Gold Reserves · Asia

Kazakhstan flagKazakhstan Gold Reserves

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.

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

354
tonnes
official holdings
#15
world rank
of 38 nations
77.2%
of reserves
held in gold
≈$47B
notional value
at ~$4,160/oz

Kazakhstan at a glance

Gold as a share of total reserves 77.2% of reserves
Share of all official gold worldwide 1.0% of 36,535 t
World rank
#15 of 38 nations
Holdings
353.5 tonnes
Notional value
≈$47B (at ~$4,160/oz)
Trend
rising
Stored at
National Bank of Kazakhstan, Astana

Rank in context

Uzbekistan 416 Portugal 383 Kazakhstan Kazakhstan: 354 tonnes 354 Saudi Arabia 323 United Kingdom 310
Official holdings, tonnes

Kazakhstan sits at #15 in the global table of national gold holders, accumulating its reserve.

A producer’s privilege

Kazakhstan is one of the world’s significant gold-mining nations, and that geology defines its reserve. The National Bank of Kazakhstan (NBK) holds a priority right to purchase gold produced domestically — a pre-emptive claim on the output of the country’s mines before it can be exported. In practice, this means the central bank can build its reserve directly from national production, paid for in the local tenge.

The arrangement mirrors that of Uzbekistan next door, and it gives both Central Asian states a route to gold accumulation that bypasses the international market entirely. For resource-rich economies seeking to convert mineral wealth into monetary strength, owning the gold beneath your own soil is the most direct path of all.

The buy-and-sell rhythm

Kazakhstan’s reserve does not simply rise in a straight line. The NBK actively manages its holdings, accumulating domestic gold and then selling portions onto the world market — sometimes substantial amounts — to earn foreign currency, manage the tenge, or fund the state. As a result, its reported reserve oscillates, falling in periods of heavy selling and recovering as production is banked again.

This makes Kazakhstan, like Uzbekistan, an important swing supplier to the global gold market as much as a holder. Its decisions ripple outward through the physical trade routes and the broader balance of gold supply and demand. The reserve is best understood not as a fixed vault but as a dynamic buffer between the country’s mines and its monetary needs.

De-dollarization on the steppe

Beyond the producer logic, Kazakhstan’s gold buying reflects the same strategic currents shaping reserves across the developing world. As a large, oil-and-mineral-rich economy positioned between Russia and China, Kazakhstan has every incentive to reduce its dependence on any single foreign currency and to hold an asset that no other government can freeze.

The NBK has been part of the broad wave of emerging-market central-bank gold accumulation that has reshaped the market since the mid-2010s. For a country navigating a delicate balance among great powers, a substantial domestic gold reserve is both an economic tool and a quiet assertion of independence — value held at home, beyond the reach of distant capitals.

A high ratio, a producer’s balance sheet

Gold makes up more than three-quarters of Kazakhstan’s total reserves — a very high share that, as with other producer states, follows naturally from sourcing the metal at home. The reserve has trended higher over the long run even as it swings quarter to quarter, reflecting a deliberate national strategy of converting mineral output into monetary gold.

Kazakhstan’s case underlines a theme that runs through the whole gold-reserves story: who holds gold is shaped as much by geology as by geopolitics. For the great Western holders, gold is a legacy of the gold standard; for Kazakhstan, it is a renewable harvest from the ground — a reserve continually replenished from the same mines that drive the national economy.

Where the gold is held

The National Bank of Kazakhstan holds its gold domestically. As a producer that sources metal from its own mines, the country has historically kept its reserve onshore, refining and vaulting home-produced gold rather than acquiring it through foreign custodians.

Kazakhstan gold reserves — your questions

How much gold does Kazakhstan have?
Kazakhstan holds 353.5 tonnes (World Gold Council, as of May 2026) — around 77% of its total reserves, one of the higher ratios in the world.
How does Kazakhstan acquire its gold?
The National Bank of Kazakhstan has a priority right to buy gold produced by the country’s own mines, paid for in local currency — so it builds its reserve directly from domestic production rather than the world market.
Why does Kazakhstan’s reserve go up and down?
The central bank accumulates domestic mine output but also sells gold onto the world market to earn foreign currency and manage the tenge, so its reported holdings fluctuate while trending higher over time.
Is Kazakhstan de-dollarizing into gold?
In part. As a resource-rich economy between Russia and China, Kazakhstan has joined the broader emerging-market move to hold more gold and reduce dependence on any single foreign currency.
Where is Kazakhstan’s gold stored?
Domestically, by the National Bank of Kazakhstan. As a producer state, it has historically refined and vaulted home-produced gold onshore.

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

Kazakhstan 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
#15
Kazakhstan's rankof 38 nations
77.2%
in goldof its reserves

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