The Muruntau colossus
Uzbekistan’s gold story begins in the Kyzylkum Desert, at Muruntau — one of the largest open-pit gold mines in the world. The vast crater, worked since the Soviet era, has made Uzbekistan one of the top gold-producing nations on Earth, and gold one of its most important exports. For a doubly landlocked Central Asian economy, the metal is a primary source of hard-currency earnings.
That geological endowment shapes everything about Uzbekistan’s reserve. Unlike most central banks, which must buy gold on the international market with foreign currency, the Central Bank of Uzbekistan can acquire it directly from domestic production. The reserve is, in effect, monetized mine output — a stream of newly refined gold flowing from the desert into the national vault.
A central bank that mines its own reserve
This producer’s privilege gives Uzbekistan’s reserve an unusual rhythm. The central bank buys domestic gold in local currency, then manages the balance between holding the metal and selling it abroad to earn the dollars the economy needs. As a result, the headline reserve figure can swing markedly from quarter to quarter — rising as production is accumulated, falling when gold is sold to fund imports or defend the currency.
This makes Uzbekistan one of the most active traders of its own reserve among major holders, and a significant swing supplier to the global market. When Uzbekistan and its neighbor Kazakhstan sell, that gold enters the same physical flows that feed refineries and vaults from Dubai to Shanghai. The reserve is less a static hoard than a working inventory at the head of the supply chain.
Opening to the world
For much of its post-Soviet history Uzbekistan was an opaque, tightly controlled economy, and its gold dealings were largely invisible to outsiders. That changed after 2017, when a wave of reforms under a new government liberalized the currency, opened the economy to investment, and brought the country into the international financial mainstream.
Part of that opening was transparency about gold. Uzbekistan began reporting its reserves to the IMF and engaging with the World Gold Council, so that its enormous, producer-driven holdings finally appeared in the global rankings. The reforms reframed gold from a state secret into a visible national asset — and revealed a country whose reserve, relative to its size, is more concentrated in the metal than any other.
The highest ratio in the world
At more than 88%, gold makes up a larger share of Uzbekistan’s total reserves than of any other nation’s — higher even than the United States or Germany. That extraordinary ratio is partly a matter of strategy and partly a matter of geology: when your reserves are fed by domestic mines, gold naturally dominates.
The concentration is both a strength and a vulnerability. It gives Uzbekistan a reserve of unimpeachable, counterparty-free value, deeply aligned with the global move toward gold. But it also ties the national balance sheet tightly to a single, volatile asset — and to the fortunes of a mining sector centered on one desert pit. For a frontier economy betting on gold, Muruntau is both the foundation and the risk.
Where the gold is held
The Central Bank of Uzbekistan holds its gold domestically in Tashkent. Because the reserve is sourced from the country’s own mines rather than purchased on world markets, almost all of it has always been held onshore — there has been little need for the foreign-vault arrangements that shape the reserves of Western nations.