Gold hit ₹90,000 per 10 grams in early 2026. Indians bought record quantities. But most of them bought it in the worst possible form. Here is how to invest in gold smartly.
Why Indians Love Gold
Gold is not just an investment for Indians — it is cultural, emotional, and financial insurance rolled into one. India consumes 700-800 tonnes of gold every year, making it the world’s second largest gold market. This demand is not going away.
The Problem With Physical Gold
Physical gold — coins, bars, jewellery — has three problems. Making charges on jewellery can be 15-25% of the value. Storage is a security risk. Selling it requires finding a buyer and accepting a discount. For investment purposes, physical gold is the worst form to own gold.
Sovereign Gold Bonds — The Best Option
Sovereign Gold Bonds issued by the RBI are the single best way for most Indians to invest in gold. You get the full price appreciation of gold plus 2.5% annual interest. There is zero storage cost. If held to maturity of 8 years, capital gains are completely tax-free. The only downside is the 8-year lock-in, though you can sell on the stock exchange after 5 years.
Gold ETFs — The Flexible Option
Gold ETFs trade on the stock exchange like shares. You can buy and sell anytime during market hours. There are no making charges. The expense ratio is typically 0.5% per year. Capital gains are taxed, unlike SGBs held to maturity. Choose Gold ETFs if you want flexibility and may need to exit before 8 years.
Digital Gold — Avoid It
Apps like PhonePe and Paytm offer digital gold. The spread between buying and selling price is wide, storage charges apply, and there is no regulatory framework as strong as SGBs or ETFs. Avoid digital gold for serious investment amounts.
How Much Gold Should You Hold?
Financial advisors typically recommend 5-10% of your total portfolio in gold. It is a hedge against rupee depreciation, inflation, and market crashes — not a primary wealth creator. Do not let your love for gold exceed 10% of your investments.