PM Modi appealed to avoid buying gold for one year.
What should jewellers do now?
This is not the time to panic. It's the time for jewellers to evolve
What the appeal actually means
Clear, factual information to share with your team, jewellers, and customers.
It is an Appeal, Not a Ban
There is no law or government order banning jewellery purchases. This is a public appeal to citizens.
- No ban on buying jewellery
- No restrictions on existing gold
- No impact on weddings or rituals
- Freedom to make personal choices
About Reducing Fresh Imports
The appeal is aimed at avoiding unnecessary fresh gold purchases that increase imports
- India spends heavily on gold imports
- Focus is on reducing new purchases
- Existing household gold is encouraged
- Responsible gold use is the goal
Traditions Can Continue
Weddings, festivals, and genuine jewellery needs can still be fulfilled — just more thoughtfully.
- Wedding jewellery is not discouraged
- Family traditions can continue
- Using existing gold is encouraged
- Smart planning replaces impulse buying
What your customers may be thinking
These are the doubts you will hear in your store. Be prepared with thoughtful answers.
"Should we postpone wedding jewellery?"
No. Wedding jewellery doesn't need to be postponed. It can still be planned smartly by using existing family gold through exchange, redesign, or remaking.
"Is it wrong to buy gold now?"
No. Buying gold is not wrong, and there is no ban. But if you already have gold at home, this is a good time to use it smartly through exchange, redesign, or remaking instead of making unnecessary fresh purchases that increase gold imports.
"Should we wait for one year?"
Not necessarily. If you have genuine needs, responsible purchasing with existing gold is always valid.
"What about the gold already at home?"
This is exactly the gold that can be used! Old necklaces, bangles, and inherited pieces have real value.
"Can we exchange old gold instead?"
Absolutely. This is the smartest approach — exchange existing gold for new designs you actually wear.
"How do we know what our old gold is worth?"
Expert jewellers can guide you with proper valuation of your old gold.
What jewellers should say
Thoughtful responses that build trust and guide customers toward smart decisions.
Addressing the fear
Introducing the alternative
For wedding enquiries
For uncertain customers
What you can show customers
Concrete transformations that demonstrate real value. Use these in your conversations.
Heavy Necklace → 3 Lightweight Pieces
Exchange scenario for wedding gold25 grams
8gm + 9gm + 8gm = 25gm
Old Bangles → Wedding Contribution
Bridal planning with family goldSitting in locker
Value credited to purchase
Inherited Jewellery → Modern Design
Redesign with emotional preservation22K, outdated design
Broken Chain + Old Ring → New Bracelet
Small pieces combinedTotal 12 grams
Lightweight, modern
Unsure Customer → Monthly Scheme
Planned gradual purchaseWants to postpone
exchange of old gold for future buying impact jewellers benefits
Old Gold → WhatsApp Valuation
First step before visiting storeVia WhatsApp
No store visit needed first
What you can do in your store
Practical campaigns to keep customers engaged and business moving through responsible gold use.
Free Old Gold Valuation Week
Redesign Your Locker Gold
Wedding Jewellery Planning
Old Gold Exchange Festival
Jewellery Repair & Polish Camp
Gold Saving Scheme Awareness
Messages you can send today
Copy, paste, and send these campaigns to your customer database.
The responsible gold message
For customers with old jewellery
For families planning weddings
India already has gold sitting in lockers.
Jewellers can help bring it back into use.
Many families have old necklaces, bangles, inherited pieces, broken chains, unused wedding jewellery, or outdated designs gathering dust. Instead of buying fresh gold, customers can convert existing gold into jewellery they actually wear.
Old Necklaces & Chains
Heavy, outdated, or never-worn pieces that can be exchanged or redesigned.
Inherited Jewellery
Grandmother's or mother's pieces with emotional value but outdated designs.
Broken or Unused Pieces
Damaged chains, single earrings, or incomplete sets gathering dust.
Gift Gold Not Suited
Gold coins, bars, or pieces received as gifts that don't match personal style.
Types of Gold Already in Indian Homes
Old Wedding Jewellery
Heavily styled pieces from past decadesInherited Family Pieces
Grandmother's and mother's treasuresBroken or Single Pieces
Chains, earrings, rings needing repairUnused Gift Gold
Coins, bars, or ill-fitting giftsOutdated Designs
Old styles no longer worn regularlyHow technology can help
Modern tools can help you manage valuations, follow-ups, and customer communication more efficiently — without changing how you serve customers.
WhatsApp-Based Valuations
Let customers send photos and details for preliminary valuations before visiting.
Customer Follow-Up Tracking
Track who responded to campaigns and ensure no enquiry goes cold.
Quick Response Templates
Save time with pre-written responses that feel personal.
From Message to Store Visit
Customer sees your WhatsApp campaign and sends a message
You receive their jewellery details and photos
Provide preliminary valuation with exchange/redesign options
Schedule store visit for verification and final discussion
Customer arrives informed and ready — sale happens naturally
Tools like Jwero can help manage these conversations, valuations, and follow-ups in one place — so you focus on what matters: serving your customers.
This appeal is not asking India to stop buying jewellery. It is asking people to avoid unnecessary gold purchases that can increase gold imports
Jewellers have an important role to play — not by stopping business, but by helping customers make smarter use of the gold they already own.
Share this guide with fellow jewellers. Help the community respond with guidance, not panic.