Before placing your first gold order, it pays to build a vocabulary and conceptual foundation. Gold markets operate with their own terminology, pricing conventions, and dynamics that differ from stock or bond investing. This guide covers the core concepts that underpin every gold investment decision.
The Gold Spot Price
The spot price is the current market price for one troy ounce of pure gold for immediate delivery. It’s quoted in US dollars and fluctuates continuously during market hours based on trading on futures exchanges, primarily the COMEX in New York and the London Bullion Market.
The spot price is the global reference point for all gold pricing. Every form of gold investment — coins, bars, ETFs, futures — is priced relative to spot.
What Moves the Spot Price?
Gold prices respond to a complex mix of factors:
- Real interest rates: The single most reliable driver — when real rates fall, gold typically rises
- US dollar strength: Gold moves inversely to the dollar’s purchasing power
- Inflation expectations: Gold is seen as a store of value when inflation erodes fiat currency
- Geopolitical uncertainty: Fear-driven safe haven demand pushes gold up
- Central bank buying: Large-scale institutional purchases affect supply/demand balance
Troy Ounces vs. Regular Ounces

Gold is measured in troy ounces, not the avoirdupois ounces used for everyday objects.
| Measurement | Weight |
|---|---|
| 1 troy ounce (ozt) | 31.1035 grams |
| 1 regular ounce (oz) | 28.3495 grams |
| 1 troy pound | 12 troy ounces |
This distinction matters: when you see a spot price of “$4,200 per ounce,” that’s per troy ounce. When comparing products by weight, always confirm which unit is being used.
⚠ Warning
Never assume “ounce” means troy ounce, especially when buying from non-specialist sellers. A troy ounce is roughly 10% heavier than a standard ounce — getting this wrong on a large purchase can be an expensive mistake.
Gold Purity Standards
Gold purity is expressed in two ways:
Karats (used for jewelry):
- 24K = 99.9%+ pure
- 22K = 91.7% pure (used in coins like American Gold Eagle)
- 18K = 75% pure
Fineness (used for investment bullion):
- 999.9 or .9999 = 99.99% pure (“four nines fine”)
- 999 or .999 = 99.9% pure (“three nines fine”)
- 995 or .995 = 99.5% pure (LBMA minimum for Good Delivery bars)
Most investment-grade coins and bars are 999.9 fine. The American Gold Eagle is an exception at 22K (916.7 fine), but it still contains exactly 1 troy oz of gold — the remaining alloy makes it more durable.
Premiums: What You Pay Above Spot
When you buy physical gold, you always pay more than spot price. This markup is called the premium over spot.
Premiums exist because:
- Coins and bars must be minted or cast (fabrication cost)
- Dealers need to earn a profit
- Shipping and insurance add cost
- High-demand products command higher premiums
Typical premium ranges:
| Product | Premium Over Spot |
|---|---|
| 1 oz gold bar (major brand) | 1.5–3% |
| 1 oz gold coin (American Eagle, Maple Leaf) | 4–8% |
| Fractional coins (1/4 oz, 1/10 oz) | 8–20% |
| Pre-1933 US gold coins | 10–50%+ (includes numismatic value) |
Key insight: Larger bars have lower premiums than coins. Fractional coins have much higher premiums. Buy the largest practical denomination for the lowest cost per ounce.
✓ Pro Tip
Compare premiums across at least three dealers before buying. The same 1 oz American Gold Eagle can vary by 2-4% between dealers — on a $4,400 coin, that is $90-$175 in savings for five minutes of comparison shopping.
The Bid-Ask Spread
When selling gold, you’ll receive the bid price (what dealers will pay), not the spot price or the ask price (what they sell at). The difference is the bid-ask spread.
For liquid products like common 1 oz coins, spreads are typically 1–3%. For rare or less-liquid products, spreads can be much wider.
Round-trip cost (buying + selling premium + spread): typically 5–15% for physical gold coins. This means gold should be viewed as a medium to long-term holding — short-term trading in physical gold is expensive.
ℹ Note
If you need to trade gold frequently, ETFs are far more cost-effective than physical metal. Round-trip costs on ETFs are typically under 0.5%, compared to 5-15% for physical coins.
Gold Fineness and the Melt Value
The melt value of any gold item is its pure gold content × the spot price.
For a 22K (91.67%) 1 oz American Gold Eagle:
- Pure gold content = 1 troy oz (guaranteed by the US Mint despite the alloy)
- Melt value = 1 × spot price
For a 14K gold jewelry piece weighing 20 grams:
- Pure gold = 20g × 0.585 = 11.7 grams = 0.376 troy oz
- Melt value = 0.376 × spot price
Our Gold Value Calculator computes melt value automatically.
Liquidity: How Quickly Can You Sell?
Gold is one of the most liquid real assets in the world — but liquidity varies significantly by vehicle:
| Vehicle | Liquidity |
|---|---|
| Gold ETFs (GLD, IAU) | Instant during market hours |
| 1 oz American Gold Eagle | Same-day at any coin dealer |
| 1 oz gold bar (PAMP, Valcambi) | Same-day at most dealers |
| 100 oz gold bar | Requires a larger dealer |
| Pre-1933 gold coins | Specialty market; may take days |
| Gold futures | Instant but complex |
If you might need to access funds quickly, prioritize liquid products and vehicles.
Storage: Securing Physical Gold
Physical gold requires a storage solution before you buy. Three main approaches:
- Home storage — A quality safe bolted to the structure. Convenient but requires good operational security (tell no one).
- Bank safe deposit box — Low cost, but limited access hours and potential bank closure risk.
- Professional vault storage — Segregated vaulting with insurance, typically 0.1–0.5% annually. Best for larger holdings.
Never store gold at an address that’s connected to your online purchase history.
Central banks worldwide hold over 36,000 tonnes of gold in reserves. The US Federal Reserve holds the largest share at roughly 8,133 tonnes, stored primarily at Fort Knox and the New York Fed.
★ Important
Most homeowners insurance policies cover only $200-$250 in precious metals. If you store gold at home, you almost certainly need a separate rider or standalone precious metals policy to be properly insured.
Gold in a Portfolio Context
Gold’s primary portfolio role is as a non-correlated asset. Unlike bonds, which have become increasingly correlated with stocks in recent decades, gold’s correlation to equities remains near zero or negative.
This non-correlation provides true diversification: when your stock portfolio falls 30% in a market crash, gold has historically held its value or risen. This doesn’t eliminate losses, but it reduces portfolio-level volatility and maximum drawdown.
Research-supported allocation range: 5–20% of a portfolio allocated to gold is supported by academic research on risk-adjusted returns. Many institutional investors and family offices target 10–15%.
"Gold is a way of going long on fear. If people become more afraid, the price of gold goes up. But the real value is what it does for your portfolio when everything else is falling."— Portfolio strategy principle
Taxes on Gold Investment
In the United States, the IRS classifies gold as a “collectible”:
- Long-term capital gains taxed at a maximum 28% rate (vs. 20% for stocks)
- Short-term gains taxed as ordinary income
- This applies to physical gold, gold coins, and ETFs backed by physical gold
Gold held in an IRA (Traditional or Roth) grows tax-deferred or tax-free, making Gold IRAs an attractive option for long-term holders.
✓ Pro Tip
Holding gold ETFs inside a Roth IRA is one of the most tax-efficient ways to own gold. You avoid the 28% collectibles tax entirely, and qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free.
Next Steps
With these fundamentals in hand, you’re ready to go deeper:
- How to Invest in Gold — Choosing your vehicle and making your first purchase
- Types of Gold Investments — Detailed comparison of all gold investment forms
- Buying & Selling Gold Guide — Everything about finding and evaluating dealers