Understanding SGB Structure
Learn how Sovereign Gold Bonds work, from purchase to maturity, including government backing and regulatory safeguards.
Everything you need to know about gold investment, Sovereign Gold Bonds, and wealth preservation in India
A Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB) is a government-issued security where you own gold electronically without storing it physically. Instead of keeping gold in a locker, the Reserve Bank of India holds it for you and you earn an annual interest of 2.5% on top of any price appreciation. With physical gold, you pay for storage, insurance, and face verification challenges when selling—SGBs eliminate all of that.
You make money in two ways: first, you earn 2.5% annual interest paid every six months, which is pure profit regardless of gold prices. Second, when gold prices rise, your bond value increases—if you bought at 5,000 per gram and it rises to 5,500, you’ve gained 500 per gram on top of your interest. Many investors have seen 8-12% annual returns over 5-year holding periods when combining interest with price appreciation.
Gold prices move based on several interconnected factors: inflation definitely plays a role, but interest rates matter just as much—when the RBI raises rates, bond yields become attractive and gold falls, when rates drop, gold becomes the safer bet. Geopolitical tensions send investors scrambling for safety (gold spikes), currency strength matters because gold is priced in dollars, and even stock market crashes trigger gold buying as investors diversify. Understanding these dynamics helps you time your purchases better.
Individual residents of India can buy SGBs through banks, post offices, or the stock exchange during the subscription windows that open roughly every month. The minimum investment is just 1 gram of gold (around 6,000-7,000 depending on current prices) and maximum is 4 kg per financial year for individuals. If you have a Demat account, it’s even easier—you can trade SGBs on the stock exchange just like stocks.
Gold acts as a stabilizer in your portfolio—when stocks and bonds struggle, gold often holds value or rises, which reduces your overall risk. Financial advisors typically suggest keeping 5-10% of your portfolio in precious metals depending on your age and risk tolerance. If you’re young and can handle volatility, 5% might be enough; if you’re closer to retirement and want stability, 10% makes sense. The key is treating gold as insurance against inflation and currency weakness, not as your primary growth engine.
Yes, and this is a major advantage. The 2.5% annual interest you receive is taxed as income, but when you sell your SGB after 5 years, any profit is treated as a capital gain—if you’ve held it for more than 2 years, it’s taxed at just 20% with indexation benefit, which means inflation adjustments reduce your taxable gain. Physical gold doesn’t get this indexation benefit, so you’d pay 20% on the full gain. Over a 1 lakh investment with 30,000 profit, the indexation benefit could save you several thousand rupees in taxes.
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Learn how Sovereign Gold Bonds work, from purchase to maturity, including government backing and regulatory safeguards.
Discover what moves gold prices—from inflation and interest rates to geopolitical events and currency movements.
Explore how to allocate gold strategically for wealth preservation and portfolio diversification based on your financial goals.