PAN Card for Gold Purchase in India: The Rs 2 Lakh Cash Rule Explained

10 Jul, 2026 17:47 IST 1 View
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When the transaction value crosses ₹2 lakh, jewellers typically request a pan card for gold purchase disclosure. Two distinct legal provisions apply.

  • First, under Rule 114B of the Income‑tax Rules, quoting PAN is mandatory for specified high‑value purchases, including jewellery transactions above ₹2 lakh.
  • Second, under Section 269ST of the Income‑tax Act, cash transactions of ₹2 lakh or more are prohibited.

Providing PAN does not override the cash restriction. From 1 April 2026, Form 97 replaced the earlier Form 60 for certain non‑PAN declarations under income tax rules.

This guide explains these rules, applicable thresholds, penalties, documentation requirements and their relevance for future financial use such as gold‑backed lending.

When Is PAN Card Mandatory for Buying Gold?

The threshold for pan card for gold purchase is ₹2 lakh or more.

Under Rule 114B, quoting PAN is mandatory for specified high‑value transactions, including jewellery purchases above this value, regardless of whether payment is made by cash or digital means.

Where PAN is not available, a declaration using Form 97 may be submitted for limited transactions under the current rules, subject to applicability.

Separately, jewellers are subject to Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements under anti‑money‑laundering regulations, which may require identity verification depending on transaction size and risk profile.

Threshold

Trigger

Document required

₹2 lakh and above (any payment mode)

PAN quoting rule

PAN, or Form 97 declaration if no PAN

₹2 lakh and above (cash)

Cash receipt ban (Section 269ST)

Cash simply not permitted; pay digitally

Note: Cash transactions of ₹2 lakh and above are not permitted under Section 269ST, irrespective of PAN availability.

The Rs 50,000 Rule vs the Rs 2 Lakh Rule - What Is the Difference?

Two separate concepts are often confused:

  • ₹2 lakh threshold: This is the statutory limit triggering PAN requirement under Rule 114B and the cash restriction under Section 269ST.
  • Lower KYC thresholds: Jewellers may collect identity details for smaller transactions as part of internal compliance or anti‑money‑laundering obligations under Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) requirements.

The first is a legal requirement; the second is a compliance practice.

What Happens If You Buy Gold Without Providing PAN?

Two scenarios, two very different outcomes.

  1. Cash above ₹2 lakh. The law penalises the recipient, not the payer: the jeweller faces a penalty equal to 100% of the amount received. A ₹3 lakh cash sale can cost the shop ₹3 lakh. Which is exactly why an organised jeweller will refuse the notes and point you to a card machine, however good a customer you are.
  2. No PAN on a ₹2 lakh-plus purchase. Without PAN or a Form 97 declaration, the jeweller cannot lawfully complete the sale under the quoting rules and PMLA KYC norms. The transaction stalls at the billing desk.

Neither situation carries a workaround worth attempting. Splitting one purchase into several same-day invoices to duck the limit is treated as a violation of the same provision, and the penalty follows the total.

Documents You Need to Buy Gold in India - A Quick Checklist

  • PAN card: required once the purchase touches ₹2 lakh, in any payment mode.
  • Aadhaar: accepted for identity verification under PMLA KYC norms, and useful alongside PAN at organised retailers.
  • Form 97 may be used where permitted under income‑tax rules for individuals without PAN, subject to eligibility.
  • Bank payment trail: for larger purchases, a card, UPI or transfer record keeps you clear of the cash ban entirely.

One caution repeated because it matters: do not split bills. Same buyer, same day, same shop adds up to one transaction in the law's eyes, and the pan rule gold 2 lakh threshold applies to the aggregate.

How PAN Compliance at Purchase Affects Your Gold Loan Eligibility

A documented purchase pays off years later at a lender's counter. Gold pledged for a loan goes through appraisal, and while the loan amount rests on weight, purity and the day's benchmark price, a clean paper trail (invoice, PAN acknowledgement, hallmark) keeps the process friction-free and answers any source-of-gold question before it is asked.

IIFL Finance accepts gold jewellery as collateral with assaying done in the borrower's presence and a certificate itemising purity, gross and net weight, and deductions. Under the RBI's April 2026 directions, loans up to ₹2.5 lakh need no income proof or credit assessment, and the loan-to-value can reach 85% in that slab, stepping down to 80% for the next band ending at ₹5 lakh, then 75%. Keep the purchase receipts with the jewellery. The gold speaks for itself at valuation; the papers speak for you.

Conclusion

wo compliance rules apply at the ₹2 lakh level. A pan card for gold purchase is required for reporting high‑value transactions, while cash payments above ₹2 lakh are restricted under Section 269ST.

Providing PAN does not permit cash payments beyond the limit. Where applicable, Form 97 serves as a declaration option for individuals without PAN.

Maintaining documentation such as invoices and identity records may support transparency and ease of verification in future financial transactions involving gold.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1.

Ans.

Yes, generally. The mandatory PAN quoting rule for gold applies at ₹2 lakh and above. Below that, PAN is usually not demanded by law, though jewellers following PMLA KYC practice may still record an identity document for sizeable cash payments. If you lack a PAN and the bill crosses the line, Form 97 (the post-April 2026 replacement for Form 60) is the declaration route. Carrying Aadhaar as backup identity smooths most counters.

Disclaimer : The information in this blog is for general purposes only and may change without notice. It does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Readers should seek professional guidance and make decisions at their own discretion. IIFL Finance is not liable for any reliance on this content. Read more

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