Gold ETF vs Gold Fund vs SGB — Which is the Best Way to Own Gold in India?

Three instruments track the price of gold in India. They look similar but behave very differently on tax, liquidity, income, and risk. Choosing the wrong…

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Atmabhan Pandit (Shrikant Bhosale)
Founder, TWIST POOL Labs  ·  TAC Research  ·  NanoCERN Unit, Pune
First-principles finance educator  ·  10+ years in Indian capital markets
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Three instruments track the price of gold in India. They look similar but behave very differently on tax, liquidity, income, and risk. Choosing the wrong one costs real money.…

Three instruments track the price of gold in India. They look similar but behave very differently on tax, liquidity, income, and risk. Choosing the wrong one costs real money.


1. The Three Instruments

Gold ETF (Exchange Traded Fund)

  • Tracks the price of 99.5% purity gold
  • Traded on How BSE and NSE Work/How BSE and NSE Work like a stock; 1 unit = approximately 1 gram of gold
  • Backed by physical gold held by the custodian
  • Annual expense ratio: 0.4–0.8%
  • Can be bought as fractional units at some brokers
  • Minimum: Price of 1 unit (~₹7,500)

Gold Mutual Fund (Fund of Funds)

  • Invests in a Gold ETF (it’s a “fund of funds”)
  • Can be purchased as SIP from mutual fund platforms without demat account
  • Expense ratio: 0.1% + underlying ETF cost = ~0.5–1%
  • Minimum SIP: ₹500
  • Good for systematic gold accumulation without a demat account

Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB)

  • Government security denominated in grams of gold
  • Issued by RBI & Interest Rates Explained; backed by Government of India
  • Earns 2.5% annual interest (cash payment)
  • Capital gain at maturity (8 years): Tax-free
  • Maximum: 4 kg per individual per year (per FY)

2. Return Comparison Over 8 Years

Assume gold price doubles (8% CAGR). Invest ₹1 lakh (approximately 13.3 grams at ₹7,500/gram).

Instrument Value at 8 Years Interest Income Tax on Gain Net Return
Gold ETF ₹2,00,000 None 12.5% LTCG on ₹1L gain = ₹12,500 ₹1,87,500
Gold Fund ₹1,98,000 (slightly lower due to extra expense) None Slab rate (debt MF) at 30% on ₹98,000 = ₹29,400 ₹1,68,600
SGB ₹2,00,000 ₹20,000 total (taxable) 0% on capital gain ₹2,00,000 + ₹20,000 (pre-tax interest)

SGB wins on tax efficiency by a significant margin. The gold fund (debt MF tax treatment post-April 2023) is the most tax-inefficient for 30% bracket investors.


3. The Practical Comparison

Feature Gold ETF Gold Fund SGB
Demat required Yes No No (RBI/exchange)
SIP possible Via broker Yes No (lump sum at issuance)
Liquidity Instant (exchange) T+3 redemption Exchange or year 5 exit
Income None None 2.5%/year
Capital gain tax 12.5% LTCG Slab (all gains) 0% on maturity
Maximum limit No limit No limit 4 kg/year
Sovereign guarantee No No Yes
Best for Regular accumulation with demat No demat, SIP accumulation Long-term 8-year hold

4. The Decision Framework

If you want to hold gold for 8 years and have a demat account: Buy SGBs in every RBI issuance. Tax-free capital gain + 2.5% interest = best total return.

If you want SIP accumulation monthly without demat: Gold Fund SIP. Accept the higher tax in exchange for convenience and forced discipline.

If you want tactical trading exposure to gold prices: Gold ETF on NSE. Instant in/out, transparent pricing, reasonable expense ratio.

If you’re a 30% bracket investor holding less than 8 years: Gold ETF is better than Gold Fund (ETF pays 12.5% LTCG vs fund paying 30% slab on all gains).


The Smart Friend’s Verdict

For most Indian investors with a long-term gold allocation target (5–10% of portfolio), the optimal strategy is:

  1. Primary allocation: SGBs at every RBI issuance → 8-year hold for tax-free capital gain
  2. Secondary/overflow: Gold ETF for any allocation that can’t wait for the next SGB issuance

Avoid Gold Funds for large amounts if you’re in the 20–30% tax bracket — the slab-rate taxation of all gains (not just LTCG) significantly erodes returns vs SGBs or ETFs.

Back to Sovereign Gold Bonds for the complete SGB guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Gold ETF and why does it matter for traders?

See the full explanation in the section above.

What is Gold Mutual Fund and why does it matter for traders?

See the full explanation in the section above.

What is Sovereign Gold Bond and why does it matter for traders?

See the full explanation in the section above.

What is Three Instruments and why does it matter for Indian investors?

See the full explanation in the section above.

What is Return Comparison Over 8 Years and why does it matter for Indian investors?

Assume gold price doubles (8% CAGR). Invest ₹1 lakh (approximately 13.3 grams at ₹7,500/gram).

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