SGB Secondary Market Trap: Why Your 'Tax-Free' Bond Might Be Taxable
Written By
Rohit Agarwal
Authoritative Compliance Lead
Last Updated
SGB Secondary Market Trap: Why Your 'Tax-Free' Bond Might Be Taxable
Written By
Rohit Agarwal
Authoritative Compliance Lead
Last Updated
SGB Secondary Market Trap: Why Your 'Tax-Free' Bond Might Be Taxable
For Assessment Year 2026-27, Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGB) remain the crown jewel of tax planning. However, a massive misconception exists among investors who buy and sell these bonds on the stock exchange (secondary market).
While the headline says "SGBs are Tax-Free," the fine print of Section 47(viib) says they are only tax-free "by way of redemption." If you use the stock exchange as an exit door before the 8-year maturity, you walk straight into the tax department's net. Here is how the "Secondary Market Trap" works and how to avoid it.
1. Redemption vs. Sale: The Legal Distinction
To save tax, you must understand the difference between these two actions:
- Redemption: You wait for the bond to mature (8 years) or use the RBI’s buyback window (after 5 years). The money comes directly from the RBI. This profit is 100% Tax-Free.
- Sale (Secondary Market): You sell the bond to another investor via the stock exchange (NSE/BSE) because you need the money early. This profit is FULLY TAXABLE.
2. Capital Gains Math for Secondary Market Sales
If you sell on the exchange, the tax depends on your Holding Period:
| Holding Period | Classification | Tax Rate (AY 2026-27) |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 12 Months | Short-Term (STCG) | Taxed at your Income Tax Slab |
| More than 12 Months | Long-Term (LTCG) | 12.5% (No Index) or 20% (With Index) |
The Trap: Many investors sell after 3 years, thinking it's "Gold" and hence tax-free. They are shocked when they receive a Section 143(1) Intimation because their Demat transaction was reported to the department but was missing from their ITR.
3. Buying from the Secondary Market: The Only "Secret" Benefit
While selling on the exchange is a trap, buying from the exchange is actually a smart move.
- The Benefit: If you buy an SGB on the stock exchange at a discount (which often happens) and then hold it until maturity (8th year), your Redemption Profit will be Tax-Free.
- The Logic: The exemption is linked to the Action (Redemption) and the Person (Individual), not to the mode of purchase.
4. Interest Income is Never Free
Regardless of whether you are the first owner or the tenth, the 2.5% annual interest paid by the RBI into your bank account is always taxable.
- Head of Income: Income From Other Sources.
- Reporting: Check your AIS (Annual Information Statement). Each interest credit must be reported in your ITR to avoid scrutiny.
Legal Reference: The Scope of Exemption
The law is very specific about how the gold bond must be exited to trigger the tax-break.
Section 47 of the Income Tax Act— Transactions not regarded as transfer: "(viib) any transfer of a capital asset, being Sovereign Gold Bond issued by the Reserve Bank of India... by way of redemption by an individual."
If you have already sold SGBs on the exchange recently, ensure you calculate the STCG/LTCG correctly in your ITR-2. For help with other digital assets, see our Taxation of Digital Gold or Gold ETFs Guide. For high-value transactions, read our Faceless Assessment survival guide.
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