Gold has been used as a store of value for thousands of years. Modern NZ investors have several practical options to access gold — from buying physical coins to investing in gold ETFs. Here’s what you need to know.
Easiest way for NZ investors: US gold ETF (GLD or IAU via Tiger Brokers or IBKR) — liquid, no storage cost, low fee. Physical gold is available from ABC Bullion, Gold Smart, or New Zealand Mint. Most evidence-based investors hold 0–5% in gold as a portfolio hedge, not as a primary investment. Gold pays no dividends and has underperformed equities over most long periods. FIF applies to gold ETFs above $50,000 NZD cost price.
Why (and Why Not) to Hold Gold
Arguments for gold in a NZ portfolio
Inflation hedge (weak): Gold has historically held purchasing power over very long time horizons (decades to centuries). Over shorter periods (5–10 years), the relationship with inflation is inconsistent.
Currency hedge: Gold is priced in USD globally. If NZD weakens, your NZD-denominated gold holdings rise even if gold’s USD price is unchanged. For NZ investors with largely NZD income and assets, some USD-denominated exposure (which gold provides) can be beneficial.
Crisis hedge: Gold tends to rise during financial crises, geopolitical stress, and banking system fears. It has low or negative correlation with equities in severe downturns (2008, COVID initial crash, 2022 Ukraine invasion).
No counterparty risk: Physical gold cannot go bankrupt, default, or be inflated away by a central bank. In tail-risk scenarios (banking system failures), physical gold holds value independently.
Arguments against gold in a NZ portfolio
No income: Gold pays no dividends, interest, or rent. A $100,000 gold holding earns $0 in cash flow. Compare to equities (3–5% dividend yield), bonds (4–5% yield), or property (4% net rental yield).
Underperforms equities long-term: Over most 10–30 year periods, diversified equities have significantly outperformed gold in real (inflation-adjusted) returns. Gold’s “opportunity cost” is high.
Storage and insurance costs: Physical gold requires secure storage — a home safe, bank vault, or specialist storage (typically 0.5–1.0% p.a.). Gold ETFs have management fees (0.25–0.40% p.a.) — lower than physical, but still a drag.
Volatile: Despite its “safe haven” reputation, gold can drop 20–40% in value over 1–3 years (it did in 2011–2015, and other periods).
Ways to Buy Gold in NZ
Option 1: Physical gold (coins and bars)
Where to buy:
- New Zealand Mint (nzmint.com) — NZ-based, government-linked, produces NZ gold coins. Premium: 3–8% over spot price.
- Gold Smart NZ (goldsmart.co.nz) — NZ gold buyer/seller, Christchurch-based. Competitive buy/sell spreads.
- ABC Bullion (abcbullion.com.au) — Australian gold dealer shipping to NZ. Institutional-grade bars, competitive pricing for larger amounts ($10,000+).
- BullionStar — ships to NZ, Singapore-based vault option.
Typical premiums over spot (May 2026 approximate):
| Product | Premium over spot |
|---|---|
| 1 oz gold coin (Britannia, Maple Leaf) | 4–7% |
| 1 oz gold bar (LBMA-certified) | 2–4% |
| 100g gold bar | 1.5–3% |
| 1 kg gold bar | 0.5–1.5% |
Spot gold price (May 2026): Approximately USD $3,200/oz ≈ NZD $5,500/oz (exchange rate dependent).
Storage options:
- Home safe: One-time cost, insurance required (most home insurance excludes precious metals — check or add a rider)
- Bank safe deposit box: $200–$500/year at major NZ banks; no insurance included
- Allocated storage (NZ Mint, BullionStar): ~0.50% p.a. of gold value; gold held in your name at a specialist facility
Option 2: Gold ETFs (most practical for most investors)
Gold ETFs hold physical gold in allocated vaults and issue shares that track the gold price. No storage, no insurance, instantly liquid.
NZX-listed option:
- Smartshares Gold ETF (GOLD): NZX-listed, NZD-denominated, backed by physical gold held by Royal Mint (UK). Fee: 0.40% p.a. Available via Sharesies, Tiger Brokers. Taxed as NZ PIE? No — Smartshares GOLD is not a PIE fund. FIF applies if your holding exceeds $50,000 NZD cost price.
US-listed options (via Tiger Brokers, IBKR, Stake):
- iShares Gold Trust (IAU): 0.25% p.a. fee — lowest cost gold ETF. US-listed, FX needed (NZD → USD).
- SPDR Gold Shares (GLD): 0.40% p.a. — world’s largest gold ETF by assets, very liquid.
- VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX): Invests in gold mining companies, not physical gold — higher volatility, different risk profile.
FIF tax note: US-listed gold ETFs above $50,000 NZD cost price are subject to FIF — 5% of opening value taxed at your marginal rate, regardless of whether you sell. Factor this into the total holding cost.
Option 3: Gold stocks (gold mining companies)
Gold mining companies on the ASX (Newmont, Evolution Mining, Northern Star) or NYSE (Barrick Gold, Newmont) give indirect gold exposure. Mining stocks are typically 2–3× more volatile than gold itself — they amplify gold price moves. Not recommended for investors seeking a portfolio hedge.
Option 4: Gold savings accounts
Some international banks (not commonly offered by NZ banks) offer gold savings accounts — a cash account denominated in gold grams. Not widely available in NZ as of 2026.
How Much Gold to Hold
Most mainstream financial research suggests gold allocations of 0–10% for most long-term investors:
| Portfolio approach | Gold allocation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Pure equity investor | 0% | Equities generate income and outperform long-term |
| Moderate diversifier | 3–5% | Crisis hedge, portfolio volatility reduction |
| Inflation/crisis focused | 5–10% | Higher weight for tail-risk protection |
| Prepper/wealth preservation | 10–20% | Non-mainstream; significant opportunity cost |
The Ray Dalio All-Weather approach includes 7.5% gold and 7.5% commodities as inflation hedges. This is a specific portfolio construction philosophy — not universal advice.
Gold Tax Treatment in NZ
Physical gold: IRD treats gold as property. If purchased with intent to sell at a profit, gains are taxable as income (same as shares). Long-term holders (not frequent traders) have a stronger argument for non-taxability — but there is no statutory capital gains exemption. GST does not apply to investment gold (>99.5% purity, LBMA certified bars and coins are GST-exempt).
Gold ETFs (NZX-listed, e.g., Smartshares GOLD): Dividends/distributions taxable at marginal rate. If held above $50,000 NZD cost price, FIF may apply. Not a PIE fund.
US gold ETFs (GLD, IAU): Non-PIE. FIF applies above $50,000 NZD cost price threshold.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is physical gold a good hedge against NZ economic collapse? Physical gold is the ultimate “outside the system” asset — it holds value independently of any bank, government, or currency. For genuine tail-risk scenarios (banking system failure, hyperinflation), physical gold is one of the few assets that provides this. Most NZ investors don’t need this protection, but it explains why some hold a small amount of physical gold.
Where is the safest place to store gold in NZ? For larger amounts (>$10,000): allocated storage at New Zealand Mint or a specialist vault. For small amounts: a quality in-wall safe (not cheap portable safes) at home, with home insurance that explicitly covers precious metals.
Can I hold gold in KiwiSaver? Not directly. No KiwiSaver fund in NZ offers gold as a holding. Some balanced or diversified KiwiSaver funds may hold commodity exposure indirectly (e.g., gold mining stocks), but this is minimal.