Convert gold between units and instantly see its value at the live spot price for any karat purity.
| Weight | 24K value | 22K value |
|---|---|---|
| 1 gram | $ 139.24 | $ 127.56 |
| 10 grams | $ 1,392.41 | $ 1,275.57 |
| 1 tola | $ 1,624.08 | $ 1,487.80 |
| 1 troy ounce | $ 4,330.87 | $ 3,967.47 |
| 1 kilogram | $ 139,240.60 | $ 127,557.14 |
| Unit | Grams |
|---|---|
| Gram (g) | 1 g |
| Milligram (mg) | 0.001 g |
| Kilogram (kg) | 1,000 g |
| Troy Ounce (oz t) | 31.103477 g |
| Tola | 11.663804 g |
| Pennyweight (dwt) | 1.555174 g |
Gold is traded internationally by the troy ounce, which is slightly heavier than a standard (avoirdupois) ounce — one troy ounce equals 31.1035 grams, compared with 28.35 grams for a regular ounce. This distinction matters: if you accidentally use the wrong ounce, your gold valuation will be off by roughly 10 percent. Our converter removes that risk by working internally in grams. It takes the amount and unit you enter, converts everything to grams, then calculates the monetary value using the live 24-karat spot price, adjusted for the purity (karat) you select.
The troy ounce dates back to the Middle Ages and the French town of Troyes, a major trading hub. It became the standard for weighing precious metals and remains so today across the London, New York, and other global bullion markets. When you read that gold is “$2,000 an ounce,” that figure always refers to one troy ounce of pure (24K) gold. Every other unit — grams, kilograms, tola — is ultimately converted back to troy ounces to determine its market value.
Suppose you have a 22K gold bangle weighing 10 grams and the live 24K spot price is $2,000 per troy ounce. First, the converter finds the metal value of pure gold per gram: $2,000 ÷ 31.1035 = about $64.30 per gram. Because 22K gold is 91.6 percent pure, the per-gram value becomes $64.30 × 0.916 = about $58.90. Multiplying by the 10-gram weight gives an indicative metal value of roughly $589. The tool performs this calculation instantly the moment you change any input.
The figure shown is the indicative metal value only. When you actually buy gold, you also pay a dealer premium and, for jewelry, a making charge for craftsmanship. When you sell, dealers typically pay slightly below spot. Local taxes such as VAT or GST can also apply. As a result, real-world transaction prices differ from the pure metal value — sometimes significantly for intricate jewelry. Treat this converter as a quick reference for the underlying gold content, not a guaranteed buy or sell quote. It is provided for information only and is not financial advice.
One tola equals about 11.6638 grams, so divide your gram amount by 11.6638 to get tola, or multiply tola by 11.6638 to get grams. The converter does this instantly and also shows the live gold value of the amount.
No. A troy ounce, used for precious metals, is about 31.1035 grams, while a standard (avoirdupois) ounce is 28.35 grams — roughly 10% lighter. Always use the troy ounce for gold, which this converter does automatically.
Enter the weight and select the karat purity of your item. The converter multiplies the pure-gold content by the live 24K spot price to show the indicative metal value. Remember this excludes making charges and dealer premiums.
Use whatever your local market quotes: grams and tola across South Asia and the Gulf, troy ounces for international bullion, and kilograms for large bars. The converter shows all of them at once so you can compare.
A kilogram is exactly 1,000 grams, so a 1 kg gold bar contains 1,000 grams of metal — about 32.15 troy ounces. The converter handles the kilo ⇄ gram ⇄ ounce maths for you.
Yes. Choose your currency in the navbar and the converter values your gold in it, using the live exchange rate applied to the international US-dollar spot price.