Gold Reserves · Asia

Singapore flagSingapore Gold Reserves

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.

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

194
tonnes
official holdings
#24
world rank
of 38 nations
6.4%
of reserves
held in gold
≈$26B
notional value
at ~$4,160/oz

Singapore at a glance

Gold as a share of total reserves 6.4% of reserves
Share of all official gold worldwide 0.5% of 36,535 t
World rank
#24 of 38 nations
Holdings
193.8 tonnes
Notional value
≈$26B (at ~$4,160/oz)
Trend
rising
Stored at
Monetary Authority of Singapore

Rank in context

Belgium 227 Azerbaijan 200 Singapore Singapore: 194 tonnes 194 Iraq 175 Algeria 174
Official holdings, tonnes

Singapore sits at #24 in the global table of national gold holders, accumulating its reserve.

A surprise from a careful manager

Singapore is not a country given to dramatic gestures with its reserves. The Monetary Authority of Singapore is among the most respected and conservative reserve managers in the world, overseeing one of the largest pools of foreign reserves relative to the size of any economy. So when, in 2021, MAS increased its gold holdings for the first time in roughly two decades, it was noticed.

The purchase lifted Singapore’s reserve meaningfully in a single step, and further additions followed in the years after. Coming from such a measured institution — one with no obvious need to make a statement — the move carried weight precisely because it was so out of character. It was less a political signal than a considered judgment: that gold deserved a larger place in even the most sophisticated reserve portfolio.

A very low ratio

Even after its buying, gold makes up only around 6% of Singapore’s total reserves — among the lowest ratios of any nation in the rankings. That reflects the sheer scale of Singapore’s foreign-currency holdings, accumulated through decades as a trade and financial entrepôt at the center of Asian commerce.

The low ratio frames Singapore’s gold buying as the careful diversification of a vast portfolio rather than a wholesale embrace of the metal. For a financial hub whose prosperity depends on open markets and the free flow of capital, gold is a prudent ballast — a small, stable allocation within an enormous, professionally managed reserve, not a flight from the dollar of the kind seen in Russia or China.

The signal in the discipline

Singapore’s buying matters for what it says about the breadth and seriousness of the gold trend. This is not an emerging economy hedging against crisis or a state at odds with the West; it is a wealthy, stable, deeply integrated financial center whose entire model rests on the smooth functioning of global markets. When such an institution chooses to hold more gold, it speaks to gold’s appeal as a core reserve asset rather than a fringe hedge.

MAS made its reasoning plain enough: gold adds resilience and diversification to a reserve portfolio in an uncertain world. That a manager as disciplined and unsentimental as Singapore’s reached that conclusion lends the broader central-bank buying wave a particular credibility. It is one thing for a sanctioned state to buy gold out of necessity; it is another for the world’s most careful reserve manager to buy it out of judgment.

Gold at the heart of Asian finance

Singapore’s role in gold extends beyond its own reserve. The city-state has worked to position itself as a hub for the physical gold trade and storage in Asia, building vaulting infrastructure and bullion-market connections to complement its broader financial ambitions. In holding more gold itself, MAS aligns the national reserve with that wider strategy.

The result is a reserve that is small in gold terms but outsized in significance. Singapore’s 194 tonnes sit at the intersection of disciplined reserve management, a low-ratio portfolio with room to grow, and a financial center deliberately deepening its ties to gold. Few holdings of this size are watched as closely — because few are managed by an institution whose judgment the rest of the market trusts as much.

Where the gold is held

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) holds the national gold reserve as part of its official foreign reserves. As a global financial hub, Singapore manages a large and professionally run reserve portfolio, within which gold is a small but rising allocation.

Singapore gold reserves — your questions

How much gold does Singapore have?
Singapore holds 193.8 tonnes (World Gold Council, as of May 2026) — only about 6% of its total reserves, one of the lowest ratios among major holders.
When did Singapore buy gold?
In 2021 the Monetary Authority of Singapore increased its gold holdings for the first time in around two decades, with further additions in the years since.
Why is gold such a small share of Singapore’s reserves?
Singapore holds an enormous pool of foreign-currency reserves as a global trade and financial hub, so gold is a small — though deliberately growing — allocation within that large portfolio.
Why does Singapore’s gold buying matter?
Because it comes from one of the world’s most disciplined and respected reserve managers, with no need to make a political statement — lending credibility to gold’s appeal as a core reserve asset rather than a crisis hedge.
Where is Singapore’s gold held?
By the Monetary Authority of Singapore, as part of its professionally managed official foreign reserves.

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

Singapore 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
#24
Singapore's rankof 38 nations
6.4%
in goldof its reserves

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