Comex Gold Price Today in India — June 13, 2026

Current Price
15,032.14/g
10 Gram Rate
150,321.40/10g
24h Change
+₹345.40
24h % Change
+2.35%

As of June 13, 2026, Gold is trading at Fifteen Thousand Thirty Two Rupees per gram across India. The 10-gram rate stands at One Lakh Fifty Thousand Three Hundred and Twenty One Rupees, and 100 grams costs Fifteen Lakh Three Thousand Two Hundred and Fourteen Rupees.

24 Karat
15,032.14
Pure gold · /g · per gram
22 Karat
13,779.46
Jewellery gold · /g · per gram
18 Karat
11,274.11
18K gold · /g · per gram

Comex Gold — 10-Day Price Trend

Comex Gold and the India Gold Rate Today

COMEX is the market most traders watch when they talk about global gold. The contract sits in dollars, trades in futures form, and often sets the tone for the next move in the Indian market. That is why people searching for comex gold usually end up checking the rupee price too — because once the currency conversion lands, the number that matters to a buyer in India is the local rate.

Comex gold price today in India per gram
Gold price in India — June 13, 2026

Right now, the live 24K reference is ₹15,032.14 per gram. For jewellery buyers, 22K comes to ₹13,779.46 per gram and 18K works out to ₹11,274.11 per gram. Those numbers are derived from the pure 24K benchmark, so they are useful for quick comparisons even before a shop adds making charges.

  • 24K gold: ₹15,032.14 per gram
  • 22K gold: ₹13,779.46 per gram
  • 18K gold: ₹11,274.11 per gram
  • 10 grams (24K): ₹150,321.40
  • 100 grams (24K): ₹1,503,214.00
  • 1 kg (24K): ₹15,032,140.00

The bigger picture matters. COMEX gold, LBMA gold and MCX gold all pull on the same rope, but the Indian rate still depends on the rupee, import duty, GST and the mood in the local market. A calm overseas session can still translate into a firmer sticker price here if USD/INR slips in the wrong direction.

Comex Gold vs Previous Periods

Today vs previous periods (₹ per gram)

Yesterday
₹14,686.74
+₹345.40 (+2.35%)
1 Week Ago
₹15,354.48
₹322.34 (-2.10%)
1 Month Ago
₹16,223.00
₹1,190.86 (-7.34%)
1 Year Ago
₹10,091.89
+₹4,940.25 (+48.95%)

Gold is currently priced at Fifteen Thousand Thirty Two Rupees per gram. Compared to one year ago, the price has risen by Four Thousand Nine Hundred and Forty Rupees (+48.95%).

Comex Gold Price by Weight

Today's Gold rate is Fifteen Thousand Thirty Two Rupees per gram. At this rate, 10 grams of Gold costs One Lakh Fifty Thousand Three Hundred and Twenty One Rupees.

Unit Weight Price (INR) Price in Words
1 Gram 1.0000 g ₹15,032.14 Fifteen Thousand Thirty Two Rupees
8 Grams 8.0000 g ₹120,257.12 One Lakh Twenty Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty Seven Rupees
10 Grams 10.0000 g ₹150,321.40 One Lakh Fifty Thousand Three Hundred and Twenty One Rupees
100 Grams 100.0000 g ₹1,503,214.00 Fifteen Lakh Three Thousand Two Hundred and Fourteen Rupees
1 Kilogram 1,000.0000 g ₹15,032,140.00 One Crore Fifty Lakh Thirty Two Thousand One Hundred and Forty Rupees
1 Ounce (oz) 28.3495 g ₹426,153.65 Four Lakh Twenty Six Thousand One Hundred and Fifty Four Rupees
1 Troy Ounce 31.1035 g ₹467,552.17 Four Lakh Sixty Seven Thousand Five Hundred and Fifty Two Rupees
1 Metric Ton 1,000,000.0000 g ₹15,032,140,000.00 Fifteen Hundred and Three Crore Twenty One Lakh Forty Thousand Rupees

Why Comex Gold Does Not Match the Shop Price Line by Line

The gap between COMEX and the jeweller’s invoice is where most buyers get confused. COMEX gives you the market pulse; a store bill gives you a finished product with labour, wastage assumptions, hallmarking and tax folded in. On a quiet day the difference looks small. During festive demand or wedding season, it can widen fast because retailers know footfall is real and they do not need to discount aggressively.

Factors affecting comex gold price in India
Gold market factors influencing Comex gold and Indian retail pricing

Carat, hallmark and what you actually pay for

BIS hallmarking tells you purity. A 916 stamp means 22K gold, while 999 is the usual purity mark for 24K. That is useful because a necklace that looks “golden” on the counter may not be pure enough for an investor who wants a standard coin or bar. For such buyers, 24K gold coin price and gold bar price tend to sit closer to the live spot benchmark, though even those products carry a small premium.

There are also broader market drivers. Central bank buying has stayed strong in recent cycles, geopolitical tension can lift safe-haven demand overnight, and crude oil often influences inflation expectations, which then feed back into gold. The USD/INR rate is the quiet variable most retail buyers miss. One nudge there can move the local rate even if COMEX barely budged.

That is why experienced traders watch COMEX for direction, then check MCX for the India-specific translation. A holiday rush in Mumbai or Chennai will not change the futures market in New York, but it can change the premium you are quoted at a jewellery counter.

Comex Gold — Historical Prices

The most recent Gold price on record (2026-06-12) is Fifteen Thousand Thirty Two Rupees per gram. This is up by Three Hundred and Forty Five Rupees from the previous day's rate of ₹14,686.74.

Date Price (₹/g) Change
2026-06-12 ₹15,032.14 +345.40
2026-06-11 ₹14,686.74 -343.29
2026-06-10 ₹15,030.03 -464.31
2026-06-09 ₹15,494.34 +96.47
2026-06-08 ₹15,397.87 +43.39
2026-06-07 ₹15,354.48 0.00
2026-06-06 ₹15,354.48 -305.13
2026-06-05 ₹15,659.61 -247.15
2026-06-04 ₹15,906.76 -28.38
2026-06-03 ₹15,935.14

Using Comex Gold as a Reference for Investing

For a retail investor, COMEX gold is best treated as a reference line, not a product to buy blindly. It gives you the global benchmark. From there, you can decide whether physical gold, a gold ETF, digital gold or a Sovereign Gold Bond suits your goal. Each route behaves differently. Physical gold gives you the metal in hand, but you pay making charges and storage costs. ETFs follow market prices closely without lockers or purity worries. Digital gold makes small-ticket buying easy, though you still need to trust the platform.

Sovereign Gold Bond is the odd one out in a good way. It tracks gold prices, pays 2.5% annual interest, and comes with a lock-in period, so it behaves more like a long-term holding than a quick trade. The price on exchange can move with the market, but the interest coupon gives it a different texture from pure physical ownership. That distinction matters if your goal is wealth preservation rather than jewellery shopping.

Seasonality still counts. Dhanteras, Akshaya Tritiya and the wedding calendar can lift demand without any help from COMEX. Even when the global chart looks flat, local buying often spikes in India and nudges premiums higher. That is why a 52-week high or low tells only part of the story. Gold remains a currency hedge, a sentiment trade and, in many households, a savings habit that survives every market cycle.

Comex Gold — Common Questions

Comex gold refers to gold futures traded on the CME Group’s COMEX exchange in the US. Traders watch it closely because it acts as a global benchmark for the gold spot price, and India often tracks that move with a lag or a premium depending on the rupee and local demand.

COMEX gold is dollar-denominated and quoted internationally, while MCX gold trades in INR for Indian participants. The two usually move in the same direction, but the final Indian rate also reflects USD/INR, import duty, GST, and local jeweller premiums.

On this page, the live India-linked reference is ₹15,032.14 per gram for 24K gold as of June 13, 2026. For quick checks, 22K is ₹13,779.46 per gram and 18K is ₹11,274.11 per gram.

Not exactly. COMEX quotes are futures prices in ounces and dollars, while 24K retail pricing in India is the converted spot equivalent per gram. The pure gold benchmark is the same idea, but the final rupee rate depends on currency conversion and domestic costs.

A jeweller adds making charges, wastage in some cases, GST, and sometimes city-level premiums. That is why a necklace bill will usually sit above the raw COMEX-linked price, even when the underlying gold market is flat.

COMEX gold helps you track the market, but it is not a retail buying route for most Indian households. For investing, gold ETF, Sovereign Gold Bond, or digital gold are more practical than trying to mirror a futures contract directly.