The humiliation of 1991
No country’s gold reserve is more bound up with national memory than India’s. In 1991, facing a balance-of-payments crisis and down to a few weeks of import cover, the government did the unthinkable: it physically airlifted some 47 tonnes of gold to the Bank of England and pledged a further portion to the Union Bank of Switzerland, using the nation’s reserves as collateral for emergency loans.
The sight of Indian gold being flown to London to stave off default was a moment of profound public shame — and a catalyst. The crisis broke the old economic order and launched the liberalization reforms that would transform India into one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. The gold was redeemed within months, but the lesson lodged permanently in the national psyche: reserves are sovereignty, and a country that must pawn its gold has lost control of its destiny.
From debtor to steady buyer
The arc since then has been one of redemption in every sense. In 2009 the Reserve Bank of India announced it had bought 200 tonnes of gold from the International Monetary Fund — a landmark purchase that signaled India’s return to financial strength and helped mark the beginning of the modern central-bank buying era.
Since around 2017 the RBI has accumulated steadily and deliberately, lifting its reserve from under 560 tonnes toward 880, and in recent years it has been among the most consistent official buyers in the world. The approach is patient and unflashy — modest, regular additions rather than dramatic announcements — but its cumulative effect has been to roughly double India’s gold over two decades and cement its place in the top ten holders. India’s buying is one strand of the broader central-bank accumulation reshaping the market.
Bringing the gold home
In 2024 the RBI did something with deep symbolic resonance: it began repatriating large quantities of gold from the Bank of England back to India, moving well over a hundred tonnes in a single phase and continuing thereafter. For the first time in decades, more than half of India’s official gold now sits on Indian soil.
The move echoed a wider global trend — the same security logic driving repatriation from Germany to Poland — but in India it carried a particular charge. A nation that had once been forced to fly its gold out to foreign vaults to survive was now, as a confident rising power, choosing to fly it back. Officials framed the decision in terms of storage diversification and cost, but the resonance with 1991 was unmistakable, and widely noted in the Indian press.
A nation that already runs on gold
India’s official 880 tonnes are only the visible tip of the country’s relationship with the metal. Indian households are estimated to hold on the order of 25,000 tonnes of gold — the largest private stock in the world — woven into weddings, festivals, temple offerings and family savings across generations. Gold in India is not an exotic investment; it is a default store of value, particularly in the vast rural economy.
That cultural depth makes India unique among the great holders. It shapes everything from monetary policy to trade: the country’s appetite for imported gold is so large that it weighs on the current account, which is why import duties on gold are a recurring instrument of policy. For more on gold’s cultural and ritual significance, see gold in religion and ritual. The RBI’s reserve, in this light, is the official expression of a far older national instinct.
Where the gold is held
The Reserve Bank of India has historically kept much of its gold with the Bank of England and the Bank for International Settlements, a legacy of colonial-era and crisis-era arrangements. Since 2024 the RBI has repatriated a large share, so that more than half of the reserve now sits in domestic vaults in Mumbai and Nagpur.