RBI Gold Loan Rules 2026: LTV and Borrower Rights

How much can you borrow against your gold?

The Reserve Bank of India (Lending Against Gold and Silver Collateral) Directions, 2025 replace the old flat 75 percent cap with a tiered Loan-to-Value (LTV) ladder that depends on how big your loan is. The bigger the loan, the lower the share of your gold's value you can borrow.

Loan amount Maximum LTV On gold worth ₹4,00,000 you can borrow up to
Up to ₹2,50,000 85 percent ₹2,12,500 (if the loan stays at or below ₹2.5 lakh)
Above ₹2,50,000 and up to ₹5,00,000 80 percent ₹3,20,000
Above ₹5,00,000 75 percent the 75 percent cap kicks in only above this band

Worked example: if your gold is valued at ₹4 lakh and you keep the loan small (at or under ₹2.5 lakh), you enjoy the 85 percent slab on that smaller ticket. But the moment you ask for more than ₹2.5 lakh against the same gold, your whole loan falls into the 80 percent band, so the maximum you can draw against ₹4 lakh of gold is ₹3.2 lakh. The LTV is not a one-time test at sign-up; the lender must keep it within the cap for the full tenure of the loan.

If you have ever pledged family gold for a quick loan, this matters to you. The Reserve Bank of India issued these Directions on 6 June 2025 and every bank and NBFC must follow them by 1 April 2026, which standardises how your gold is weighed, valued, returned and, if it ever comes to that, auctioned. This guide explains the LTV ladder, the valuation rules and the borrower protections in plain language so you know exactly what to demand at the counter.

What changed and why

Before these Directions, different lenders ran gold loans differently. Purity checks, the way the “net weight” of gold was calculated, auction notices and the return of ornaments all varied from one branch to the next, and borrowers had little visibility. The RBI's (Lending Against Gold and Silver Collateral) Directions, 2025 harmonise the rules across all regulated entities, meaning commercial banks, cooperative banks and NBFCs alike.

The Directions cover loans taken against eligible gold or silver collateral for consumption (a wedding, a medical bill, school fees) as well as for income generation, including farm credit. From 1 April 2026, the same protections apply whether you borrow from a large bank or a neighbourhood gold-loan NBFC. This is part of a broader push by the regulator toward fair, transparent retail lending, the same theme behind the rules on digital lending and borrower rights and on co-lending between banks and NBFCs.

How the tiered LTV works (with the example)

LTV is simply the loan amount divided by the assessed value of your gold. Under the old single cap, everyone got up to 75 percent. The new ladder is more generous on small loans and stays conservative on large ones:

  • Up to ₹2.5 lakh: up to 85 percent LTV. Best for small, short-term needs.
  • Above ₹2.5 lakh up to ₹5 lakh: up to 80 percent LTV.
  • Above ₹5 lakh: up to 75 percent LTV.

Reusing the worked example: gold assessed at ₹4 lakh. Keep your requirement under ₹2.5 lakh and the 85 percent slab applies to that ticket. Ask for ₹3 lakh and you sit in the 80 percent band, so the most you can borrow is ₹3.2 lakh on ₹4 lakh of gold. Because the cap must be maintained throughout the tenure, if gold prices fall sharply the lender may ask you to part-pay or add collateral to bring the ratio back within the limit. Ask your lender, in writing, what their policy is on margin calls before you sign.

How your gold is valued and assayed

The Directions require standardised assaying and valuation. Lenders must apply consistent protocols for testing purity and recording both the gross weight and the net weight (the actual gold content, after removing stones, fastenings and other non-gold parts) across all their branches. You should not get a different “value” for the same chain at two branches of the same lender.

Your rights at the valuation stage:

  • Ask exactly how your gold was valued: the assessed purity (in carats or fineness), the gross weight, the net weight, and the reference gold price used.
  • Lenders must disclose their valuation methodology, typically on their website, so you can check it independently.
  • Get the valuation details on your loan paperwork. This same net weight and purity record is what protects you when the gold is returned.

Your rights if you default

Default is stressful, but the Directions give you concrete protections so a missed payment does not mean losing your gold overnight. A lender cannot quietly sell your ornaments. The auction of pledged gold on default must follow due process:

  • Advance written notice. You must be given prior written notice before any auction, with a clear chance to repay and reclaim your gold. Confirm the exact notice period in your loan agreement and fair practices code; many lenders give 14 days or more, and some follow a longer notice window under their fair practices code.
  • A transparent, fair auction. The sale must be conducted transparently, typically with a publicly notified auction and a fair reserve (floor) price benchmarked to the prevailing market value so your gold is not dumped cheap. Ask your lender to state the reserve price basis in writing.
  • Surplus belongs to you. After the lender recovers the outstanding dues and permitted charges from the sale proceeds, any surplus must be refunded to you (or your legal heirs). The auction is to recover the debt, not to profit from your gold.

Keep every notice, valuation slip and statement. If a lender auctions without proper notice, sells below a fair price, or fails to refund your surplus, you have grounds to complain.

Your rights on repayment

When you repay in full, the lender must return your pledged ornaments promptly. Under the 2025 Directions the pledged gold is to be released within a short, fixed window after full repayment or settlement. The Directions also require lenders to compensate the borrower for a delay in releasing the collateral that is the lender's fault. Ask your lender for the exact release timeline and the per-day delay compensation in writing, and check it against your loan agreement and the lender's fair practices code, since these figures are set by the regulator and the lender, not by you.

Practical checklist at return:

  • Insist on getting back the same ornaments you pledged, matched against the net weight and item description on your loan slip.
  • Inspect for damage. If the lender damaged the gold, repair is their responsibility; if it was lost, compensation applies.
  • For a deceased borrower's loan, the legal heirs have the same rights to the gold and to any surplus or delay compensation.

What to check before taking a gold loan

  • The LTV slab that applies to your loan size, and whether the lender quotes the maximum or something lower.
  • The all-in cost: interest rate, processing fee, valuation charge, and any auction or storage charges on default.
  • The assaying and valuation method, the net weight recorded, and the reference price used.
  • The tenure and repayment structure, and whether margin top-ups can be demanded if gold prices fall.
  • The default and auction clause: notice period, reserve price basis, and surplus refund timeline.
  • The return timeline for ornaments and the delay-compensation clause.

Common traps

  • Chasing 85 percent on a big loan. The top slab only applies up to ₹2.5 lakh. Borrowing just over ₹2.5 lakh drops your whole loan to 80 percent, so sometimes a slightly smaller loan gives you a better ratio.
  • Ignoring the ongoing LTV. The cap must hold for the full tenure. A price crash can trigger a margin call.
  • No written valuation record. Without the net weight and purity on paper, disputes at return are hard to win.
  • Assuming the lender can auction immediately. They cannot. No proper advance notice means the auction is challengeable.
  • Forgetting the surplus. If your auctioned gold sold for more than your dues, the extra is yours. Ask for the account.

Frequently asked questions

What is the maximum LTV on a gold loan from 1 April 2026?

Up to 85 percent for loans of ₹2.5 lakh or less, up to 80 percent for loans above ₹2.5 lakh and up to ₹5 lakh, and up to 75 percent for loans above ₹5 lakh, under the RBI (Lending Against Gold and Silver Collateral) Directions, 2025. The cap must be maintained throughout the loan.

When do the new RBI gold loan rules take effect?

The RBI issued the Directions on 6 June 2025, and all regulated lenders (banks and NBFCs) must comply by 1 April 2026.

Can the lender auction my gold without telling me?

No. On default the lender must give advance written notice and a chance to repay before any auction, conduct a transparent sale at a fair reserve price, and refund any surplus from the proceeds to you after recovering its dues.

How quickly must the lender return my gold after I repay?

The Directions require prompt release of pledged ornaments after full repayment or settlement, and compensation for delays attributable to the lender. Ask for the exact release timeline and per-day delay compensation in writing and confirm it against your loan agreement and the latest RBI text.

Do these rules cover silver and farm gold loans too?

Yes. The Directions apply to lending against eligible gold and silver collateral, for consumption or income generation, including farm credit, across all regulated entities.

Do these rules apply to my old running gold loan?

Lenders must align their practices to the Directions by 1 April 2026. Ask your lender how they are applying the harmonised valuation, return and auction protections to existing loans, and get the answer in writing.

If a lender breaks these rules, you can escalate. Start with the lender's grievance officer, then the RBI Ombudsman; our guide on which regulator to complain to shows the right door. For a public authority, you can also file an RTI; try our AI RTI draft tool and read The RTI Playbook. To understand your statutory information rights, see the RTI Act.

Sources

  • Reserve Bank of India, Reserve Bank of India (Lending Against Gold and Silver Collateral) Directions, 2025, issued 6 June 2025, effective 1 April 2026.
  • FIG Paper (No. 52): RBI Directions on Lending Against Gold and Silver Collateral, Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas / Lexology, 2025.
  • AZB and Partners, RBI Issues Directions on Lending Against Gold and Silver Collateral, 2025.
  • EY India, RBI Gold Loan Guidelines 2025: Key changes and impact.
  • Business Standard, RBI tightens gold loan rules: what changes in repayment, valuation, auction, 2 October 2025.

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