A Gold ETF is a fund that holds real 99.5%-pure gold in a vault, and slices it into units you can buy and sell on the stock exchange — just like a share. One unit tracks roughly one gram of gold. No making charges, no purity worries, no safe-deposit box. Here's exactly how that compares to gold sitting in your cupboard, over the last 30 years.
Once these click, a Gold ETF stops feeling like a mystery product and starts looking like exactly what it is: gold, digitised.
Every unit is backed by 99.5% pure gold sitting in a vault, held by a custodian on behalf of all unit-holders — not a promise, not a derivative.
Most Indian Gold ETFs are built so one unit tracks roughly a gram of gold, so its price moves almost in lockstep with the per-gram gold rate.
Net Asset Value — the fund's gold holdings valued at the day's price, divided by units outstanding. The exchange price trades close to this.
An annual fee (typically 0.4%–0.8%) the fund deducts to store, insure and manage the gold — this is the main reason an ETF slightly trails real gold.
The small day-to-day gap between the fund's return and the real gold price it's meant to mirror — usually tiny for a well-run gold ETF.
Gold ETF units sit in your demat account and trade on the NSE/BSE during market hours, exactly like a stock — unlike physical gold or SGBs.
Long stretches of quiet, interrupted by sharp bursts — that's the real shape of gold's history in India, not a smooth diagonal line.
10 grams of 24K gold actually slipped from about ₹5,160 to ₹4,400 as global gold prices stayed subdued through the late '90s — a reminder that gold doesn't only go up.
Gold more than quadrupled, from ₹4,400 to about ₹18,500, as the dot-com bust, the 2008 financial crisis and a weakening rupee pushed investors toward a safe asset.
Prices nearly rose from ₹18,500 to ₹48,651, but the path included a multi-year sideways stretch (roughly 2013–18) before the pandemic-driven surge of 2020.
Gold roughly tripled again, from ₹48,651 to an all-time high near ₹1,69,349 in March 2026, driven by inflation, a weaker rupee, and heavy central-bank gold buying worldwide.
₹5,160 growing to roughly ₹1,42,000 works out to about 11.7% compounded annually — real, but arrived at through sharp rallies and long flat patches, not a straight line.
India's first Gold ETF launched in March 2007. So no fund has a genuine 30-year record — what's 30 years old is the gold price itself, which every ETF exists purely to mirror.
Same underlying metal, very different experience of owning it. Here's the side-by-side.
| What matters | Gold ETF | Physical gold |
|---|---|---|
| Purity | 99.5%, standardised, vault-audited | Varies — 22K jewellery vs 24K coins/bars; hallmarking helps but risk isn't zero |
| Extra cost to buy | Just brokerage — no making charges, no GST on the transaction | 3% GST + making charges (often 6–25% on jewellery) |
| Storage | None needed — held electronically in your demat account | Locker or home safe; theft and loss risk sit with you |
| Minimum investment | Price of one unit — often a few thousand rupees | Usually a full gram or more; jewellery in even bigger chunks |
| Liquidity | Sell on the exchange in seconds during market hours | Depends on a jeweller's buy-back price, which is rarely the full market rate |
| Return vs real gold | Slightly lower — trims off by the expense ratio (~0.4–0.8%/yr) and tracking error | Matches the market price, but you already lost making charges going in |
| Usable as loan collateral | Yes, many brokers accept ETF units as margin/collateral | Yes, gold loans are common and quick against physical gold |
| Needs a demat account | Yes | No |
Tap any drawer to open it. Examples to learn from, not a ranking or recommendation. Figures are indicative as of mid-2026.
Open-ended funds holding physical 99.5% gold, traded on the exchange like a stock. India's oldest and most liquid way to buy "paper gold."
Jewellery, coins and bars — the oldest and most culturally rooted way Indians hold gold, especially around weddings and festivals.
RBI-issued bonds that track gold's price and pay 2.5% extra interest on top — the only way to actually earn a yield on gold. No new tranches since February 2024.
Fund-of-funds that invest in Gold ETFs (no demat needed), and app-based digital gold sold by fintechs and jewellers — convenient, but less tightly regulated than ETFs or SGBs.
Rules changed materially after Budget 2024 — indexation is gone, and Gold ETFs now qualify for the lower long-term rate faster than physical gold.
| Route | Short-term (before threshold) | Long-term (after threshold) | Holding period for LTCG |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold ETF | Taxed at your income slab | 12.5%, no indexation | 12 months |
| Gold Mutual Fund / FoF | Taxed at your income slab | 12.5%, no indexation | 24 months |
| Physical / Digital Gold | Taxed at your income slab | 12.5%, no indexation | 24 months |
| SGB — bought at RBI issue, held to maturity | Tax-free on maturity gains (2.5% interest still taxed at slab) | Till maturity | |
| SGB — sold early / bought in secondary market | Taxed at your income slab | 12.5%, no indexation | Varies |
A Gold ETF isn't a bet against physical gold — it's the same metal, minus the making charges and locker, minus a small annual fee for someone else to store it safely, and traded with the speed of a stock.
Over 30 years, gold in India has compounded at roughly 11–12% a year — through a falling stretch in the late '90s, a multi-year sideways patch in the mid-2010s, and sharp rallies in between. A Gold ETF exists purely to hand you that same ride, as closely as an expense ratio of well under 1% allows.
Get more market clarity →