Gold prices in Pakistan fell sharply on Tuesday, April 28, with the local market giving back a sizable chunk of the gains seen in recent sessions. The strongest same-day readings from live bullion trackers put 24-karat gold at Rs480,500 per tola, down Rs11,000, while 10 grams of 24-karat gold were quoted at Rs411,951. HamariWeb’s live page explicitly described the move as a drop of Rs11,000 per tola, and Gold.pk’s bullion panel also showed a Rs480,500 bid and Rs481,500 asking range for the day.
That drop stood out because a number of other Pakistani rate pages were still showing older or slower-updating figures near Rs491,500 per tola, which appears to reflect a lag rather than a different market trend. On the same date, Economy.pk and UrduPoint both displayed Rs491,500 per tola, while HamariWeb’s live section on that very date showed the market already lower at Rs480,500. Taken together, that suggests the day’s headline move was a real decline, but not every publisher refreshed at the same pace. That is an inference from the conflicting timestamps and same-day quotations across local rate pages.
In practical terms, the correction pushed gold back below the Rs485,000 mark in the more actively updated quotations, which is notable in a market where bullion prices had been hovering near record territory. Gold.pk’s daily rates page says its figures are based on rates received from sources such as the Karachi Sarafa Association and notes that prices are indicative because bullion can change minute to minute. That helps explain why readers saw different numbers on different websites even though the broader direction was clearly downward.
The international backdrop also pointed to weakness in bullion. Market coverage from the same day said gold slipped below $4,700 per troy ounce, with early New York trading around $4,642.30, as investors weighed inflation fears and the prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates. HamariWeb’s Pakistan page separately showed an international 24K ounce reference near $4,581, reinforcing the view that the domestic fall was tied to softer global prices rather than just local currency noise.
For buyers and traders in Pakistan, the takeaway is fairly simple: April 28 was a down day for gold, and a meaningful one. The cleaner live-market read points to 24K gold near Rs480,500 per tola and Rs411,951 per 10 grams, even though some retail pages were still catching up. In a market that moves fast and is watched closely by households, jewellers, and investors alike, that kind of discrepancy matters almost as much as the price move itself.
