India · Bangalore · 15 Jul 2026
Computed for Bangalore
| Purity | 8 g | 10 g | 100 g |
|---|---|---|---|
24K999 fine | ₹1,13,528.17 | ₹1,41,910.21 | ₹14,19,102.12 |
22K916 hallmark | ₹1,04,067.87 | ₹1,30,084.83 | ₹13,00,848.34 |
18K750 hallmark | ₹85,146.13 | ₹1,06,432.66 | ₹10,64,326.59 |
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Difference is vs. previous trading day
| Date | 24K | 22K |
|---|---|---|
15 Jul 2026 Wednesday | ₹14,191.02(+3.00) | ₹13,008.48(+2.75) |
14 Jul 2026 Tuesday | ₹14,188.02(-31.00) | ₹13,005.73(-28.42) |
13 Jul 2026 Monday | ₹14,219.02(-118.00) | ₹13,034.15(-108.16) |
12 Jul 2026 Sunday | ₹14,337.02(-0.01) | ₹13,142.31(-0.01) |
11 Jul 2026 Saturday | ₹14,337.03(+0.00) | ₹13,142.32(+0.00) |
10 Jul 2026 Friday | ₹14,337.02(-29.00) | ₹13,142.32(-26.58) |
9 Jul 2026 Thursday | ₹14,366.02(+131.01) | ₹13,168.90(+120.09) |
24K · INR per gram · Bangalore · always shows latest, independent of selected date
Same IBJA base · local premium applied
The gold rate in Bangalore on 15 Jul 2026 stands at ₹14,191.02 per gram for 24K (999 fine), ₹13,008.48 per gram for 22K (916 hallmark — the standard for Indian jewellery), and ₹10,643.27 per gram for 18K (750 hallmark). The rate is derived from the IBJA national fix and adjusted for Bangalore’s local premium of 0.00%.
Like all Indian cities, Bangalore retailers use the IBJA reference twice a day (12:00 and 17:00 IST) as the base for their displayed rate. The small per-city spread reflects local transport, financing and dealer margins — it rarely exceeds 1% of the national base.
Bengaluru is one of South India's largest gold markets and trades very close to the national base (0% premium here). As across much of the South, buyers frequently quote and purchase by the sovereign (pavan) — 8 grams of 22K — rather than by the gram.
Commercial Street is Bengaluru's most famous jewellery and shopping stretch, while the older trade clusters around Chickpet and the showrooms of Jayanagar serve traditional buyers.
Indian gold rates are anchored to the international spot price quoted in USD on the London Bullion Market and COMEX. That base is converted to INR using the daily exchange rate, with import duty (currently 6%) and GST (3%) layered on top. The Indian Bullion and Jewellers Association publishes a domestic fix twice each business day that most retail jewellers and banks use as their reference.
The headline drivers are the dollar index, real US interest rates, central-bank gold buying (notably China and India), and physical demand around the Diwali, wedding and Chinese New Year seasons. Geopolitical events tend to add a short-lived safe-haven premium that fades within days.
24K (999 fine) is pure gold — used for coins, bars and digital gold. It preserves the full metal value at the IBJA rate but is too soft for daily-wear jewellery.
22K (916 hallmark) is 91.6% gold alloyed for hardness. It is the Indian jewellery standard, used in almost all hallmarked rings, chains and bangles.
18K (750 hallmark) is 75% gold and is preferred for diamond and gemstone settings because it holds prongs more securely. It is the standard for branded designer jewellery.
Wherever in Bangalore you buy, the same checks apply: verify the BIS hallmark and HUID code on the piece, compare the quoted wastage and making against typical charges by ornament, and if you are trading in old jewellery, know how old-gold exchange is valued before you negotiate. Also tracking silver? See the silver rate in Bangalore.
Today's 24K gold rate in Bangalore is ₹14,191.02 per gram and 22K is ₹13,008.48 per gram.
1 gram of 22K gold in Bangalore costs ₹13,008.48 today. 22K (the 916 hallmark) is the purity virtually all Indian jewellery is sold at, and per gram is the unit every jeweller quotes. A jewellery bill adds wastage, making charges and GST on top of this metal rate.
10 grams of 22K gold is worth ₹1,30,084.83 today at the Bangalore rate of ₹13,008.48 per gram. That is the metal value only — a finished 10 g ornament will be billed higher once wastage, making charges and GST are added. The jewellery bill calculator on this page itemises the full amount.
916 is the BIS fineness mark for 22-karat gold: 91.6% pure gold, with the rest copper or silver added for hardness. "916 gold rate" and "22K gold rate" are the same number. Today's 916 gold rate in Bangalore is ₹13,008.48 per gram — the same as the 22K rate above.
Divide the karat by 24 and multiply by the 24K rate: karat ÷ 24 × 24K price per gram. For example, with today's 24K rate of ₹14,191.02, the 22K rate works out to roughly 22 ÷ 24 × ₹14,191.02 ≈ ₹13,008.44 per gram (retail 22K uses the slightly different 0.916 fineness ratio).
A tola is a traditional Indian unit equal to 11.6638 grams. At today's 24K rate, one tola costs about ₹1,65,521.23. The related South Indian unit, the sovereign (pavan), is 8 grams of 22K gold. The price table above shows today's rate per gram, tola, sovereign and ounce.
24K is 99.9% pure gold (also called 999 fine) and is used for coins and bars. 22K is 91.6% pure (the 916 hallmark) and is the standard for Indian jewellery because pure 24K is too soft to hold a setting. 18K is 75% pure (750 hallmark) and is preferred for diamond and gemstone jewellery for its added strength.
Indian gold rates move with the international spot price (set in USD on the London and COMEX markets), the USD-to-INR exchange rate, import duty, GST, and daily demand from jewellers and bullion banks. The Indian Bullion and Jewellers Association (IBJA) publishes a fix twice each business day that most domestic retailers use as a reference.
The BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards) hallmark is a six-digit alphanumeric code stamped on jewellery to certify its purity. A 916 stamp confirms 22K, 750 confirms 18K, and 999 confirms 24K. Since April 2023, BIS hallmarking is mandatory for gold jewellery sold in India.
No. Each city applies a small local premium on top of the IBJA reference price to cover transport, financing, and dealer margins. Chennai is historically the highest by a small margin; Mumbai, Bangalore and Hyderabad are typically closest to the national base.
No. The rate on this page is the metal value per gram only. Jewellery purchases also attract wastage (typically 5–12%), making charges (8–25%) and GST (3% on gold value, 5% on making). Use the bill verification calculator to itemise a complete jeweller's bill.
For pure investment, 24K coins or bars (or digital gold) preserve the full metal value and are easier to liquidate at the IBJA rate. 22K is meant for jewellery; resale value usually deducts wastage and making charges, so it is a less efficient investment vehicle.
Look for the three-part BIS hallmark stamped on the piece: the BIS triangle logo, the fineness number (916 for 22K, 750 for 18K, 999 for 24K), and the six-digit alphanumeric HUID code. You can verify the HUID against the jeweller's record in the official BIS Care mobile app. For unhallmarked pieces, any BIS-recognised assaying centre can test purity with an XRF (karat meter) scan.
Yes. 22K is alloyed with copper or silver precisely so it is hard enough for everyday wear — it is the standard for Indian daily-wear chains, rings and bangles. Pure 24K is too soft and dents or bends easily, while 18K is harder still and suits stone-set pieces that take more knocks.
You will be paid for the metal value only — the wastage, making charges and GST you paid at purchase are not recoverable. Most buyers also deduct roughly 3–10% for melting and purity testing, and hallmarked pieces fetch closer to the published rate than unhallmarked ones. Exchanging old jewellery for new at the same jeweller usually gives a better effective rate than an outright sale.
No one can reliably predict gold prices, and this site publishes data, not forecasts. Prices respond to the US dollar, real interest rates, central-bank buying, the USD–INR exchange rate and Indian seasonal demand. Use the long-range chart on this page to study the historical trend yourself, and treat any specific price prediction you read online with scepticism.
A sovereign — also called pavan — is 8 grams of 22K gold and is the unit most South Indian buyers, including in Bengaluru, use to price chains, bangles and wedding sets. The per-gram and per-sovereign figures on this page are derived from the same IBJA rate.
Commercial Street is the best-known destination, with Chickpet and Jayanagar serving more traditional buyers. Look for the BIS hallmark and HUID before paying, and use the bill calculator to check wastage and making charges.