LIVE Gold/oz-- Silver/oz-- Platinum/oz-- Palladium/oz-- XAU/USD-- LIVE Gold/oz-- Silver/oz-- Platinum/oz-- Palladium/oz-- XAU/USD--
Reference · Gold Bullion Coins

Gold Coins

Complete reference guides to the six most-traded gold bullion coins in the world. Live prices, purity details, tax implications, premium comparisons, and trusted dealers. Updated for 2026.

Current Gold Spot Price
$4,526.97 /oz
Last known price · All coin values calculated from this
United States
American Gold Eagle

The official U.S. gold bullion coin since 1986. Backed by the U.S. government, the most widely traded gold coin in America. Saint-Gaudens’ Lady Liberty design.

Purity
91.67% (22K)
1 oz Value
$4,526.97
First Issued
1986
IRA Eligible
Yes
View Eagle →
Canada
Canadian Gold Maple Leaf

World’s first 99.99% pure gold bullion coin (1979). Royal Canadian Mint. Advanced security features including Bullion DNA and micro-engraved year mark.

Purity
99.99% (24K)
1 oz Value
$4,526.97
First Issued
1979
IRA Eligible
Yes
View Maple Leaf →
South Africa
South African Krugerrand

The world’s first modern gold bullion coin (1967). Pioneered private gold ownership. Lowest premiums of any major coin. Distinctive copper alloy hue.

Purity
91.67% (22K)
1 oz Value
$4,526.97
First Issued
1967
IRA Eligible
No
View Krugerrand →
United Kingdom
British Gold Sovereign

Modern era since 1817 with design dating to 1489. UK Capital Gains Tax exempt. Pistrucci’s iconic St. George and the Dragon design.

Purity
91.67% (22K)
Value
$1,065.65
Gold Content
7.32 g
UK CGT
Exempt
View Sovereign →
United Kingdom
Gold Britannia

Royal Mint flagship since 1987, upgraded to 99.99% in 2013. The only coin that’s BOTH UK CGT-exempt AND U.S. IRA eligible. Four security features.

Purity (2013+)
99.99% (24K)
1 oz Value
$4,526.97
UK CGT
Exempt
IRA Eligible
Yes (2013+)
View Britannia →
Austria
Vienna Philharmonic

Europe’s #1 selling gold coin since 1996. Austrian Mint. Unique orchestral instrument design. Lowest premiums of any 24K coin. The world’s smallest gold coin in 1/25 oz size.

Purity
99.99% (24K)
1 oz Value
$4,526.97
First Issued
1989
IRA Eligible
Yes
View Philharmonic →

Quick Comparison

All six coins side-by-side. Sort criteria varies by buyer goal.
Coin Country Year Purity IRA UK CGT Best For
Gold Eagle USA 1986 22K Yes No U.S. IRAs, durability
Maple Leaf Canada 1979 24K Yes No Pure gold + IRAs
Krugerrand S. Africa 1967 22K No No Lowest premiums
Sovereign UK 1817 22K No Yes UK investors, history
Britannia UK 1987 24K (2013+) Yes (2013+) Yes UK+US tax efficient
Philharmonic Austria 1989 24K Yes No European market, low premiums

How to Choose

All six coins are excellent bullion grades — they all contain real gold backed by a national mint. The right choice depends on your specific goals.

For U.S. IRA Buyers

Choose any 24K coin: Maple Leaf, Britannia (2013+), Philharmonic, or American Gold Eagle (the only 22K exception). The Eagle gets the U.S. government brand recognition; Maple Leaf and Philharmonic offer pure 24K at competitive premiums.

For UK Investors

Sovereigns and Britannias are CGT-exempt because they’re UK legal tender. Sovereigns have 200+ years of history; Britannias are modern 24K coins. Both VAT-exempt as investment gold.

For Lowest Premium

Krugerrand wins — typically 1.5-3% premium on 1 oz coins, lowest of any major bullion coin. Not IRA eligible, but excellent for personal holding. Philharmonic is the cheapest 24K option.

For Pure Gold Per Dollar

Krugerrand and Philharmonic compete for lowest cost per ounce of pure gold. Both have minimal premiums. Differences come down to brand preference and IRA needs.

For Gifts and Collecting

Sovereigns and Philharmonics offer the smallest sizes (down to 1/25 oz for Philharmonic = ~$190 in gold). Both have rich cultural backstories that elevate them above pure investment coins.

For International Diversification

Mix coins from multiple jurisdictions. Holding Eagles, Maple Leafs, and Philharmonics spreads political/currency risk across U.S., Canada, and Austria. Each is recognized worldwide.

Key Terminology

Quick reference for terms used across all coin pages:

Troy Ounce

Standard measure for precious metals — 31.10 grams. Different from a regular “avoirdupois” ounce (28.35g). All gold prices quoted in troy ounces.

Spot Price

Current market price of pure gold per troy ounce. Set globally on commodity exchanges (London, New York, Shanghai, Tokyo). Updates continuously during trading hours.

Premium

The amount charged above spot price. Covers minting, dealer overhead, and profit. Smaller coins have higher percentage premiums. Krugerrands have the lowest premiums (~2%); proof coins can have 40-60%.

Bullion vs. Proof

Bullion coins are struck for investment — gold content is what matters. Proof coins are mirror-polished collectible versions with higher premiums (40-60% above spot). For investment, always buy bullion.

IRA Eligibility

U.S. IRS rules require gold coins in retirement accounts to be 99.5%+ pure. American Eagles get a 22K exception; all others must be 24K. UK and EU don’t have this restriction.

Melt Value

What a coin would be worth if melted into pure gold — its gold content × spot price. The minimum a dealer should pay you. Don’t accept less than 90% of melt at any dealer.

Breaking -- Loading... --
Spot prices shown reflect previous trading session close