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Gold Rate Today, 17 June 2026: 24K at ₹1,52,472/10g, Silver Near ₹2.65 Lakh
If you checked the gold rate today on the morning of 17 June 2026, the numbers are sitting near record territory again. Indicative national prices put 24K gold at about ₹1,52,472 per 10 grams and 22K at roughly ₹1,39,766 per 10 grams, while silver is hovering close to ₹2,65,000 per kilogram. Those are benchmark figures — what you actually pay at the counter depends on your city, your jeweller and the taxes layered on top.
This is a fast-moving market, so treat any single quote as a snapshot rather than a fixed price. Below is where rates stand, what is pushing them, and a level-headed take on whether today is a sensible day to buy.
Gold rate today: 24K and 22K at a glance
The headline benchmark for pure investment-grade metal is 24-karat (99.9%) gold near ₹1,52,472 per 10g. That is the grade used for coins, bars and most digital gold. For jewellery, the relevant number is 22-karat (91.6%) gold at around ₹1,39,766 per 10g, because ornaments need the extra hardness that comes from alloying.
A quick way to read the two: the gap between 24K and 22K is mostly the purity difference, not a discount. If you are buying a chain or bangle, you are paying the 22K rate for the gold content, plus everything that comes after.
For smaller budgets, divide by ten. At today's level, one gram of 24K works out to roughly ₹15,247, and a single gram of 22K to about ₹13,977 — before tax and making charges.
Silver near ₹2.65 lakh a kilo
Silver has been the more dramatic story of the past year. After a blistering rally that took it to record highs and then a sharp correction, the white metal is now trading around ₹2,65,000 per kg. That is still historically elevated, but well below its earlier peak.
Silver behaves like two metals in one. It is a precious metal that tracks gold, and an industrial metal tied to solar panels, electronics and electric vehicles. That dual demand makes it swing harder than gold in both directions, which is exactly why it rewarded buyers on the way up and punished latecomers on the way down.
If you are drawn to silver for the industrial growth story, keep the position modest and be ready for the volatility that comes with it.
What is moving precious metals and the markets
A few forces are keeping gold firm and silver jumpy right now.
- A soft rupee and dollar. With USD/INR at about ₹94.31, a weaker rupee makes imported gold costlier in local terms, supporting domestic prices even when global rates pause.
- Fed rate-cut expectations. Markets are leaning toward further US interest-rate cuts, which tends to weaken the dollar and lift gold, since the metal pays no interest and becomes relatively more attractive when yields fall.
- Central bank buying. Reserve banks around the world have been steady gold accumulators, putting a floor under prices.
- Geopolitics and safe-haven demand. Ongoing global tensions keep a risk premium baked into bullion.
The broader market mood today is mixed but steady. The Sensex is around 76,264 and the Nifty 50 near 23,854, while Bitcoin sits at roughly ₹62,33,107. When equities wobble, some money rotates into gold; when they rally hard, gold can drift. For now, both equities and metals are holding firm at the same time, which is not unusual late in a rate-cut cycle.
City rates vary, and the quote is never the final bill
Here is the part shoppers miss most often. The rates quoted above exclude GST and making charges, and they differ from city to city.
Gold and silver prices in Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Hyderabad and Bengaluru rarely match to the rupee. Local taxes, transport costs, jewellers' association rates and regional demand all nudge the number. As a rough pattern, southern hubs like Chennai and Hyderabad often quote a touch higher than Mumbai or Delhi, though the gaps are usually small.
Then come the add-ons that change your bill meaningfully:
- GST of 3% on the value of the gold or silver.
- Making charges, which can range from a modest few percent on plain coins and bars to 20% or more on detailed, handcrafted jewellery.
- Hallmarking and, in some cases, small handling fees.
So a piece quoted at the 22K rate can land 10–25% higher once everything is added. Always ask for a clear break-up of metal value, making charges and GST before you pay.
Is it a good time to buy?
The honest answer: it depends on why you are buying, not on whether today is a local high or low.
Reasons buyers are still comfortable — central bank demand is structural, the dollar is soft, and rate cuts historically favour gold. Indian households also buy for weddings and festivals regardless of the chart, and gold has done its classic job of protecting purchasing power.
Reasons to be cautious — prices are near record levels, so the easy gains may be behind us. Silver in particular has already shown how quickly a parabolic move can reverse. Anyone expecting a quick flip could be disappointed.
A practical approach for most readers:
- Buying for a goal (wedding, gifting, long-term savings): stagger purchases through the year rather than committing a lump sum on one day. This averages out the price.
- Buying as an investment: consider keeping gold to a sensible slice of your portfolio — many advisers suggest somewhere in the 5–15% range — and look at digital gold, sovereign-style instruments or ETFs to avoid making charges and storage worries.
- Buying silver: treat it as the higher-risk satellite holding, not the core.
The bottom line for today
On 17 June 2026, 24K gold near ₹1,52,472 and silver around ₹2,65,000 a kg reflect a market that is firm but no longer cheap. The macro backdrop — a weaker dollar, possible rate cuts and steady official buying — still leans supportive, but record-zone prices mean discipline matters more than urgency.
Check the live rate in your own city, confirm whether the jeweller is quoting before or after GST and making charges, and buy for a reason rather than a hunch. For long-term holders, the case for owning some gold hasn't changed. For traders hoping to time the next leg, patience and position-sizing will matter more than today's headline number.



