Investors in Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) are celebrating as several tranches issued by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) have recently matured or become eligible for early redemption this October. These redemptions, including premature ones, have given bumper returns with up to 325%. However, while these gains look impressive, many investors remain unaware of how these bonds are taxed. In this write-up, we will understand how the taxation system works with respect to Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs).
SGBs’ October redemptions bring rich rewards
The RBI has announced redemption prices for multiple SGB series this month, each delivering extraordinary returns.
SGB 2017-18 Series IV (issued October 23, 2017): These series bonds were recently opened for redemption after completing 8 years. The bond was originally issued at Rs 2,987 per gram and redeemed at Rs 12,704 per gram, returning investors an absolute return of 325% in just 8 years. Additionally, investors earned an annual interest of 2.5%.
SGB 2017–18 Series V (issued October 30, 2017): This tranche completed its 8-year maturity on October 30, 2025. Investors who held it to maturity earned a redemption price of Rs 11,992 per gram, compared to the issue price of Rs 2,971, resulting in a gain of over 303%.
SGB 2018–19 Series II (issued October 15, 2018): This tranche was also allowed for early redemption this month, rewarding investors with around 304% return.
SGB 2019–20 Series VI (issued October 30, 2019): This series became eligible for premature redemption after five years on the same date this month. The RBI fixed the redemption price again at Rs 11,992 per gram, against the issue price of around Rs 3,785, yielding returns of nearly 217%.
SGB 2020–21 Series I (issued October 28, 2020): Eligible for early redemption on October 28, 2025, investors received Rs 12,198 per gram compared with Rs 4,589 issue price — giving 166% gains over five years.
These numbers reflect a massive surge in gold prices, especially in the last 2 to 3 years. In the last 5 years, gold (24-karat) prices have jumped by over 149%. The 2-year and 3-year returns in gold have been even better, with 138% and 115% respectively.
How SGBs work
Sovereign Gold Bonds are government securities issued by the RBI, backed by gold prices published by the India Bullion and Jewellers Association (IBJA). Investors buy them in grams of gold. The best advantage of SGB investing is that you do not have to worry about its physical storage as it comes in digital form. SGBs earn a fixed 2.5% annual interest on the initial investment value.
Each bond has an 8-year maturity, though investors can choose premature redemption after five years on interest-payment dates. Redemption prices are calculated based on the average closing gold price over the previous three business days.
Taxation: Where most investors slip
While the return numbers are headline-grabbing, the tax rules for SGBs depend on how you exit — and this is where many investors miss the fine print.
If you hold the bond till maturity (8 years) and redeem it directly with the RBI, your capital gains are completely tax-free. You don’t pay any tax on the profit from gold price appreciation.
If you redeem early through RBI (after 5 years), your capital gains remain tax-free. However, if you sell the bond on the stock exchange before redemption, tax applies. If sold within 12 months, the gain is short-term and taxed as per your income slab.
If sold after 12 months, it is long-term, and taxed at 12.5% without indexation (as per the new capital gains regime introduced in Budget 2024).
The 2.5% annual interest earned on SGBs is always taxable as “Income from Other Sources”, and must be reported while filing your income tax return. No TDS is deducted by the issuing authority, but the investor must pay the tax due.
Example: How the tax works
Let’s say an investor bought one gram of SGB 2017–18 Series V for Rs 2,971 and held it till maturity in October 2025. The redemption price was Rs 11,992 — a gain of Rs 9,021. Since the investor redeemed it with RBI on maturity, no capital gains tax applies.
The only taxable component is the interest earned — Rs 74.28 per year (2.5% of Rs 2,971) — which is added to the investor’s income annually.
However, if the same investor had sold the bond on the stock exchange in 2024, the capital gain of Rs 9,000 would have been taxed at 12.5% (or as per applicable law then).
Why it matters now
In October 2025, investors from multiple SGB series are receiving redemption proceeds credited directly to their bank accounts. Many are unaware that interest income is taxable and that only redemption via RBI qualifies for capital gains exemption.
Financial planners suggest that investors should:
Check the issue year and eligibility date for their SGB tranche.
Redeem through the RBI route (not via exchange) to get the tax exemption.
Keep track of annual interest payments for tax filing.
Summing up…
SGBs have proven to be a goldmine for patient investors, combining high returns with safety and tax efficiency.
But the tax advantage applies only if you redeem through RBI — not if you sell early on the market. And the annual interest is still taxable. In short, SGBs are glittering, but the taxman’s share still shines through.

 
 