Gold Investment India

Gold has been woven into the fabric of Indian culture, tradition, and finance for thousands of years. From adorning brides at weddings to serving as a symbol of wealth, prosperity, and security — Indians hold an estimated 25,000 tonnes of gold, making India the world’s largest private holder of gold. According to the World Gold Council, India consumes approximately 700-800 tonnes of gold annually, second only to China.

But investing in gold in 2026 is no longer limited to buying physical jewellery or gold coins from a jeweller. The Indian financial market now offers sophisticated, cost-efficient, and tax-advantaged ways to invest in gold — namely Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGB), Gold Exchange Traded Funds (Gold ETFs), and Digital Gold — alongside the traditional route of Physical Gold.

Each of these instruments has its own unique structure, benefits, risks, tax treatment, and suitability for different types of investors. Whether you are a first-time investor, a seasoned wealth builder, or someone planning a wedding purchase, understanding the differences between these gold investment options can save you money, reduce your tax burden, and maximise your returns.

This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know about gold investment in India in 2026 — from detailed comparisons to tax implications, practical strategies, and expert recommendations.

 

2. Why Should You Invest in Gold in 2026?

Gold has consistently proven itself as a reliable store of value and a powerful portfolio diversifier across economic cycles. Here are the key reasons why gold continues to deserve a place in every Indian investor’s portfolio:

2.1 Inflation Hedge

Gold historically maintains its purchasing power over long periods. When inflation rises and the value of paper currency erodes, gold prices typically rise, preserving your wealth. Over the past 20 years, gold prices in India have delivered approximately 12-13% CAGR in rupee terms, handily beating inflation.

2.2 Portfolio Diversification

Gold has a low or negative correlation with equities and other financial assets. During stock market crashes — like the 2008 financial crisis or the COVID-19 market crash in March 2020 — gold prices surged while equity markets plunged, providing a natural hedge for diversified portfolios.

2.3 Safe Haven Asset

During geopolitical tensions, wars, currency crises, or global recessions, investors rush to gold as a safe haven. Gold is universally accepted, highly liquid globally, and immune to any single country’s economic policies.

2.4 Rupee Depreciation Benefit

Since gold is priced in US dollars globally, Indian investors get a dual benefit — rising global gold prices AND a depreciating Indian rupee both push domestic gold prices higher. The rupee has depreciated significantly against the dollar over the past two decades, amplifying gold returns in rupee terms.

2.5 Cultural and Festive Demand

India’s cultural affinity for gold ensures steady demand during Akshaya Tritiya, Dhanteras, Diwali, and wedding seasons. This structural demand provides a price floor and consistent appreciation in gold’s rupee value over time.

 

Key Insight: Financial experts recommend allocating 5% to 15% of your total investment portfolio to gold for optimal diversification. The exact allocation depends on your risk profile, investment horizon, and financial goals.

 

 

3. Types of Gold Investment in India — Overview

There are four primary ways to invest in gold in India today:

Type

What It Is

Best For

Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB)

Govt. bonds denominated in grams of gold with 2.5% annual interest

Long-term investors (8-year horizon)

Gold ETF

Exchange-traded fund that tracks gold prices; held in demat form

Active investors, medium-term horizon

Physical Gold

Jewellery, coins, or bars bought from jewellers/banks

Cultural buyers, traditional investors

Digital Gold

Fractional gold stored in secured vaults by platforms like MMTC-PAMP

First-time/small investors, gifting

 

 

4. Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB) — The Government’s Gold Investment

Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) are government securities issued by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on behalf of the Government of India. Introduced in November 2015 under the Gold Monetisation Scheme, SGBs were designed to reduce the demand for physical gold in India while offering investors a superior, regulated alternative.

4.1 How SGBs Work

When you buy an SGB, you are essentially buying a government bond that is denominated in grams of gold. The bond’s value moves in line with the prevailing domestic price of 24-karat gold (999 purity), as published by the India Bullion and Jewellers Association (IBJA).

  • Issued in denominations of 1 gram of gold and multiples thereof
  • Minimum investment: 1 gram of gold
  • Maximum investment per financial year: 4 kg for individuals, 4 kg for HUFs, 20 kg for trusts
  • Maturity period: 8 years with premature redemption option after 5th year
  • Annual interest: 2.5% per annum on the initial investment amount, paid semi-annually
  • Backed by the sovereign guarantee of the Government of India
  • Can be held in paper or demat form
  • Tradeable on NSE and BSE exchanges (if held in demat form)

4.2 SGB Returns Calculation

SGB returns have two components: capital appreciation (based on gold price movement) and a fixed annual interest of 2.5%. This makes SGB the only gold investment instrument that generates a regular income in addition to capital gains.

Example: If you invest Rs 6,000 per gram in SGB (1 gram) and after 8 years the gold price is Rs 9,000 per gram, your capital gain is Rs 3,000 (50% gain). Additionally, you would have received 2.5% annual interest on Rs 6,000 = Rs 150 per year x 8 years = Rs 1,200 in interest income. Total return = Rs 4,200 on an investment of Rs 6,000 (70% total return over 8 years, excluding tax benefits).

 

4.3 Tax Benefits of SGB

  • Capital gains on redemption at maturity (after 8 years) are COMPLETELY EXEMPT from income tax
  • Premature redemption after 5 years: Long Term Capital Gains (LTCG) applicable at 12.5%
  • If sold on exchange before 5 years: gains taxed as per your income tax slab (Short Term Capital Gains)
  • 5% annual interest income is taxable as per your applicable income tax slab
  • No TDS on interest payment — investor must declare in ITR
  • No GST on SGB purchase (unlike physical gold which attracts 3% GST)
  • No wealth tax applicable on SGB holdings

Tax Advantage: SGB held to full 8-year maturity is the MOST tax-efficient gold investment in India — the entire capital gain is tax-free, making the effective post-tax return significantly superior to Gold ETFs or physical gold.

 

4.4 How to Buy SGB

  1. Through RBI’s scheduled commercial banks (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Axis, etc.)
  2. Through Stock Holding Corporation of India (SHCIL)
  3. Through recognised stock exchanges: NSE and BSE during primary issuance
  4. Through registered stockbrokers via their trading platforms
  5. Online purchase attracts a discount of Rs 50 per gram on the issue price
  6. New SGB series are issued periodically by RBI — check RBI announcements for upcoming tranches

4.5 SGB Pros and Cons

PROS

CONS

2.5% annual interest income

Long 8-year lock-in period

Tax-free capital gains at maturity

Limited liquidity in secondary market

Sovereign (Government) guarantee

New tranches not always available

No storage/safety concerns

Interest income is taxable

No making charges or GST

Maximum cap of 4 kg per year

Tradeable on exchange (demat)

Secondary market price may differ from NAV

 

 

5. Gold ETF — The Flexible, Low-Cost Gold Investment

Gold Exchange Traded Funds (Gold ETFs) are open-ended mutual fund schemes that invest in 99.5% purity physical gold and are listed and traded on stock exchanges (NSE/BSE) just like equity shares. Each Gold ETF unit represents approximately 1 gram of physical gold (though this varies by fund).

Introduced in India in 2007, Gold ETFs have become increasingly popular as a cost-effective, transparent, and highly liquid alternative to physical gold. As of 2026, the total AUM (Assets Under Management) in Gold ETFs in India has crossed Rs 40,000 crore, reflecting growing investor confidence.

5.1 How Gold ETFs Work

When you buy a Gold ETF unit, the fund house purchases an equivalent amount of physical gold in its vault, fully backed and audited. The NAV (Net Asset Value) of the ETF mirrors the market price of gold, adjusted for the expense ratio.

  • Traded on NSE/BSE during market hours — real-time pricing and liquidity
  • Minimum investment: 1 unit (approximately 1 gram of gold, depending on fund)
  • No minimum holding period — can be bought and sold anytime
  • Held in your demat account — no physical storage required
  • Gold is stored in secured, insured, SEBI-regulated vaults
  • Expense ratio: 0.30% to 0.65% per annum (varies by fund house)

5.2 Top Gold ETFs in India (2026)

Fund Name

1Y Return

3Y Return

5Y Return

Expense Ratio

Nippon India Gold ETF

14.2%

16.8%

13.4%

0.44%

SBI Gold ETF

14.0%

16.5%

13.1%

0.35%

HDFC Gold ETF

13.9%

16.3%

13.0%

0.33%

ICICI Pru Gold ETF

14.1%

16.6%

13.2%

0.40%

Kotak Gold ETF

13.8%

16.2%

12.9%

0.35%

Axis Gold ETF

14.0%

16.4%

13.0%

0.53%

 

Disclaimer: Returns shown are indicative and based on historical data as of 2026. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Please read the SID and KIM before investing.

 

5.3 Tax Treatment of Gold ETFs (Post Budget 2024)

  • Holding period less than 24 months: Short Term Capital Gains (STCG) — taxed at your income tax slab rate
  • Holding period 24 months or more: Long Term Capital Gains (LTCG) — taxed at 12.5% without indexation benefit
  • No wealth tax applicable
  • No GST on purchase or sale of Gold ETF units
  • Dividends are taxable as per investor’s income tax slab

Note: Budget 2024 changed the LTCG holding period for Gold ETFs from 36 months to 24 months, making them more tax-efficient than before. However, the tax-free status of SGB maturity proceeds still makes SGB superior from a tax perspective for long-term investors.

 

5.4 Gold ETF vs Gold Fund of Fund (FoF)

Gold Funds of Funds (Gold FoFs) invest in Gold ETFs but do not require a demat account. They can be bought and sold directly through mutual fund platforms or AMC websites. Key differences:

Parameter

Gold ETF

Gold FoF

Demat Account

Required

Not Required

Expense Ratio

0.30-0.65%

0.60-1.00% (two layers)

SIP Option

Not directly

Yes — easy SIP

Liquidity

Real-time during market hours

End-of-day NAV

Minimum Investment

1 unit (approx 1 gram)

Rs 100 (some FoFs)

 

5.5 Gold ETF Pros and Cons

PROS

CONS

High liquidity — buy/sell anytime

Requires demat account

Transparent pricing on exchange

Annual expense ratio reduces returns

No storage or insurance worries

LTCG tax at 12.5% after 24 months

Fractional investment possible

No interest income unlike SGB

No making charges or GST

Subject to exchange trading hours

SEBI regulated and audited

Minor tracking error vs spot gold price

 

 

6. Physical Gold — The Traditional Gold Investment

Physical gold encompasses jewellery, gold coins, gold bars (bullion), and gold biscuits. It is the oldest and most culturally entrenched form of gold investment in India. Despite the emergence of more sophisticated financial instruments, physical gold continues to account for the majority of India’s annual gold demand.

6.1 Forms of Physical Gold

6.1.1 Gold Jewellery

Gold jewellery is by far the most popular form of gold ownership in India. It combines aesthetic value, cultural significance, and investment. However, from a pure investment standpoint, jewellery is the least efficient form due to high making charges (8%-25% of gold value), GST, and the loss in resale value.

6.1.2 Gold Coins and Biscuits

24-karat gold coins and biscuits (bars) sold by banks (SBI, HDFC, Axis, etc.) and jewellers offer a purer form of gold investment. They carry BIS Hallmarking (Bureau of Indian Standards) certification guaranteeing purity. Making charges are lower than jewellery (0.5%-3%) but GST of 3% still applies.

6.1.3 Gold Bars (Bullion)

Large gold bars (typically 100 grams to 1 kg) are available from bullion dealers and banks. They are the closest to institutional-grade physical gold investment. Suitable for high-net-worth investors seeking direct gold ownership with minimal charges relative to value.

6.2 Costs Associated with Physical Gold

Cost Component

Gold Jewellery

Gold Coins/Bars

Making Charges

8% to 25%

0.5% to 3%

GST

3% on gold + 5% on making

3% on gold value

Hallmarking

BIS Hallmark (mandatory)

BIS Hallmark

Storage Cost

Locker/home safe

Locker/vault

Insurance

Separate policy needed

Separate policy needed

Resale Discount

10% to 30% loss

2% to 5% loss

 

6.3 BIS Hallmarking — Why It Matters

Since January 2022, it is mandatory for jewellers to sell only BIS-hallmarked gold jewellery in India. BIS Hallmarking guarantees the purity of gold. The Hallmark Unique Identification (HUID) number on each piece of hallmarked gold can be verified on the BIS Care app or website.

  • 916 purity (22 karats) — most common for jewellery
  • 999 purity (24 karats) — coins, bars, and investment-grade gold
  • 875 purity (21 karats) — some jewellery items
  • 750 purity (18 karats) — often used in diamond jewellery settings

6.4 Tax Treatment of Physical Gold

  • Short Term Capital Gains (STCG): Holding period less than 24 months — taxed as per income tax slab
  • Long Term Capital Gains (LTCG): Holding period 24 months or more — taxed at 12.5% without indexation (post Budget 2024)
  • GST of 3% applicable at time of purchase
  • Wealth tax was abolished in 2015 — no wealth tax on physical gold currently
  • Gold jewellery is subject to scrutiny if purchased beyond certain limits without income proof (Rs 2 lakh or more for cash purchases requires PAN)
  • Inherited gold is not taxable — no capital gains tax on gold received through inheritance

6.5 Physical Gold Storage Safety

One of the biggest risks of physical gold ownership is storage and security. Here are the recommended safe storage options:

  1. Bank locker: Most secure option, annual rent Rs 1,500 to Rs 5,000 depending on size and bank
  2. Home safe: Good for smaller quantities, invest in a certified fire-resistant, wall-mounted safe
  3. Insured vault services: Third-party gold vault providers like Brinks, Sequel, and others offer insured storage
  4. Gold insurance policy: Specific gold insurance policies available from general insurers

6.6 Physical Gold Pros and Cons

PROS

CONS

Tangible asset — physically owned

High making charges (jewellery)

No internet/tech dependency

GST of 3% at purchase

Cultural and emotional value

Storage and security risks

Useful as collateral for loans

LTCG tax at 12.5% after 24 months

Universally accepted

No interest/income from holding

Emergency liquidity via pledging

Purity concerns (without hallmark)

 

 

7. Digital Gold — The New-Age Gold Investment

Digital Gold is a relatively new form of gold investment that allows investors to buy fractional gold online, with the purchased gold stored securely in accredited vaults. It is available through platforms like PhonePe, Google Pay, Paytm, and directly from MMTC-PAMP India.

7.1 How Digital Gold Works

  • Buy gold online in very small amounts — as low as Re 1
  • Physical gold is stored in secured, insured vaults maintained by MMTC-PAMP or Augmont
  • You can redeem physical gold (coins/bars) delivered to your home upon request
  • No GST at time of purchase on the platform (GST applies on physical delivery)
  • Prices track 24-karat physical gold prices in real-time

7.2 Limitations of Digital Gold

  • Not regulated by SEBI or RBI — no regulatory framework as of 2026
  • Storage charges apply after a certain period (typically 5 years free storage on some platforms)
  • Maximum holding limit: Rs 2 lakh on most platforms
  • Counterparty risk — dependent on the platform and vault provider
  • Not as tax-efficient as SGB

Caution: While Digital Gold is convenient for small investors, its lack of direct SEBI regulation makes it less secure compared to SGB or Gold ETFs. Experts recommend using Digital Gold only for very small, short-term holdings and preferring Gold ETFs or SGB for serious investment goals.

 

 

8. SGB vs Gold ETF vs Physical Gold — Master Comparison Table

Parameter

SGB

Gold ETF

Physical Gold

Digital Gold

Issuer

RBI/Govt of India

SEBI-reg AMCs

Jewellers/Banks

MMTC-PAMP/Augmont

Gold Purity

999 (24K)

999 (24K)

Hallmarked

999 (24K)

Minimum Invest

1 gram

1 unit (~1g)

1 gram

Re 1

Interest Income

2.5% p.a.

None

None

None

Lock-in

8 years (exit after 5)

None

None

None

LTCG Tax (maturity)

NIL (after 8 yrs)

12.5% (after 24M)

12.5% (after 24M)

12.5% (after 24M)

GST

None

None

3% on value

None (on purchase)

Making Charges

None

None

8%-25% (jewellery)

None

Storage

Demat/paper

Demat account

Self/Locker

Platform vault

Liquidity

Medium (exchange)

High (real-time)

Medium-Low

Medium

Regulation

RBI + Govt

SEBI

BIS Hallmark

No direct regulator

Demat Required

Preferred (optional)

Yes

No

No

SIP Option

No

Via Gold FoF

No

Yes (some platforms)

Best For

Long-term tax saving

Flexible trading

Cultural/traditional

Small/micro investing

 

 

9. Complete Tax Guide for Gold Investments in India (2026)

Understanding the tax implications of each gold investment option is critical for maximising your post-tax returns. Here is a comprehensive breakdown:

9.1 Tax on SGB

Scenario

Tax Treatment

Rate

Capital Gain at Maturity (8 years)

EXEMPT

0% — Completely Tax-Free

Premature Redemption (5-8 years)

LTCG

12.5% without indexation

Sale on Exchange (before 5 years)

STCG

As per income tax slab

2.5% Annual Interest Income

Taxable as Income

As per income tax slab

 

9.2 Tax on Gold ETF and Physical Gold

Holding Period

Classification

Tax Rate

Less than 24 months

Short Term Capital Gain (STCG)

As per income tax slab

24 months or more

Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG)

12.5% (no indexation) — Budget 2024

 

9.3 Gold Gifting and Inheritance Tax Rules

  • Gold received as gift from specified relatives (parents, spouse, siblings, etc.) is fully exempt from income tax
  • Gold received as gift from non-relatives: Exempt if value is less than Rs 50,000 in a financial year
  • Gold received as gift from non-relatives above Rs 50,000: Entire amount taxable as Income from Other Sources
  • Gold received through inheritance or Will: No tax at the time of receipt; capital gains apply only when eventually sold

9.4 Wealth Tax and Cash Purchase Rules

  • Wealth tax on gold was abolished in India from the 2015-16 financial year
  • Cash purchases of gold above Rs 2 lakh require mandatory PAN card disclosure
  • Jewellers are required to collect PAN details for transactions above Rs 2 lakh
  • Income Tax Department may scrutinise unexplained gold purchases against declared income
  • Inherited gold: Keep proper documentation of inheritance/Will to avoid tax complications

 

 

10. Gold as Collateral — Taking a Loan Against Gold

One of the most underutilised benefits of gold ownership in India is its use as collateral to secure loans at competitive interest rates. Gold loans are among the fastest-disbursed secured loans in India.

10.1 Gold Loan Against Physical Gold

  • Banks and NBFCs (Muthoot Finance, Manappuram, SBI, HDFC, Axis) offer loans against physical gold jewellery and coins
  • Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio: Up to 75% of gold value (as per RBI guidelines)
  • Interest rates: 7.5% to 14% per annum (varies by lender)
  • Tenure: 3 months to 3 years
  • No income proof required — gold is the collateral
  • Quick disbursal — typically within 30 minutes to a few hours

10.2 Loan Against SGB

  • SGBs can be used as collateral for loans from banks and financial institutions
  • LTV typically up to 75% of SGB value
  • Available at major public and private sector banks
  • Useful for investors who need liquidity but do not want to prematurely redeem SGB and lose tax benefits

10.3 Gold Loan Against Gold ETF

  • Most banks do not currently accept Gold ETF units as loan collateral
  • Some stockbrokers offer margin against Gold ETF holdings
  • Regulations on this are evolving — check with your specific bank or broker

 

11. Gold Investment Strategy — Portfolio Allocation Guide

11.1 How Much Gold Should You Own?

Most financial planners and wealth managers recommend a gold allocation of 5% to 15% of the total investment portfolio. The exact percentage depends on your risk profile, investment goals, and market outlook.

Investor Profile

Risk Appetite

Gold Allocation

Preferred Instrument

Conservative

Low

10%-15%

SGB + Physical Gold

Moderate

Medium

7%-10%

SGB + Gold ETF

Aggressive

High

5%-7%

Gold ETF

Young Investor

Medium-High

5%-10%

Gold ETF + Digital Gold

Near-Retirement

Low-Medium

10%-15%

SGB + Physical Gold

 

11.2 Recommended Gold Investment Strategy by Goal

Goal: Tax Saving + Long-term Wealth Creation

Best Option: Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB). Invest in SGB tranches as and when available. Hold till maturity for complete tax exemption on capital gains. Use the 2.5% annual interest as a bonus income stream.

Goal: Flexibility + Liquidity

Best Option: Gold ETF. Buy Gold ETFs through your demat account for real-time liquidity. Suitable for investors who may need to liquidate gold holdings quickly or want to tactically increase/decrease gold exposure.

Goal: Cultural Investment + Gift Giving

Best Option: Physical Gold (hallmarked coins or bars). Buy BIS-hallmarked 24-karat gold coins from a reputed bank or jeweller. Avoid jewellery for pure investment purposes due to high making charges.

Goal: Micro-Investment + Getting Started

Best Option: Digital Gold or Gold FoF (Fund of Funds). Start with Rs 100 or less through platforms like Groww or ET Money. Graduate to Gold ETF or SGB as your investment amount grows.

11.3 Gold SIP Strategy

Just as equity mutual funds benefit from SIP (Systematic Investment Plan), gold investments benefit from regular, disciplined purchases. Gold FoF platforms allow SIP starting at Rs 100/month, enabling rupee cost averaging and gradual wealth accumulation.

Power of Gold SIP: Rs 5,000/month invested in Gold ETF via SIP for 15 years at an assumed 12% CAGR would grow to approximately Rs 25 lakh from a total investment of Rs 9 lakh — delivering nearly 3x wealth multiplication over the period.

 

 

12. Common Mistakes to Avoid in Gold Investing

  1. Treating jewellery as pure investment — high making charges and GST make jewellery the most expensive and least efficient gold investment.
  2. Buying gold without BIS hallmarking — always insist on BIS Hallmark and verify HUID number.
  3. Ignoring tax implications — not accounting for LTCG tax at 12.5% when planning gold investment returns.
  4. Over-allocating to gold — keeping more than 20% of portfolio in gold is excessive and reduces overall returns potential.
  5. Selling SGB before maturity — prematurely selling SGB (especially before 5 years) forfeits the tax-free capital gains benefit.
  6. Not comparing total cost of ownership — making charges + GST + storage for physical gold vs expense ratio for ETF.
  7. Buying gold on credit or EMI — this adds interest cost to an already expensive asset.
  8. Storing large quantities at home without insurance — always insure gold holdings.
  9. Not maintaining purchase records — always retain invoices, receipts, and statements to prove cost of acquisition for capital gains calculation.
  10. Chasing short-term gold price movements — gold is a long-term hedge, not a trading instrument.

 

13. Gold Price Outlook and Factors Affecting Gold Prices in 2026

13.1 Key Drivers of Gold Prices

  • US Federal Reserve interest rate decisions — lower rates boost gold prices
  • US Dollar strength — inverse relationship: stronger dollar = lower gold prices
  • Global geopolitical tensions — wars, conflicts, and political instability drive gold demand
  • Central bank gold purchases — global central banks have been aggressively buying gold since 2022
  • Indian rupee-dollar exchange rate — rupee depreciation amplifies domestic gold price rises
  • Seasonal demand in India — Akshaya Tritiya, Dhanteras, Diwali, and wedding season spike
  • Global inflation levels — high inflation drives safe-haven demand for gold

13.2 Gold Price Historical Performance in India

Year

Gold Price (per 10g)

Annual Return

Key Factor

2016

Rs 28,623

-4%

Strong USD

2018

Rs 31,438

+7%

Trade war fears

2020

Rs 56,200

+28%

COVID-19 safe haven

2022

Rs 52,670

-4%

Fed rate hikes

2024

Rs 72,000

+21%

Central bank buying

2026 (YTD)

Rs 93,000+

+15%*

Geopolitical + Rate cuts

 

Note: Gold prices shown are approximate and for illustrative purposes. *2026 returns are indicative year-to-date as of May 2026. Please verify current gold prices from official sources like IBJA or MCX.

 

 

14. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) About Gold Investment

Q1. Which is better — SGB or Gold ETF?

For long-term investors (5+ years), SGB is clearly better due to the 2.5% annual interest income and complete tax exemption on capital gains at maturity. For investors who need flexibility and liquidity, Gold ETF is the preferred choice.

Q2. Can I buy SGB online?

Yes. You can purchase SGB online through your net banking portal (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, etc.) or through NSE/BSE using your demat and trading account. Online purchases get a discount of Rs 50 per gram on the issue price.

Q3. Is it safe to invest in Gold ETF?

Yes. Gold ETFs are regulated by SEBI. The physical gold backing each ETF unit is stored in accredited, insured vaults and independently audited. While the gold price itself can fluctuate, the counterparty risk is minimal compared to digital gold or unregulated platforms.

Q4. What is the minimum amount to start investing in gold?

SGB: 1 gram (approximately Rs 8,000-9,000). Gold ETF: 1 unit (approximately Rs 60-70, representing 1/100th or 1 gram depending on the fund). Digital Gold: Re 1. Physical Gold: 1 gram coin (approximately Rs 9,000-9,500 inclusive of charges).

Q5. How much gold can an Indian citizen hold legally?

There are no limits on gold holdings in India if the source is from declared/taxable income or agriculture income. However, in case of IT searches, the CBDT circular specifies that up to 500 grams for a married woman, 250 grams for an unmarried woman, and 100 grams for a male member can be held without explanation. Any amount beyond these limits should be supported by income proof or inheritance documentation.

Q6. Can NRIs invest in SGB and Gold ETFs?

NRIs are not eligible to invest in Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGB). However, NRIs can invest in Gold ETFs through their NRE or NRO demat accounts as per RBI and FEMA guidelines. Physical gold can be purchased by NRIs during their visit to India.

Q7. What happens to my SGB if RBI stops issuing new tranches?

Your existing SGB holdings are unaffected by the issuance status of new tranches. All existing SGBs continue till their respective maturity dates and are fully backed by the Government of India’s sovereign guarantee. You can also sell on the stock exchange if you need liquidity.

Q8. Can I convert physical gold to SGB or Gold ETF?

You cannot directly convert physical gold to SGB or Gold ETF. You would need to sell the physical gold first and then use the proceeds to invest in SGB or Gold ETF separately.

 

15. Gold Investment Checklist for 2026

Before You Invest: Complete this checklist to make a smart, informed gold investment decision.

 

  • Decide your investment goal: tax saving, wealth creation, liquidity, or cultural purchase
  • Determine your gold allocation: 5%-15% of total portfolio is recommended
  • For SGB: Open a demat account for demat form; check RBI website for upcoming SGB tranches
  • For Gold ETF: Ensure you have an active demat account and trading access to NSE/BSE
  • For physical gold: Verify BIS hallmarking; check HUID on BIS Care app
  • Calculate total cost of ownership: making charges + GST + storage + insurance
  • Keep all purchase invoices, demat statements, and SGB certificates safely
  • Consult a tax advisor on LTCG implications before redeeming
  • Review gold allocation annually as part of your overall portfolio review
  • Do not invest borrowed money in gold — gold is a long-term asset, not a short-term trade

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