Gold Reserves to Scale · Western Europe
Germany’s gold, as a single cube
Stacked into one solid block, Germany’s entire official gold reserve would stand 5.6 m on a side — about one and a half storeys tall.
5.6 m
per side
How big is that, really?
Gold is extraordinarily dense — about two and a half times the density of iron — so 3,350 t of it, worth roughly $448 billion, collapses into a block just 5.6 m on each edge.
- roughly 2.6 shipping containers’ worth of metal
- about 1.7 double-decker buses by volume
Drawn to scale · 1.7 m person and 8 m house shown for reference
The holding
Germany’s gold reserve, in proportion
Germany's central bank holds about 3,350 tonnes of gold — among the five largest national gold hoards in the world. That is a number most people cannot picture, so picture this instead: gathered into one solid block, every bar of it would form a cube roughly 5.6 m on each side — about one and a half storeys tall. Gold is so dense (19.32 grams per cubic centimetre, about two and a half times the density of iron) that Germany's entire reserve, worth approximately $448 billion, would occupy only about 173 cubic meters.
Gold makes up 84.0% of Germany's official reserves — an unusually gold-heavy reserve — the signature of a central bank that treats bullion as the bedrock of its balance sheet, not a sideline. Measured against the world's monetary gold, that block is about 9.2% of all the bullion held by every central bank and treasury on the planet. Germany sits in Western Europe, where deep, long-standing reserves are the rule.
The metal is held at Frankfurt, New York & London. In recent years the holding has been held steady — neither bought nor sold in any size — a quiet vote of confidence in gold's role as a permanent reserve asset. Whether a reserve is growing or steady, its physical footprint barely changes: even doubling Germany's gold would only widen the cube by about a quarter — the defining paradox of the metal is that staggering value keeps collapsing into a remarkably small space.
It is worth holding the comparison in mind. The largest reserve on Earth, the United States', is a cube only 7.5 m per side; all the gold ever mined in human history fits inside a cube about 22 m per side — the size of a seven-story building. Germany's share of that 6,000-year inheritance is the block you see above.
Germany against the giants
Every block below is drawn at the same scale — Germany’s reserve, the largest national hoard (United States), and all the monetary gold on Earth.
Germany’s reserve in numbers
- 3,350 t
- Official gold
- #2 of 38
- World rank
- 9.2%
- Share of world gold
- 84.0%
- Gold as % of reserves
- 5.6 m
- Cube edge
- $448 billion
- ≈ Value
Want the history, the vaults and the strategy behind the number? Read the full Germany gold-reserves profile →
Explore other nations to scale
Some hold more gold than Germany, some far less — each rendered as its own cube.
-
United States 7.5 m cube
-
Italy 5.0 m cube
-
France 5.0 m cube
-
China 4.9 m cube
-
Russia 4.9 m cube
-
Switzerland 3.8 m cube
Reserve figures: World Gold Council · IMF IFS, as of May 2026. Cube computed from gold’s density (19.32 g/cm³). ≈ value at a $4,200/oz spot price baked June 2026.