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95.3348 INR
The Indian Rupee floats under a 'managed float' regime — the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) doesn't defend a fixed rate but intervenes, buying or selling dollars, to smooth excessive volatility (RBI sold $3.6 billion in April 2025 alone to curb a sharp rupee slide). India's gold import duty — raised sharply from 6% to 15% in May 2026 partly to help stabilize the rupee — is a reminder that USD/INR and India's gold price are economically linked, not independent numbers.
One of the most-traded emerging-market currency pairs globally — tracked by India's massive remittance-receiving population (NRIs sending money home), importers/exporters, and anyone following India's gold market, since a weaker rupee directly raises the local gold price even when the dollar spot price is unchanged.
Because the rupee is a managed float, a bank's or remittance provider's quoted rate differs from the mid-market rate shown here for two reasons — their own margin, and the fact that the rupee itself can move during the day, occasionally with RBI intervention layered on top.
Banks typically apply a wider spread on USD/INR than dedicated remittance operators or online transfer services, since currency exchange isn't a bank's core product — worth comparing before sending a larger amount.
Card networks convert at their own daily rate, and card issuers commonly add a foreign transaction fee on top — often one to three percent — so a card purchase or ATM withdrawal in India rarely lands exactly on the mid-market figure shown here.
For NRI remittances, the total cost has two parts — the transfer fee, and the margin built into the provider's exchange rate versus the mid-market rate — and the two don't always move together, so the cheapest-looking fee isn't always the best overall deal.
The rate shown here is a frequently updated mid-market reference rate — since the rupee is a managed float rather than a fixed peg, treat it as a benchmark for comparison rather than the exact rate any bank or remittance service will apply.
Is the rupee pegged to the dollar?
No — it's a managed float. The RBI lets the market set the rate day to day but intervenes to prevent disorderly swings.
How does this rate affect India's gold price?
Directly — India's domestic gold price is the dollar spot price converted at this rate, plus import duty and GST. A weaker rupee alone can push local gold prices up.
Why did India raise its gold import duty in 2026?
To reduce gold import volumes and ease pressure on the rupee — the duty rose from 6% to 15% in May 2026 to curb demand.