Reviewed by returnees. Cross-checked with RBI, Income Tax Department and MEA. Editorial policy.
Content Index
Gold’s Track Record: The Numbers Don’t Lie
The Big Restriction: NRIs Cannot Buy Sovereign Gold Bonds
What Gold Investment Options Do NRIs Actually Have?
Gold Investment Comparison for NRIs
Tax Implications: What NRIs Need to Know
How Much Gold Should Be in Your Portfolio?
Gold in the US vs Gold in India: Where Should NRIs Invest?
Common Mistakes NRIs Make with Gold
Gold for NRIs Planning to Return to India
So, Is Gold a Good Investment for NRIs?
Every Diwali and Akshaya Tritiya, I get the same question in our WhatsApp community.
“Mani, should I buy gold? Is it a good investment?”
And honestly? My answer has changed over the years.
When I first moved back to India, gold felt like something my grandmother talked about. Temple jewelry. Lockers full of chains. “It’s for safety, Mani.”
But as I started helping NRIs manage money across borders, I realized gold serves a very specific purpose in a portfolio. It’s not the best investment. It’s not the worst either. It just needs to be understood clearly.
So let me break it down for you. No hype.
No pushing you to buy or avoid.
Just the facts, the options available to NRIs, what’s restricted, and how gold actually fits into your financial picture.
Gold’s Track Record: The Numbers Don’t Lie
Gold has delivered roughly 10-12% annualized returns in INR terms over the last 10-15 years.
In 2024-2025, gold had a phenomenal run. Global uncertainty, central bank buying, and geopolitical tensions pushed gold prices to all-time highs.
But here’s the thing. Gold doesn’t always do this.
There have been stretches – 2013 to 2018, for example – where gold went practically nowhere. People who bought at the 2012 peak waited years to break even.
Over 30+ year periods, gold in INR has returned about 9-10% annually. That’s decent. It beats inflation.
But it doesn’t beat equity markets (Nifty 50 has returned 12-14% over similar periods).
Where gold shines:
During recessions and global crises (2008, 2020, 2024)
When inflation is high
When currencies weaken (the INR has depreciated against gold consistently)
As a hedge when stock markets crash
Where gold disappoints:
During bull equity markets (opportunity cost is high)
It produces no income (no dividends, no interest, no rent)
Storage and insurance costs eat into returns (for physical gold)
Tax treatment isn’t always favorable
My honest take: Gold is a portfolio diversifier, not a primary wealth builder. If 100% of your money is in equity and real estate, some gold makes sense. If you’re already gold-heavy (as many Indian families are), you probably don’t need more.
The Big Restriction: NRIs Cannot Buy Sovereign Gold Bonds
Let me get this out of the way first because it’s the single biggest source of confusion.
NRIs cannot invest in Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs).
This is a FEMA restriction. Not a technicality. Not something you can work around with the right broker.
SGBs were the best gold investment available in India. Government-backed. 2.5% annual interest on top of gold price appreciation. Capital gains tax-free if held to 8-year maturity. They were genuinely excellent.
But here’s the even bigger news.
Budget 2025 discontinued new SGB issuances entirely.
The government stopped issuing new tranches. The last one was in late 2024.
So even resident Indians can’t buy new SGBs anymore.
If you bought SGBs before becoming an NRI:
Good news. You can continue holding them until maturity or opt for early redemption (available after 5 years). You don’t need to sell them just because your residency status changed.
The interest income (2.5% per year) will continue to be paid and will be taxable as per NRI tax rules. Capital gains at maturity through RBI redemption remain tax-free.
But you cannot buy new SGBs. That door is closed for NRIs and now for everyone.
For more on sovereign gold bonds, check our dedicated guide.
What Gold Investment Options Do NRIs Actually Have?
With SGBs off the table, here are your realistic options. Each has pros, cons, and specific rules for NRIs.
1. Gold ETFs (Exchange-Traded Funds)
This is currently the best option for most NRIs.
A Gold ETF is a mutual fund unit listed on the stock exchange (NSE/BSE) that tracks the price of physical gold. One unit is typically backed by 1 gram of 99.5% purity gold.
Can NRIs invest? Yes.
How to invest:
You need an NRI demat and trading account with a broker that supports NRIs
Investments must be through a Non-PIS (non-Portfolio Investment Scheme) account
Fund using either NRE or NRO bank account
Buy and sell on NSE/BSE just like stocks
Pros:
Tracks gold prices closely (transparent pricing)
No storage or security worries
High liquidity (buy/sell anytime during market hours)
SEBI regulated
Low cost (expense ratio 0.5-0.6% per year)
No making charges, no purity concerns
Repatriable if invested through NRE account
Cons:
No 2.5% interest (unlike SGBs)
Need a demat account (adds a layer of setup)
Brokerage charges on every buy/sell
US/Canada NRIs may face FATCA complications with some brokers
Popular Gold ETFs in India:
Nippon India Gold ETF
HDFC Gold ETF
SBI Gold ETF
ICICI Prudential Gold ETF
Kotak Gold ETF
Axis Gold ETF
Most of these have very similar returns since they all track the same underlying gold price.
Choose based on expense ratio (lower is better) and trading volume (higher is better for liquidity).
Gold mutual funds are “fund of funds” – they invest in Gold ETFs rather than directly in physical gold.
Can NRIs invest? Yes.
How to invest:
Through any NRI-compatible AMC (asset management company)
Can invest via NRE or NRO accounts
No demat account needed (this is a key advantage over ETFs)
Available as lump sum or SIP
Pros:
No demat account required
SIP option available (invest small amounts monthly)
Easier to set up than ETFs for most NRIs
Managed by professional fund houses
Cons:
Slightly higher expense ratio (0.5-1%) than ETFs because of the double layer of fees (fund of fund + underlying ETF)
NAV-based pricing (not real-time like ETFs)
Redemption takes T+3 business days
Some AMCs don’t accept US/Canada NRIs (FATCA restrictions)
Popular Gold Mutual Funds:
SBI Gold Fund
HDFC Gold Fund
Nippon India Gold Savings Fund
Kotak Gold Fund
Axis Gold Fund
Best for: NRIs who don’t have a demat account and want a simple, SIP-based approach to gold investing.
3. Digital Gold
Digital gold lets you buy gold online in small amounts (as low as ₹10). The gold is stored in insured vaults by providers like SafeGold, MMTC-PAMP, or Augmont.
Can NRIs invest? This is a gray area. Some platforms accept NRIs. Others don’t. There’s no clear FEMA prohibition, but also no clear RBI regulation.
How it works:
Buy gold through apps/platforms (PhonePe, Google Pay, Paytm, etc.)
Gold is stored in vaults, backed by physical gold
You can sell back anytime or request physical delivery
Pros:
Extremely easy to buy (as low as ₹10)
No demat account needed
Buy/sell 24/7
Can convert to physical gold if desired
Cons:
NOT regulated by SEBI or RBI (this is a big concern)
GST of 3% on purchase
Storage fees may apply after a period
Platform risk (what if the company shuts down?)
Liquidity depends on the platform
Unclear regulatory status for NRIs
My honest take: I’m not a fan of digital gold for NRIs. The lack of SEBI/RBI regulation is a red flag.
If you want digital gold exposure, Gold ETFs or Gold Mutual Funds give you the same thing with proper regulation.
For more on the digital gold investment landscape, see our separate guide.
4. Physical Gold (Jewelry, Coins, Bars)
The most traditional option. Buy gold jewelry from a jeweler or gold coins/bars from a bank.
Can NRIs invest? Yes. No restrictions on buying physical gold in India.
How to buy:
Walk into any authorized jeweler or bank branch in India during a visit
Or have family purchase on your behalf
PAN card required for purchases above ₹2 lakh
Pros:
Tangible asset
Cultural significance (wedding jewelry, family tradition)
No counterparty risk (you physically hold it)
Easy to gift to family members
Cons:
Making charges of 8-25% on jewelry (you lose this immediately)
Purity concerns (always buy BIS hallmarked)
Storage and security costs (bank lockers: ₹2,000-₹10,000/year)
Insurance costs
No income generation
Selling involves melting, purity testing, and often a discount
Emotional attachment makes it hard to sell when needed
Carrying gold to India:
NRIs returning to India after staying abroad for more than 6 months can carry gold duty-free up to:
Men: 20 grams (value up to ₹50,000)
Women: 40 grams (value up to ₹1,00,000)
Beyond these limits, customs duty of approximately 15% applies. You can carry up to 1 kg of gold total (with duty payment).
Check our guide on bringing gold to India from Dubai for UAE-specific rules, and gold at airports for the customs process.
My honest take: Buy physical gold for family occasions and cultural reasons.
But don’t treat jewelry as an “investment.” The making charges alone mean you’re starting 10-20% in the red.
For investment purposes, Gold ETFs are far more efficient.
Gold Investment Comparison for NRIs
Here’s a quick comparison to help you decide.
Gold ETFs
Minimum investment: Price of 1 unit (~₹50-60 per unit for some funds)
Demat needed: Yes
SEBI regulated: Yes
Annual cost: 0.5-0.6% expense ratio
Liquidity: High (T+1 settlement)
NRI eligible: Yes (Non-PIS route)
SGB alternative: Closest equivalent
Best for: Investors comfortable with demat accounts
Gold taxation depends on the type of investment and how long you hold it.
Gold ETFs (Listed on Exchange)
Short-term (held less than 12 months): Taxed at your income tax slab rate. For most NRIs, this means 30% + surcharge + cess.
Long-term (held 12 months or more): Taxed at 12.5% without indexation benefit.
TDS: If you buy/sell Gold ETFs directly on the stock exchange, no TDS is deducted. If traded through mutual fund route, TDS may apply.
Gold Mutual Funds
Short-term (held less than 24 months): Taxed at slab rate.
Long-term (held 24 months or more): Taxed at 12.5% without indexation benefit.
TDS: Applicable on NRI redemptions.
Physical Gold / Digital Gold
Short-term (held less than 24 months): Taxed at slab rate.
Long-term (held 24 months or more): Taxed at 12.5% without indexation benefit.
Sovereign Gold Bonds (If You Already Hold Them)
Interest (2.5% per year): Taxable at slab rate under “Income from Other Sources.”
Capital gains at maturity (8 years, RBI redemption): Completely tax-free. This is the golden advantage of SGBs.
Capital gains on early redemption (after 5 years): Taxed at 12.5% as long-term capital gains.
Tax-saving tip: If you sell physical gold or gold ETFs at a long-term capital gain, you can claim exemption under Section 54F (invest in a residential house) or Section 54EC (invest in REC/NHAI bonds within 6 months, max ₹50 lakh).
For the full picture on NRI taxation, check our tax filing guide.
Important for US NRIs: Gold investments in India must be reported on your US tax return.
Gold ETFs and mutual funds should be reported under FBAR if the account value exceeds $10,000 at any point.
Physical gold held in India may also have reporting implications. See our FBAR guide for details.
How Much Gold Should Be in Your Portfolio?
This is where most NRIs get it wrong.
Indian families have a cultural love for gold. Many NRI families already have significant gold holdings – family jewelry, wedding gold, parents’ gold, ancestral pieces.
Before investing in more gold, do a quick inventory. You might be surprised.
General allocation guidelines from financial planners:
Gold should be 5-15% of your total investment portfolio. Not more.
If your total portfolio (across India and abroad) is worth ₹1 crore, that means ₹5-15 lakh in gold exposure. Including all physical gold you already own.
At 5% allocation: You have enough to serve as a crisis hedge without dragging down long-term returns.
At 15% allocation: You’re well-hedged against currency depreciation and market crashes, but you’re giving up potential equity returns.
Above 15%: You’re overweight on gold. It’s hurting your wealth creation potential.
The typical Indian NRI reality: Many families already have 20-30% or more of their net worth in gold (mostly physical jewelry).
If that’s you, you don’t need to buy more gold. You might actually want to consider selling some jewelry and redirecting into equity mutual funds or fixed deposits.
I know that’s not easy to hear. Gold has emotional and cultural significance.
But from a purely financial perspective, having 30% of your wealth in a non-income-producing asset is suboptimal.
Gold in the US vs Gold in India: Where Should NRIs Invest?
If you’re in the US, you have gold investment options there too.
US Gold Options:
GLD (SPDR Gold Trust) – largest gold ETF in the world
IAU (iShares Gold Trust) – lower expense ratio
Physical gold from authorized dealers
Gold futures (for advanced investors)
India Gold Options:
Gold ETFs on NSE/BSE
Gold Mutual Funds
Physical gold
Which should you choose?
If your gold allocation is part of your India portfolio (for eventual use in India, or to hedge INR depreciation), invest in Indian Gold ETFs.
If your gold allocation is part of your US portfolio (for global diversification), invest in GLD or IAU through your US brokerage.
If you plan to return to India, having your gold exposure in India makes practical sense. It’s already in INR, already in the Indian market, and easier to manage after your move.
For broader investment planning, see our best investment options guide.
Common Mistakes NRIs Make with Gold
Mistake 1: Treating jewelry as investment.
Jewelry is a lifestyle purchase, not an investment. The 10-20% making charges, the emotional attachment, and the difficulty of selling make it a poor investment vehicle. Buy jewelry for weddings and occasions.
Use ETFs or mutual funds for investment.
Mistake 2: Not accounting for existing gold.
Before buying more, add up all the gold you already own – locker gold, wedding jewelry, parents’ gold, inherited pieces.
Many families are shocked to find they already have ₹20-30 lakh or more in gold. That’s already more than the recommended allocation.
Mistake 3: Trying to time the gold market.
“Gold is high, I’ll wait.” “Gold dipped, should I buy?”
Just like with equity, timing the gold market is nearly impossible. If you want gold exposure, use SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) through gold mutual funds.
It averages out your purchase price over time.
Mistake 4: Keeping all gold in physical form.
Physical gold has storage costs, theft risk, purity concerns, and selling friction. Convert some to Gold ETFs for a cleaner, more liquid holding.
You get the same gold price exposure without the headaches.
Mistake 5: Ignoring tax implications.
Gold gains are taxable. Many NRIs sell gold without understanding the capital gains impact. Plan your sales around holding periods and use available exemptions.
Mistake 6: Not reporting gold investments to the IRS (US NRIs).
Indian Gold ETFs and mutual fund accounts must be reported on FBAR if they cross $10,000 in value. Missing this can attract penalties.
If you’re planning your move back, gold plays a slightly different role.
Before returning:
Consider buying Gold ETFs or gold mutual funds in India to start building your Indian portfolio
Don’t buy physical gold in the US to carry back (customs duty and hassle outweigh benefits for small amounts)
If you have US gold ETFs (GLD, IAU), you may want to sell before returning to simplify your tax situation
After returning:
Once you become a resident again, all gold options open up (though SGBs are discontinued)
Your NRI demat account will convert to resident. Gold ETFs transfer seamlessly.
Consider your gold allocation as part of your overall India financial plan
Carrying gold back:
Men: 20 grams duty-free (value up to ₹50,000)
Women: 40 grams duty-free (value up to ₹1,00,000)
Beyond this: ~15% customs duty
Maximum: 1 kg per person with duty payment
Must have stayed abroad for minimum 6 months (1 year for higher limits)
So, Is Gold a Good Investment for NRIs?
Let me give you a straight answer.
Gold is a GOOD investment if:
It’s 5-15% of your total portfolio (not more)
You use Gold ETFs or Gold Mutual Funds (not just physical jewelry)
You see it as a diversifier and hedge, not a primary growth engine
You’ve already built strong equity and fixed income positions
You want protection against INR depreciation and global uncertainty
Gold is a BAD investment if:
It’s your only or primary investment
You’re buying only physical jewelry and calling it “investing”
You already have 20%+ of your net worth in gold
You’re chasing recent price performance hoping for quick gains
You’re ignoring equity markets to pile into gold
Gold has a place. A specific, measured place. About 5-15% of your portfolio.
Beyond that, your money works harder in diversified equity mutual funds, real estate, or even fixed deposits.
The families in our community who’ve built the most wealth? They use gold as one piece of a balanced portfolio. Not the centerpiece.
Disclaimer: This is informational content, not financial or investment advice. Gold prices fluctuate and past performance doesn’t guarantee future returns. Tax rules change frequently. Always consult a qualified financial advisor and tax consultant before making investment decisions. Verify NRI eligibility with your broker or AMC before investing.
If you’re building your India investment portfolio and want real advice from people who’ve done it, join our WhatsApp community at /groups – 20,000+ NRIs helping each other with real, lived experience. It’s free and volunteer-run.
Written by
Mani Karthik
Founder, BackToIndia · Returnee since 2016
Mani Karthik is an entrepreneur who moved back to India in 2016 after nearly a decade living and working in the US and the Middle East. He started BackToIndia to help other NRIs navigate the move — banking, taxes, schooling, careers and the everyday reality of resettling in India.
Rules for NRI banking, tax and residency change often. We update guides when policy or our lived experience changes. Nothing here is legal, tax or investment advice — always confirm with a qualified professional in India.
Free for NRIs
Get the Return to India Checklist, Planner & Tools
The exact playbook returnees use to move back without missing a step — built from real journeys, updated for 2026.