Indians hold over 25,000 tonnes of gold, most of it sitting idle in family lockers or adorned as jewellery. For generations, buying gold meant visiting a trusted family jeweller, checking for purity marks, and worrying about safe storage. But a shift is underway.
In 2024 alone, millions of Indians purchased gold not from a showroom, but through a few taps on their smartphones, often for amounts as small as ₹10. This is the era of digital gold.
It promises the safety of the yellow metal with the speed of the stock market. But does it truly replace the security of physical gold, or is it just a convenient trap for the uninformed investor?
What is Digital Gold?
Digital gold is a method of investing in physical gold without the immediate hassle of holding the metal yourself. When you buy digital gold on a platform like Google Pay, Paytm, or PhonePe, a trading company purchases an equivalent amount of physical gold in your name.
They store this gold in secure, insured vaults. You do not see the metal, but you own it. The balance reflects in your digital wallet, and you can sell it instantly at live market rates.
Three primary entities provide the gold infrastructure in India: MMTC – PAMP, SafeGold, and Augmont.
The Mechanics: How It Works
The process completely democratizes gold ownership.
- Purchase: You enter an amount (in rupees or grams) on your chosen app. The minimum can be as low as ₹1.
- Price: You pay the live market price for 24K (99.9% pure) gold. This price includes a 3% GST and a spread (the difference between buying and selling price).
- Storage: The provider stores your gold in a vault. Most offer free storage for a specific period (usually 2 to 5 years).
- Exit: You can sell the gold back to the platform at current sell rates, or request physical delivery (coins/bars) to your doorstep.
Digital vs. Physical Gold
- Purity and Trust
Physical gold purchases often suffer from trust deficits. Unless you buy hallmarked jewellery from reputed brands, purity can vary. Digital gold eliminates this doubt. Providers like MMTC-PAMP guarantee 24K, 99.9% purity. You get exactly what you pay for, with no risk of fraud at the point of sale. - Liquidity and Convenience
Selling physical gold is tedious. Jewellers often deduct 10% to 20% as “waste” or “making charges” if you try to sell back a piece you bought elsewhere. Digital gold offers 100% liquidity. You can sell your holdings at 2:00 AM on a Sunday and receive the money in your bank account instantly. - Storage and Safety
Physical gold demands vigilance. You either pay for a bank locker or risk keeping it at home. Digital gold sits in a vault insured by the provider. However, this safety depends entirely on the provider’s integrity (more on this in the risk section). - Making Charges
When you buy jewellery, you pay making charges that range from 8% to 25%. This cost is unrecoverable. Digital gold carries no making charges at the time of purchase, meaning more of your money goes into the asset itself.
The Regulatory Area
This is the most critical section for any serious investor.
Digital gold is not a regulated product.
Unlike the stock market (regulated by SEBI) or the banking sector (regulated by RBI), the digital gold ecosystem operates in a grey zone.
SEBI has explicitly issued warnings stating that digital gold does not fall under its jurisdiction.
If a digital gold provider goes bankrupt or shuts down operations, you do not have the same grievance redressal mechanisms available to a mutual fund or stock investor.
Hidden Charges
Digital gold is convenient, but it is not free.
- The Spread: The buy price and sell price of digital gold are never the same. The buy price is typically 3% to 6% higher than the sell price. If you buy ₹100 worth of gold and sell it immediately, you might only get ₹94 back. You need gold prices to rise by at least 5-6% just to break even.
- Delivery Charges: If you choose to convert your digital balance into physical coins, you must pay making charges and delivery fees.
Taxation
The Income Tax Department treats digital gold exactly like physical gold.
- GST: You pay 3% GST on the purchase value.
- Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG): If you sell within 24 months (holding period generally align with physical assets), the profit is added to your income and taxed at your applicable slab rate.
- Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG): If held for longer, gains are taxed at 12.5% (as per recent 2024 budget updates for gold assets).
There is no tax arbitrage here.
Whether you hold a bar in your hand or a balance in your app, the tax impact remains identical.
Who Should Buy
Digital gold serves a specific purpose. It is excellent for:
- Young Earners: Those who want to save small amounts (e.g., ₹500/month) in gold.
- Gifting: Sending gold instantly to friends or family.
- Short-term Trading: Investors who want to capture a quick price spike without visiting a market.
It is not suitable for large, serious investments.
For substantial wealth creation, Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) remain superior due to the 2.5% annual interest and tax-free maturity, or Gold ETFs for their regulatory safety and lower spreads.
Insights
The digitization of gold is a fantastic innovation for accessibility, but it should not be your primary investment. Use it to accumulate gold in small fractions for future conversion into jewellery. But if you seek serious returns and absolute safety for your life savings, stick to regulated avenues like SGBs or ETFs. Convenience is valuable, but in the world of finance, regulation is priceless.
This video provides a crucial breakdown of the SEBI warning regarding digital gold, highlighting why the lack of regulation matters for your money.

