Gold Price History · The Free-Float Era

2025

Above the 1980 High, At Last

Gold averaged well above $3,000 — and, in real inflation-adjusted terms, finally surpassed its 1980 peak.

Average price
$3,448/oz
In 2025 dollars
$3,448/oz
Change on the year
+43.1%
After inflation
+39.5%

2025 in context · real value, 2005–2025

20102020 $3,448
Inflation-adjusted to 2025 dollars. See all 768 years →

2025 closed the longest chapter in modern gold history. The price averaged well above $3,000 an ounce, and — most remarkably — in real, inflation-adjusted terms it finally surpassed the 1980 peak. The 45-year wait for that high to be beaten, the longest real bear market in monetary history, was over.

The drivers were structural rather than speculative: record central-bank accumulation, the lingering lesson of frozen reserves, persistent deficits, and a steady erosion of confidence in paper money. Half a century after Nixon cut the anchor in 1971, gold had completed its journey from $35-by-treaty to a market-set verdict on the world's monetary order. The full story is told in Gold in the Free-Float Era; see what any year's investment would be worth on the calculator.

Key events of 2025

  1. 2025-01-01

    A new real high

    Gold surpasses its 1980 peak in inflation-adjusted terms, ending the longest real bear market on record.

What would $10,000 of gold in 2025 be worth today?

Run the numbers across gold, stocks, housing, and bonds — adjusted for inflation.

Calculate 2025 →

How gold did in 2025

Value at year-end of $10,000 invested on 1 January 2025.

Gold
$14,312 +43.1%
S&P 500 (total return)
$11,778 +17.8%
US housing
$10,301 +3.0%
Inflation (CPI)
$10,263 +2.6%

Annual-average basis. Gold: Officer & Williamson; S&P 500 & Treasuries: Damodaran (NYU); housing: Shiller; CPI: BLS. Methodology →

Related years

Sources. Gold price: Officer & Williamson, The Price of Gold, 1257–Present (annual average); inflation adjustment by US CPI (BLS / Officer & Williamson). Asset comparison from the calculator dataset. Figures are annual averages. Full methodology →