Gold Trade 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

Gold Trade Price Trend — 10-Day Chart

Gold Trade Price in India Today

Gold trade in India today is anchored to the live 24K spot rate, and that number sits at ₹15,032.14 per gram on June 13, 2026. Traders, jewellers, and retail buyers all end up circling the same reference point, even if the final bill looks different once making charges and GST enter the picture.

Gold trade price in India per gram with live 24K, 22K and 18K rates
Gold price in India — June 13, 2026

The market does not move on sentiment alone. LBMA PM fix, MCX gold futures, and the USD/INR rate all feed into the domestic trade price, while import duty and local premiums do the rest. That is why the number can change even when a shopkeeper in your city is still adjusting the board outside.

  • 24K gold trade rate, 1 gram: ₹15,032.14
  • 22K gold trade rate, 1 gram: ₹13,779.46
  • 18K gold trade rate, 1 gram: ₹11,274.11
  • 10 grams, 24K: ₹150,321.40
  • 100 grams, 24K: ₹1,503,214.00
  • 1 kilogram, 24K: ₹15,032,140.00

If you are tracking gold trade for buying or trading, keep one thing straight: the pure spot rate is only the starting line. The final number in India reflects the market in London, the futures screen in Mumbai, and the practical costs that sit on top of both.

Gold Trade Price 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%).

Gold Trade Prices 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 Gold Trade Prices Are Built in the Indian Market

People often imagine gold trade prices are pulled from a single screen. They are not. The domestic rate is built from international bullion pricing, converted from USD to INR, and then adjusted for the realities of the Indian market. That means one bad day for the rupee can push the local rate up even if global gold is flat.

Gold trade factors in India including MCX, LBMA and BIS hallmark standards
Gold trade drivers in India — MCX, LBMA and hallmarking standards

BIS hallmark, purity, and why the bill looks higher

For jewellery buyers, BIS hallmarking matters more than most people think. A 916 stamp means 22K gold, while 999 refers to nearly pure 24K gold. The trade rate may look clean, but once you add gold jewellery making charges, wastage in some designs, and GST, the shop bill no longer resembles the spot chart on a mobile screen.

Festive demand also shows up in the trade. Diwali, Akshaya Tritiya, and the wedding season can lift local buying fast, especially in tier-1 and tier-2 cities. On top of that, central bank gold buying and geopolitical tension can keep global demand sticky. Gold does not need a loud headline to move; sometimes a weak rupee and a firm crude oil market are enough.

That is the practical truth behind gold trade. The pure number is global, but the price you pay or quote in India is local, regulated, and full of small frictions that actually matter.

Gold Trade History — Last 10 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

Gold Trade as an Investment, Not Just a Daily Rate

Most retail buyers start by checking today’s rate. Better investors look at the pattern behind it. Gold trade is useful because gold still behaves like a hedge when equity markets wobble, the rupee weakens, or inflation refuses to settle down. It is not magic. It is just one of the few assets people trust across cycles.

For smaller amounts, digital gold and gold SIPs make sense if you want a simple entry point. Gold ETF units can be cleaner for market-linked exposure because they trade on exchanges and avoid storage headaches. Sovereign Gold Bond is different again: it gives you gold-linked returns and 2.5% annual interest, though it comes with a lock-in and a schedule that is not as flexible as buying physical gold on your own terms.

If you are comparing gold trade today with a 52-week range, do not obsess over the last tick. The better question is whether the move reflects a one-day rupee shock or a broader shift in demand. India’s wedding and festival demand tends to leave a mark, but so does the steady drift in global money, central bank purchases, and risk appetite. That mix is why gold keeps its place on so many balance sheets, from a family locker to a trading book.

Gold Trade FAQs

Gold trade usually means buying and selling gold based on the live spot price, MCX futures, or jewellery market rates. On June 13, 2026, the 24K reference price is ₹15,032.14 per gram before making charges and GST.

The trade price tracks the pure 24K market rate. Jewellery bills add making charges, wastage in some cases, and GST. That is why a 22K ornament rarely matches the raw spot number you see on a price screen.

22K gold trade value today works out to ₹13,779.46 per gram, based on the 24K spot price of ₹15,032.14. It is the practical benchmark for most Indian jewellery purchases.

MCX gold futures usually move close to the domestic trade rate, but they are not identical every minute. Futures reflect market expectations, while the retail trade price also absorbs import duty, USD/INR moves, and local premiums.

Digital gold is easier for small-ticket buying, while physical gold gives you coins, bars, or jewellery you can hold. Gold ETF and Sovereign Gold Bond are different again: they avoid storage, and SGBs also carry 2.5% annual interest with a lock-in.