Sovereign Gold Bond vs Digital Gold vs Gold ETF — Complete Guide 2026
Last verified: April 2026, against RBI’s SGB scheme guidelines, current Gold ETF NAV practices, and GST/customs duty rates on gold (April 2026).
Gold is one of the few assets Indians genuinely want to own. The challenge: how to own it. Physical gold has making charges, storage risk, and resale haircuts. Digital gold has GST. Gold ETFs have expense ratios. Sovereign Gold Bonds give 2.5% interest plus tax-free maturity but lock you for 8 years. This guide compares all four with worked math — and tells you which combination delivers the best gold exposure for an Indian investor in 2026.
The headline comparison
| Feature | Sovereign Gold Bond | Gold ETF | Digital Gold | Physical Gold (jewellery / coin) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interest / yield | 2.5% p.a. on issue price (taxable) | None | None | None |
| Capital gains tax (LTCG) | Tax-free at 8-year maturity | 12.5% LTCG above 24 months (no indexation) | 12.5% LTCG above 24 months | 12.5% LTCG above 24 months |
| STCG (under 24 months) | Slab rate | Slab rate | Slab rate | Slab rate |
| Liquidity | Locked 5+ years (premature exit window every 6 months); listed on NSE/BSE for secondary sale | T+2, intraday tradeable | 1-2 days redemption (instant via app) | Resell at jeweller (5-10% haircut) |
| Expense ratio | None | 0.4-0.7% | None (but 3% GST upfront) | None (but making charges 8-25%) |
| Minimum investment | 1 gram | 1 unit (~₹50) | ₹1 | 1 gram coin / jewellery |
| Storage | None (digital RBI-issued) | None (demat) | None (issuer-vault stored) | Physical (locker, theft risk) |
Sovereign Gold Bond — the overlooked winner
RBI issues SGBs in tranches (typically 4-6 per year, though pace has slowed in FY 2024-25 onwards). Issue price linked to the average closing gold price for the preceding 3 working days. Tenure: 8 years, exit window from year 5 onwards (every 6 months at coupon date).
SGB pays 2.5% annual interest on issue price (taxable as other-sources). Capital gain at 8-year maturity is tax-free under Section 47(viic). For a ₹1L invested at ₹6,500/gm, expect ~₹85K capital + ₹14K post-tax interest over 8 years (~7-7.5% post-tax CAGR).
Gold ETF — the liquid alternative
Open-ended scheme that holds physical gold. Listed on NSE/BSE, intraday traded. Top ETFs: Nippon India, ICICI Pru, HDFC, SBI Gold ETF. Expense 0.4-0.7%. T+2 settlement. Same Budget 2024 LTCG of 12.5% above 24 months. SGB beats Gold ETF by ~75 bps post-tax over 8 years; Gold ETF wins on liquidity.
Digital Gold — convenient but flawed
3% GST on every purchase + bid-ask spread of 2-5%. Counterparty risk on platform’s storage. Fine for ₹500-5,000 monthly accumulation; switch to SGB/ETF for ₹50K+ allocation.
Physical Gold — only for cultural / wedding purposes
Jewellery: 8-25% making charges + 3% GST + 5-10% resale haircut = 20-35% total entry-to-exit friction. Use only for weddings/gifts.
The recommended gold allocation
Gold should be 5-10% of a typical Indian household portfolio. For ₹5L target gold allocation: ₹3.5L SGB + ₹1L Gold ETF + ₹50K physical coins. Skip digital gold and jewellery for portfolio purposes.
Linked deep-dives
FAQs
Is SGB safer than gold ETF?
SGB is sovereign — zero credit risk, RBI-issued. Gold ETF is SEBI-regulated MF holding physical gold. Both safe.
What’s the tax on SGB interest?
Taxable as other-sources at slab rate; TDS for interest above ₹10K/year.
Can NRIs buy SGBs?
NRIs cannot subscribe to new SGBs but can hold existing ones if resident at issuance.
Sources
- RBI — SGB scheme
- Section 47(viic) and 112 of the Income Tax Act
Last verified: April 2026.