2000–2008
The Quiet Years
Western central banks were net sellers under the Central Bank Gold Agreement. Britain auctioned ~395 tonnes near a generational low; Switzerland sold ~1,550; France ~600. Gold was, in central-banker speak, "a relic."
Gold Reserves · The Global Ledger
A live ledger of the world's national gold reserves — who holds what, who is buying, and why the metal still anchors the balance sheets of central banks.
World Gold Council · IMF IFS · as of May 2026
The Great Central-Bank Gold Rush
For most of the 2000s the West was selling. Since 2008 — and above all since 2022 — the world's central banks have become relentless buyers. This is the shift, country by country, in reported net purchases for 2025.
In 2025, central banks bought 327 t of gold (reported). Top buyer: Poland (+102 t).
2000–2008
Western central banks were net sellers under the Central Bank Gold Agreement. Britain auctioned ~395 tonnes near a generational low; Switzerland sold ~1,550; France ~600. Gold was, in central-banker speak, "a relic."
2009–2018
Then 2008 happened. The Fed printed trillions, and central banks turned from sellers to buyers for the first time in a generation. Russia accumulated 200+ tonnes a year; China stopped pretending its reserves hadn't grown. The center of gravity began shifting east.
2019–2025
The map lights up across Turkey, India, Poland, Singapore, Kazakhstan and the Gulf. The freezing of Russia's reserves in 2022 turned official buying into a stampede — the World Gold Council estimates over 1,000 tonnes a year, the fastest pace in modern history.
Reading the map. Gold = a net buyer that year, slate = a net seller, cream = no change; gray = no reported data. Figures are reported flows (IMF IFS via WGC Goldhub). Reported totals (~327 t in 2025) run below the WGC's estimated total demand (~1,000 t+), which includes unreported buying — notably by China. Source: World Gold Council · IMF IFS, May 2026.
The United States and the major European economies still dominate the table — but the fastest growth is now in Asia and emerging Europe.
| # | Country | Tonnes | Share of world | Gold in reserves | Region |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | | 8,133.5 | 22.3% | 83.3% | North America |
| 2 | | 3,350.3 | 9.2% | 84.0% | Western Europe |
| 3 | | 2,451.8 | 6.7% | 80.6% | Western Europe |
| 4 | | 2,437 | 6.7% | 81.8% | Western Europe |
| 5 | | 2,313.4 | 6.3% | 9.1% | Asia |
| 6 | | 2,304.7 | 6.3% | 40.6% | Eastern Europe |
| 7 | | 1,039.9 | 2.8% | 15.2% | Western Europe |
| 8 | | 880.5 | 2.4% | 18.5% | Asia |
| 9 | | 845.9 | 2.3% | 9.1% | Asia |
| 10 | | 612.5 | 1.7% | 74.2% | Western Europe |
| 11 | | 581.6 | 1.6% | 29.5% | Eastern Europe |
| 12 | | 534.8 | 1.5% | 61.6% | Middle East |
| 13 | | 415.5 | 1.1% | 88.3% | Asia |
| 14 | | 382.7 | 1.0% | 79.9% | Western Europe |
| 15 | | 353.5 | 1.0% | 77.2% | Asia |
| 16 | | 323.1 | 0.9% | 10.0% | Middle East |
| 17 | | 310.3 | 0.8% | 21.0% | Western Europe |
| 18 | | 286.8 | 0.8% | 82.4% | Middle East |
| 19 | | 281.6 | 0.8% | 33.8% | Western Europe |
| 20 | | 280 | 0.8% | 75.8% | Western Europe |
| 21 | | 234.5 | 0.6% | 12.4% | Asia |
| 22 | | 227.4 | 0.6% | 59.6% | Western Europe |
| 23 | | 200 | 0.5% | 38.2% | Asia |
| 24 | | 193.8 | 0.5% | 6.4% | Asia |
| 25 | | 174.6 | 0.5% | 27.1% | Middle East |
| 26 | | 173.6 | 0.5% | 34.8% | Africa |
| 27 | | 172.4 | 0.5% | 7.0% | Latin America |
| 28 | | 146.6 | 0.4% | 20.4% | Africa |
| 29 | | 133.5 | 0.4% | 18.6% | Asia |
| 30 | | 129.5 | 0.4% | 38.2% | Africa |
| 31 | | 125.7 | 0.3% | 24.8% | Western Europe |
| 32 | | 125.5 | 0.3% | 23.2% | Africa |
| 33 | | 120.1 | 0.3% | 6.6% | Latin America |
| 34 | | 115.2 | 0.3% | 30.3% | Middle East |
| 35 | | 114.7 | 0.3% | 69.5% | Western Europe |
| 36 | | 110 | 0.3% | 24.1% | Eastern Europe |
| 37 | | 104.4 | 0.3% | 3.3% | Asia |
| 38 | | 103.6 | 0.3% | 16.6% | Eastern Europe |
“Share of world” = each nation’s portion of all 36,535 t of official gold. “Gold in reserves” = gold as a share of that country’s own total reserves. Source: World Gold Council · IMF IFS, May 2026. Profiled nations link to a full reserve report; the IMF (2,814 t) and ECB (508 t) are institutions, excluded from the national ranking.
A handful of central banks are responsible for most of the post-2022 buying wave. These are the nations actively lifting their gold reserves — for reasons that range from de-dollarization to currency defense.
China’s reported 2,313 tonnes understate one of the most consequential accumulation programs in the modern gold market — and at 9% of reserves, Beijing has only just begun.
Russia spent fifteen years building a 2,300-tonne gold reserve — and in 2022 that strategy was vindicated in the harshest way possible.
India’s 880 tonnes carry a memory no other reserve does — of the 1991 crisis when the nation pawned its gold to stay solvent. Today it is quietly bringing that gold home.
Poland is the most aggressive gold buyer of the era — racing from barely 100 tonnes to nearly 600 in a few years, on a frontier where geopolitics feels very close.
Uzbekistan holds the most gold-heavy reserve on Earth — over 88% — built directly from the output of one of the planet's largest gold mines.
Kazakhstan turns the output of its vast gold mines straight into reserves — buying domestic production first, then selling into the world market as its needs dictate.
Thailand holds 235 tonnes — a reserve transformed by a burst of buying in 2021 that announced South-East Asia’s arrival in the central-bank gold story.
Singapore holds 193.8 tonnes — a reserve that jumped in 2021 when one of the world’s most sophisticated monetary authorities broke decades of silence and bought gold.
Iraq holds 174.6 tonnes — a reserve it has been steadily building as an oil economy seeks stability amid regional turmoil and pressure on its access to dollars.
Brazil holds 172.4 tonnes — a reserve that leapt higher in 2021 when Latin America’s largest economy joined the global rush into gold.
Egypt holds 129.5 tonnes — a reserve it expanded sharply during a currency crisis, reaching for gold as the pound buckled.
Qatar holds 115.2 tonnes — a reserve it built up sharply after 2017, when its Gulf neighbors imposed a blockade and the tiny, wealthy emirate learned the value of self-reliance.
Hungary holds 110 tonnes — built from almost nothing in a few dramatic years, as a government with a nationalist agenda embraced gold as an instrument of sovereignty.
The View from the Blocs
The Eurozone, combined
Pool the gold of the euro-area economies and the ECB and the bloc would top the table — out-holding even the United States.
BRICS core, combined
China, Russia, India, Brazil and South Africa together hold a fast-growing share — the engine of the modern central-bank buying wave.
The United States, alone
One country still holds more gold than any bloc member — a legacy of the era when the dollar was redeemable for metal.
Go deeper
Source. Holdings are official sector gold reserves reported to the IMF and compiled by the World Gold Council, in tonnes and as a share of total reserves, as of May 2026.
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