The 20-Gram Problem
Every travel season, thousands of NRIs land at Indian airports with gold tucked into their carry-ons, and a surprising number of them walk out poorer, fined, or with their jewellery confiscated, simply because they didn’t know exactly where the line was.
Here’s the number that catches people off guard: bring back gold bars or coins worth a few lakh rupees from Dubai today, and customs duty alone can eat into a meaningful chunk of that value before you’ve even left the airport. Jewellery gets you a small duty-free cushion. Bars and coins don’t get you any.
So before your next trip home, here’s exactly what the law allows and why a growing number of NRIs are choosing to skip the customs counter altogether.
The Ground Truth: What You Can Actually Carry
Quick definitions first (so you don’t have to leave this page to look anything up):
- Baggage Rules: The customs framework governing what you can bring into India as personal luggage, duty-free or otherwise. Updated for 2026.
- Customs duty: A tax charged on goods brought into the country above your duty-free allowance.
- Declaration (Red Channel): The airport process for formally telling customs about dutiable goods you’re carrying, instead of walking through the duty-free Green Channel.
Duty-Free Jewellery Allowance
| Traveller | Duty-Free Limit | Eligibility |
| Women NRIs | Up to 40 grams of gold jewellery | Stayed abroad continuously for 6+ months |
| Men NRIs | Up to 20 grams of gold jewellery | Stayed abroad continuously for 6+ months |
As of the Budget 2026 baggage rule revision (effective 2 Feb 2026), this allowance is now based on weight, not value, a meaningful simplification since it removes the old confusion around fluctuating gold prices. It applies only to wearable jewellery (rings, bangles, necklaces, and studded pieces included). Coins, bars, and biscuits are excluded entirely; they attract duty from the very first gram.
Extended Allowance For Stays Abroad Over 1 Year
| Item | Limit | Notes |
| Gold (jewellery, bars, coins combined) | Up to 1 kg total | Declaration required at arrival |
| Silver | Up to 10 kg total | Declaration required at arrival |
| Customs duty on the excess | Varies commonly cited between 6% and 15%, depending on the form of gold and the current notification | Rates have shifted under active 2026 reforms; confirm the exact current rate at cbic.gov.in before you travel |
| Declaration proof | Passport, visa, boarding passes showing duration of stay abroad | Required at the Red Channel |
Country Context
| Region | What to Know |
| USA & Europe | Duty-free limits apply the same way; jewellery for personal use is permitted |
| Southeast Asia (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand) | A popular gold-shopping circuit: anything beyond your allowance must still be declared |
| GCC (Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Qatar) | Gold is cheaper to buy, but bullion imports attract full duty regardless of the lower purchase price |
What’s Actually at Risk
- High duty costs: Bringing in gold bars or coins beyond your allowance means paying duty from the first gram; for larger amounts, that can add up to a serious chunk of the gold’s value.
- Seizure & penalties: Undeclared gold beyond your limit can be confiscated outright, with fines on top, under the Customs Act, 1962.
- Travel hassles: Carrying meaningful quantities of physical gold through airports, security lines, and connecting flights is, plainly, a theft and loss risk you’re carrying personally.
The Step-by-Step Way to Avoid All of This
If you’re still carrying physical gold this trip:
- Confirm your eligibility window: 6+ months abroad for the basic jewellery allowance, 1+ year for the extended baggage allowance.
- Weigh your jewellery before you pack, not just check its value, since the 2026 rules are weight-based.
- Keep proof of stay abroad (passport stamps, visa, boarding passes) accessible, not buried in checked baggage.
- If you’re over the limit, walk through the Red Channel and declare voluntarily. It’s always safer than hoping it goes unnoticed.
- Ask about an export certificate if you travel with the same jewellery repeatedly it can save you from repeated declarations.
If you’d rather skip the airport part of this story entirely:

- Use your Indian resident bank account to invest in gold digitally through a platform like Gfolio: no flight, no suitcase, and no customs line involved.
- Complete KYC (Know Your Customer), the identity verification step using your Aadhaar and PAN, to activate your account securely and in line with regulation.
- Buy digital gold in whatever amount suits you, whenever you want. There’s no minimum stay-abroad clock running here.
- Redeem domestically: When you actually need physical gold for a wedding, a gift, or a ceremony, redeem your holdings as physical gold within India, with zero customs duty involved because nothing crossed a border.
- Watch this space: with FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act—India’s framework governing cross-border money movement) registration and cross-border payment gateways in progress, Gfolio is working toward enabling NRE/NRO transactions, so NRIs can invest directly from abroad without routing through an Indian resident account at all.
The Screenshot-Worthy Comparison
| Physical Gold | Digital Gold (Gfolio) | |
| Customs duty | Yes, beyond your allowance | None — never crosses a border |
| Theft/loss risk | Real, while traveling | None |
| Verification | Manual declaration, proof of stay | Aadhaar + PAN KYC |
| Redemption | Whatever you physically carried | Physical gold, redeemable in India, on your schedule |
| Investable from abroad today | N/A (it’s physical) | Via Indian resident account |
| Investable from abroad in future | N/A | Planned via FEMA-enabled NRE/NRO |
The Takeaway
Every gram of jewellery in your suitcase is a small bet against customs. Every gram of digital gold in your account is simply yours already in India, waiting for the moment you actually need it.
Physical gold import rules aren’t going away, and for small amounts of jewellery, they’re genuinely manageable if you know the limits going in. But for anything beyond that bars, coins, or larger gifting amounts digital gold removes the duty risk, the seizure risk, and the travel hassle in one move while keeping your gold real, redeemable, and compliant.
Thinking about your next gold purchase before a trip home? Explore how Gfolio lets you invest from your Indian account today and stay ready for direct NRI access as it rolls out.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or customs advice. Duty-free limits and customs duty rates are subject to ongoing regulatory changes under Budget 2026 . Verify current rates with CBIC or a qualified customs/tax professional before traveling.
Sources
- Rtulsian — How Much Gold Can an NRI Bring to India in 2026?
- IndianEagle — Customs Rules to Carry Gold Jewelry to India in 2026: A Guide for NRIs
- IndianEagle — Indian Customs Duty Drops to Flat 10% under Baggage Rules 2026
- India Observers — India Customs Baggage Rules 2026: New Duty-Free & Gold Limits
- Central Board of Indirect Taxes & Customs (CBIC) — Baggage Rules, 2026


