di dunia dan akan meningkat menjadi populasi Hindu terbesar keempat di dunia pada 2050,[9] mencapai 5.6 juta[9] dan meliputi 2% populasi Pakistan.[10] Setelah Pakistan meraih kemerdekaan dari British Raj, 4.7 juta Hindu dan Sikh Pakistan Barat pindah ke India sebagai pengungsi.[11] Sekitar 5,000 Hindu Pakistan bermigrasi dari Pakistan ke India setiap tahun.[12]
^Rehman, Zia Ur (18 August 2015). "With a handful of subbers, two newspapers barely keeping Gujarati alive in Karachi". The News International. Diakses tanggal 13 January 2017. In Pakistan, the majority of Gujarati-speaking communities are in Karachi including Dawoodi Bohras, Ismaili Khojas, Memons, Kathiawaris, Katchhis, Parsis (Zoroastrians) and Hindus, said Gul Hasan Kalmati, a researcher who authored "Karachi, Sindh Jee Marvi", a book discussing the city and its indigenous communities. Although there are no official statistics available, community leaders claim that there are three million Gujarati-speakers in Karachi – roughly around 15 percent of the city’s entire population.
^Hasan, Arif; Raza, Mansoor (2009). Migration and Small Towns in Pakistan. IIED. hlm. 12. ISBN9781843697343. When the British Indian Empire was partitioned in 1847, 4.7 million Sikhs and Hindus left what is today Pakistan for India, and 6.5 million Muslims left India and moved to Pakistan.