Gold Reserves · Western Europe

Belgium flagBelgium Gold Reserves

Belgium holds 227 tonnes — the remnant of a once-vast reserve, most of which was sold in the 1990s and most of what remains held far from Brussels.

World Gold Council · IMF IFS · holdings as of May 2026

227
tonnes
official holdings
#22
world rank
of 38 nations
59.6%
of reserves
held in gold
≈$30B
notional value
at ~$4,160/oz

Belgium at a glance

Gold as a share of total reserves 59.6% of reserves
Share of all official gold worldwide 0.6% of 36,535 t
World rank
#22 of 38 nations
Holdings
227.4 tonnes
Notional value
≈$30B (at ~$4,160/oz)
Trend
stable
Stored at
Held largely abroad — Bank of England, Bank of Canada & BIS

Rank in context

Austria 280 Thailand 235 Belgium Belgium: 227 tonnes 227 Azerbaijan 200 Singapore 194
Official holdings, tonnes

Belgium sits at #22 in the global table of national gold holders, holding steady on its reserve.

The great Belgian sell-off

Belgium once held one of Europe’s larger gold reserves — well over a thousand tonnes in the early 1990s. Today it holds 227. The difference represents one of the most substantial national gold disposals of the modern era, carried out across the 1990s as Belgium, like several European peers, sold down its reserve in the years before the metal’s long bull market began.

The sales were part of the wider European pattern that produced the Central Bank Gold Agreements — an attempt to coordinate disposals so they would not destabilize the market. Belgium was among the most aggressive participants, parting with the bulk of a reserve accumulated over generations. As with the sales by Switzerland, the United Kingdom and others, the timing looks unfortunate in hindsight: much of Belgium’s gold left its vaults near the bottom of the market.

Gold held abroad — and lent out

What distinguishes Belgium’s remaining reserve is its custody. The National Bank of Belgium holds the overwhelming majority of its gold outside the country, principally at the Bank of England in London, with smaller amounts in Canada and at the BIS. Very little sits in Brussels — a profile that sets Belgium apart from the European nations now bringing their gold home.

Belgium has also been historically active in gold lending — placing portions of its reserve on deposit to earn a modest return, a practice more common in earlier decades than today. This combination of foreign storage and active management reflects a particular philosophy: treating gold less as an untouchable national treasure to be guarded at home and more as a financial asset to be deployed. As the security case for domestic custody has grown, that approach has looked increasingly out of step with the times.

A moderate ratio, a settled reserve

Gold makes up roughly 60% of Belgium’s total reserves — a substantial share, though lower than the very high ratios of Italy, France or the Netherlands. After the heavy selling of the 1990s, the reserve has been broadly stable for two decades; Belgium has neither resumed large-scale selling nor joined the modern buying wave.

In that sense Belgium’s gold story is largely a settled one. The dramatic chapter — the disposal of most of the reserve — is long past, and what remains is a steady, externally held holding maintained without fanfare. The questions that animate other nations’ reserves — whether to buy, whether to repatriate — have stirred only occasional debate in Belgium, where the gold sits quietly in foreign vaults.

A cautionary chapter

Belgium’s experience belongs to the same cautionary literature as Britain’s “Brown’s Bottom” and the Swiss and French sales. Together, these European disposals of the 1990s and 2000s — tens of thousands of tonnes sold, in aggregate, before gold’s great ascent — form the backdrop against which today’s near-universal reluctance to sell gold makes sense.

The central banks now accumulating gold so eagerly are, in part, acting on the lesson those sales taught. Belgium, having let most of its reserve go, stands as one of the clearest examples of what that lesson cost. Its remaining 227 tonnes are a reminder that the modern conviction to hold gold was forged by a generation that, for a time, was only too willing to part with it.

Where the gold is held

The National Bank of Belgium keeps the large majority of its gold abroad, primarily at the Bank of England, with portions at the Bank of Canada and the Bank for International Settlements. Only a small share is held domestically — an unusually external custody profile among major holders.

Belgium gold reserves — your questions

How much gold does Belgium have?
Belgium holds 227.4 tonnes (World Gold Council, as of May 2026) — about 60% of its total reserves.
Why did Belgium’s gold reserve shrink so much?
Belgium held well over a thousand tonnes in the early 1990s but sold most of it through that decade, as part of the wave of European central-bank gold sales — a disposal that looks poorly timed given gold’s later rise.
Where is Belgian gold stored?
Mostly abroad — primarily at the Bank of England in London, with portions at the Bank of Canada and the BIS. Only a small share is held domestically in Brussels.
Does Belgium lend out its gold?
Belgium has historically been active in gold lending, placing portions of its reserve on deposit to earn a return — reflecting a view of gold as a financial asset to be managed rather than an untouchable hoard.
Is Belgium buying gold now?
No. After the heavy selling of the 1990s, Belgium’s reserve has been broadly stable for two decades; it has not joined the modern central-bank buying wave.

Methodology & sources. 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. Notional US-dollar values are illustrative, computed at a reference price of ~$4,160 per troy ounce (1 tonne = 32,150.7 oz) and will move with the gold price. The IMF and ECB are supranational institutions and are excluded from national rankings.

The Bigger Picture

Belgium is one piece of a global gold realignment.

Central banks are buying gold at the fastest pace in half a century. Track who holds what — and why it matters for every investor.

36,535
Tonnes worldwideofficial reserves
#22
Belgium's rankof 38 nations
59.6%
in goldof its reserves

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