Gold Price Chart in India — June 13, 2026
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.
Gold Price Chart Today — 10-Day India Trend
What the gold price chart is showing right now
The gold price chart gives you the quickest read on where the market stands today, and right now the benchmark 24K rate sits at ₹15,032.14 per gram in India as of June 13, 2026. That single number matters, but the chart matters more. A flat line tells you buyers are waiting. A sharp move usually means global gold spot price action, a jump in the dollar, or fresh movement in MCX gold futures after overseas trading sets the tone.
Indian buyers often search for sone ka bhav or sone ka rate and stop at the headline number. Fair enough. But if you are buying jewellery, booking a gold bar, or averaging into a gold ETF, the gold price chart gives better context than a single daily quote. The chart on this page reflects recent price movement tied to the global LBMA PM fix, rupee-dollar conversion, and domestic trading cues. That combination is what turns an international ounce price into a usable Indian per gram rate.
- 24K gold (1 gram): ₹15,032.14
- 22K gold (1 gram / 916 gold): ₹13,779.46
- 18K gold (1 gram / 750 gold): ₹11,274.11
- 24K gold (10 grams): ₹150,321.40
- 24K gold (100 grams): ₹1,503,214.00
- 24K gold (1 kg): ₹15,032,140.00
- Gold per tola: ₹175,331.87
One more thing. The price on a chart is the clean market reference. The price on a jewellery invoice is never that clean. Retail bills add GST, gold jewellery making charges, and sometimes a small premium depending on design demand and inventory. So the chart tells you where the market is; the final bill tells you what the market costs in real life.
Gold Price Chart Reference 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 |
How to read a gold price chart before you buy
Most retail buyers don’t need candlestick jargon. They just need to know whether the market is running away, cooling off, or moving in a narrow range. That is where a gold price chart earns its keep. If you are buying 24K gold coins, comparing a gold coin price across dealers, or planning a wedding jewellery purchase in 22K, the recent trend often matters more than today’s headline alone.
Chart price, showroom price, and BIS purity are three different things
The chart rate is the market benchmark. The showroom rate is the benchmark plus costs. Purity tells you what you are actually paying for. Those three get mixed up all the time.
Take 24K gold first. This is 999 gold, the pure form used for bars and coins, and it maps most closely to the spot market. A 22K piece is 916 gold, common in Indian jewellery because it is more durable. Then comes 18K gold, usually marked 750, often used in diamond jewellery and lighter modern pieces. Buying 22K jewellery costs less per gram than 24K — but the making charges often close that gap. That catches people off guard.
BIS hallmarking standards matter here. If a piece carries a BIS hallmark with 916, 750, or 999 purity marking, you know the stated carat level has formal backing. Without that, the gold rate comparison is shaky from the start. A clean gold price chart helps you benchmark market value; BIS hallmark helps you judge whether the item in front of you is being sold honestly.
What actually moves the chart in India
Several drivers pull the gold price chart up or down. The first is the international gold spot price, usually anchored by the LBMA gold benchmark. The second is USD/INR. A stronger dollar or weaker rupee can lift domestic prices even when overseas gold looks quiet. Then there is policy. Import duty changes have a direct effect on landed cost, and India’s total tax stack still matters for how local rates behave.
Geopolitics has a habit of showing up suddenly. A banking scare in the US, conflict in West Asia, or recession fears in Europe can push safe-haven demand higher overnight. Central bank gold buying has also been a real tailwind in recent years, and traders on MCX gold watch those flows closely. Closer home, festive buying during Diwali, Akshaya Tritiya, and the wedding season can tighten local demand just when international prices are already firm.
For practical buyers, the best use of the chart is simple: if the market has spiked sharply in a day or two, don’t rush a large purchase unless you have to. If the chart has been range-bound and you need to buy for a fixed occasion, splitting the purchase across dates often reduces regret.
Gold Price Chart History — Last 10 Trading Days
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 | — |
Why long-term buyers still watch the chart closely
A gold price chart is not only for traders. Long-term buyers use it differently. They are not chasing every ₹20 swing. They are checking whether the current rate sits near a recent high, somewhere in the middle of the range, or after a correction that makes gradual accumulation easier.
That matters because the way Indians buy gold has changed. Physical jewellery is still the emotional default, especially for weddings and gifting. But investors now split allocations across a gold ETF, digital gold, gold SIP products, coins, and occasionally a gold bar price deal from a trusted bank or dealer. Each route has a different cost structure. Physical gold carries storage concerns and making charges if it is jewellery. ETFs are liquid and track the underlying price more efficiently. Digital gold is convenient in small amounts, though investors should pay attention to platform terms and redemption spreads.
Sovereign Gold Bond deserves a separate mention. SGBs are very different from holding physical gold. They pay 2.5% annual interest on the issue price, have a lock-in for early redemption through the RBI route, and they trade on exchanges at market value. Sometimes they even trade below the value of equivalent gold, which makes them interesting for patient investors. The trade-off is liquidity and price discovery on the secondary market can be uneven, especially outside active series.
The chart also helps with timing discipline. If you are building exposure over six or twelve months, a single-day spike should not force your hand. Better to stagger entries. That works whether you are buying one gram a month, setting up a gold SIP, or adding to a family reserve before the wedding season. Nobody catches the exact bottom consistently. Experienced buyers know that. What they do instead is avoid panic buying during headlines and use market structure sensibly.
There is also the rupee angle. Gold in India does not depend only on international strength. Even when global prices pause, INR weakness can keep domestic rates elevated. That is one reason gold has remained relevant in Indian portfolios: it acts as a hedge not just against inflation or crisis, but also against currency erosion over longer periods. You can see that story better on a chart than in any advertisement.
If your goal is ornaments, monitor the gold price chart but negotiate the full bill. If your goal is investment, compare physical gold with a gold ETF or SGB before committing. Different tools, different outcomes. The chart is where the decision starts.
Gold Price Chart FAQs for Indian Buyers and Investors
The gold price chart shows the latest 24K gold rate in India at ₹15,032.14 per gram as of June 13, 2026, along with the recent 10-day movement. It helps you see whether the market is trending up, flat, or pulling back.
Based on today’s 24K spot rate, 22K gold works out to ₹13,779.46 per gram and 18K gold to ₹11,274.11 per gram. Jewellers may quote slightly different retail rates after adding making charges and local premiums.
At today’s live rate, 10 grams of 24K gold is ₹150,321.40. For 100 grams, the value is ₹1,503,214.00.
MCX gold tracks exchange-traded futures and closely reflects the underlying spot market. A jeweller’s quote usually includes wastage, making charges, GST, and sometimes a local premium. That is why the chart rate and the showroom bill are never exactly the same.
Yes, Indian gold pricing broadly follows the global gold spot price and the LBMA PM fix, then converts it into rupees through the USD/INR exchange rate. Import duty and domestic taxes influence the final landed cost in India.
A gold price chart is useful for spotting short-term momentum, comparing today’s rate with the last week or month, and planning entries for physical gold, a gold ETF, digital gold, or Sovereign Gold Bond offers. It is a decision tool, not a guarantee of future price direction.
Gold Price by City
View city-specific Gold rates across India.