One of the less-discussed aspects of gold investing is the need for a liquidity plan — a deliberate structure for your gold holdings that ensures you can access funds when needed, whether for emergencies, rebalancing, or planned retirement distributions.

The Liquidity Challenge with Gold
Physical gold is highly liquid in normal conditions, but not instantly accessible the way a bank account is:
- Selling online requires shipping, waiting for wire transfer (1-3 business days)
- A local coin dealer provides same-day cash but at a lower price (below spot)
- Large amounts require more planning and may affect price
Gold ETFs are instantly liquid during market hours but require a brokerage account and involve settlement time (T+1 or T+2).
The Liquidity Tier Framework
Structure your gold holdings in tiers based on when you might need access:
Tier 1: Emergency Access (0–72 hours)
Vehicle: Small-denomination physical gold coins (1 oz or fractional) stored at home or nearby vault.
Purpose: Genuine emergency — medical, natural disaster, sudden travel, grid/system disruption.
Size: 1–3% of total gold holdings; perhaps $5,000–$15,000 in coins depending on your situation.
Access method: Local coin dealer, pawn shop (lower prices), private sale.
✓ Pro Tip
Keep your Tier 1 emergency coins in common, widely recognized denominations — American Gold Eagles and Canadian Maple Leafs sell fastest and with the smallest discount at local dealers.
Tier 2: Short-Term Access (1–5 business days)
Vehicle: Gold ETFs (IAU, GLDM) in a liquid brokerage account, OR physical gold at an online dealer (sell and receive wire transfer).
Purpose: Non-emergency financial needs — unexpected expenses, investment opportunities, tax payments.
Size: 20–30% of total gold holdings.
Access method: Sell ETF shares in brokerage account; transfer to bank.
Tier 3: Long-Term Holding (6+ months to sell)
Vehicle: Physical gold bars and coins in vault storage or safe deposit box; Gold IRA holdings.
Purpose: Long-term wealth preservation; retirement assets; crisis insurance.
Size: 60–75% of total gold holdings.
Access method: Arrange sale through dealer; Gold IRA distributions (subject to tax if Traditional).
A common liquidity split: 10% in emergency-access coins at home, 20% in liquid ETFs or online dealer accounts, and 70% in long-term vault or IRA storage. Adjust based on your personal risk tolerance and cash reserves.
Planning for Large Liquidity Events
Retirement Distributions
If you hold gold in a Traditional Gold IRA:
- You must begin RMDs at age 73
- Plan your distribution method (cash vs. in-kind) well in advance
- Consider gradually converting to physical gold outside the IRA before RMDs begin
For ETF-based gold in a regular IRA:
- RMDs are satisfied by selling ETF shares — simple and no tax complexity vs. physical
- Plan which gold to sell first (oldest purchases for tax lot purposes)
Rebalancing After Major Price Moves
If gold appreciates significantly, your allocation may exceed target:
- Identify which holdings to sell (ETF in taxable account? Physical? IRA?)
- Consider tax implications (collectibles rate applies to physical and ETF)
- Consider selling higher-premium products first (smaller coins, older products)
- Retain core physical position for crisis insurance
Estate Planning and Transfer
Physical gold requires specific planning for transfer:
- Document all holdings with serial numbers, weights, and storage locations
- Store documentation separately from the gold itself
- Include gold in your estate plan explicitly
- Beneficiaries need to know where the gold is and how to access it
See our Estate Planning Guide for details.
★ Important
Store your gold inventory documentation separately from the gold itself. If both are in the same safe and it’s compromised, your beneficiaries may have no record of what was held or where to find additional holdings.
Practical Liquidity Rules
Rule 1: Never be 100% in illiquid gold Maintain at least 10–20% of your gold in liquid vehicles (ETFs or easily-sold coins).
Rule 2: Keep emergency coins accessible A small amount of common, recognizable coins (American Gold Eagles, Maple Leafs) should be easily retrievable without planning.
Rule 3: Know your dealers in advance Don’t wait for a crisis to research who buys gold in your area. Know your local dealers and their current buy prices before you need to sell.
Rule 4: Maintain a liquid cash buffer Your gold should not be your emergency fund. Maintain 3-6 months of expenses in cash or money market funds. Gold is for wealth preservation, not daily liquidity.
⚠ Warning
Gold is not a replacement for a cash emergency fund. Selling gold under pressure — especially physical gold at a local dealer — often means accepting 5-15% below spot price. Keep your cash reserves fully funded before building a gold position.
Rule 5: Document everything Keep a secure inventory of all gold holdings — quantities, denominations, storage locations. Review and update annually.
Selling Gold Efficiently
When it’s time to sell:
For ETFs: Simply sell through your brokerage account. Use limit orders in volatile markets.
For physical gold:
- Check current spot price and calculate expected value
- Get quotes from 2-3 sources (online dealer, local dealer, competitor)
- Choose highest offer considering convenience and timing
- Use insured shipping (USPS Registered Mail or dealer’s preferred carrier)
- Allow 1–2 weeks for complete transaction
ℹ Note
When selling physical gold, always get quotes from at least 2-3 sources. The difference between the best and worst offer can easily be 3-5% of the total value.
For Gold IRA gold:
- Contact your custodian
- Direct them to sell specific holdings
- Proceeds remain in the IRA (tax-free for Roth; deferred for Traditional) until distribution
Further Reading
- Portfolio Allocation Strategies — Sizing your gold position
- Selling Your Gold — Complete guide to selling physical gold
- Estate Planning — Planning for gold transfer at death