How to Trade Gift Nifty — Hours, Eligibility & Contract Guide

This guide explains how Gift Nifty trading works — the two daily sessions, who is eligible, how the contract is structured and how traders use the implied open. Gift Nifty is a US-dollar Nifty 50 futures contract on NSE IFSC in GIFT City; if you are new to it, start with Gift Nifty basics.

GIFT NIFTY NSE IFSC · Nifty Futures
Market Open
24,062.00
-53.00 (-0.22%)
Open24,054.00
High24,282.00
Low24,017.50
Prev Close24,115.00

Gift Nifty is trading at 24,062.00, down 53.00 (-0.22%) as of Jun 25, 22:39 IST on 25 Jun 2026.

Last updated: Jun 25, 22:39 IST · 25 Jun 2026

Gift Nifty trading hours

Gift Nifty trades for almost 21 hours a day across two sessions (IST), Monday to Friday:

  • Session 1: morning to mid-afternoon, overlapping Indian cash-market hours.
  • Session 2: late afternoon into the early hours of the next day, capturing US market activity.

This near-round-the-clock schedule is why Gift Nifty reflects overnight global moves. For the precise opening and closing times of each session, see Gift Nifty trading hours. Remember that Gift Nifty follows the NSE IFSC holiday calendar, which can differ from NSE/BSE — check trading holidays.

Who can trade Gift Nifty?

Gift Nifty is designed for international participation. Eligible participants include foreign portfolio investors, NRIs, foreign individuals and other categories permitted under IFSCA rules. They trade through brokers registered with NSE IFSC after completing KYC. Because the contract is USD-denominated and based in the IFSC, it sits under the IFSCA regulatory framework rather than domestic SEBI cash-market rules.

Contract structure

Gift Nifty futures are cash-settled in US dollars and track the Nifty 50. Exact lot size, tick size, available expiries and margin requirements are set by the exchange and can change, so always confirm current values in the official Gift Nifty contract specifications before trading. A related contract, Gift Bank Nifty, tracks the Nifty Bank index.

How traders use Gift Nifty

  1. Pre-market direction: the implied gap between Gift Nifty and the Nifty 50 previous close signals the likely open. See the live implied open.
  2. Overnight hedging: positions exposed to the Nifty 50 can be hedged while Indian cash markets are closed.
  3. Global linkage: traders watch overnight US and Asian markets alongside Gift Nifty.
  4. Levels and risk: plan entries and exits with the Gift Nifty calculators (pivot points, position size and P&L).

Risk and discipline

Gift Nifty is a leveraged derivative. Leverage magnifies both gains and losses, and overnight gaps can move against open positions. Use stop-losses, size positions to your risk tolerance and never trade money you cannot afford to lose. This page is educational and not a recommendation to trade.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I trade Gift Nifty?
You trade Gift Nifty through a broker registered with NSE IFSC. After completing KYC and funding a USD-denominated account, you can buy or sell Gift Nifty futures during its two daily sessions. Eligibility is governed by IFSCA rules and varies by investor category.
What are Gift Nifty trading hours?
Gift Nifty trades for about 21 hours a day across two sessions, Monday to Friday — a morning-to-afternoon session and a late-afternoon-to-early-morning session in IST. See our trading-hours page for the exact times, which can be revised by the exchange.
Is Gift Nifty good for beginners?
Gift Nifty is a leveraged futures product and carries significant risk, so beginners should learn the basics, paper-trade and understand margins and gaps first. Start with our Gift Nifty basics and glossary before committing capital.
What is the difference between trading Gift Nifty and Nifty 50 futures?
Domestic Nifty 50 futures trade on the NSE in rupees during Indian market hours under SEBI rules. Gift Nifty trades on NSE IFSC in US dollars for nearly 21 hours under IFSCA rules, which is why it is popular with foreign and NRI investors.

Continue learning

For information and education only — not investment advice. Derivatives trading carries a high risk of loss.