From afterthought to ambition
For most of the post-communist era, Poland’s gold reserve was an afterthought — around 100 tonnes, a static legacy holding that drew little attention. That changed abruptly under central-bank governor Adam Glapiński, who made gold accumulation a signature national policy.
The pivot began in 2018–2019, when the NBP bought roughly 125 tonnes, more than doubling the reserve to 228 tonnes. It did not stop there. Across 2023, 2024 and 2025 Poland bought gold at a ferocious pace, pushing its holdings toward 580 tonnes and beyond — a near-sixfold increase in a handful of years that has made it, repeatedly, the single largest official buyer in the world. Few central banks have ever rebuilt a reserve so quickly or so deliberately.
Sovereignty on the frontier
Poland’s buying cannot be understood apart from its geography. As a NATO and EU frontline state bordering both Ukraine and Belarus, Poland experiences geopolitical risk not as a chart on a screen but as a fact across the border. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 turned an abstract argument for gold into a visceral one.
Glapiński has been explicit about the logic. Gold, he has argued, is an asset that holds its value even amid wars, financial crises and the collapse of confidence in other instruments — and that no foreign government can freeze or revoke. For a country with painful historical memories of occupation and lost sovereignty, a large, partly home-stored gold reserve is a tangible guarantee of independence. It is the same sanctions-and-security logic driving buyers across the developing world, sharpened by Poland’s position on the map.
Bringing the gold home
The security rationale also drove one of the most theatrical episodes in modern reserve management. In 2019 the NBP repatriated 100 tonnes of gold from the Bank of England to Poland, transporting it in a secret, heavily guarded operation that Polish officials later publicised as a point of national pride.
The message was unmistakable: Poland wanted its gold not just owned but held, physically, within its own borders and under its own protection. As the reserve has ballooned, the question of how much to store at home versus in London has only grown more pointed. Poland’s trajectory mirrors the broader repatriation instinct seen from Amsterdam to Mumbai — but pursued with a speed and openness that reflect just how seriously Warsaw takes the matter.
The template buyer
Poland has become the archetype of the modern central-bank gold buyer. Its reserve is still only around 30% of total reserves — well below the 70–80% of the old Western holders — and Glapiński has spoken of pushing gold toward 20% and beyond as a deliberate target, implying years of further buying ahead.
That combination — a clear strategic rationale, an explicit target, ample room to grow, and the political will to act — makes Poland the clearest living example of the forces reshaping the gold market. Where the United States sits on a static legacy hoard and Japan opts out entirely, Poland shows what conviction-driven accumulation looks like in real time. It is, as much as any nation, the face of the record central-bank buying that has rewritten gold’s demand picture — and on current evidence, it is not finished.
Where the gold is held
The National Bank of Poland (NBP) holds its gold partly in Warsaw and partly at the Bank of England. In 2019 it repatriated 100 tonnes from London to Poland in a high-profile convoy, and it has signaled an intent to bring a growing share of its fast-expanding reserve onto home soil.