The Long View · Gold Price History

768 Years of Gold

Eight centuries of price, purchasing power, and the moments that mattered — from a medieval English mint to the records of today.

1257 — 1717 · 460 years

The Medieval Value of Gold

Medieval & Early ModernClassical Gold StandardInterwar ChaosBretton WoodsThe BreakThe Free-Float Era $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 1257 1717 1914 1944 1971 1982 2025 Newton Fixes Gold Executive Order 6102 The Nixon Shock The 1980 Peak The 2011 Peak Above the 1980 High
Medieval & Early Modern

Eight Centuries of Constancy

For nearly five centuries before Newton, an ounce of gold bought roughly the same goods. Debased coin, plague and New-World bullion came and went — gold’s real value barely moved.

≈ Flat real value held for 460 years
Read more: Gold Through History
Classical Gold Standard

Newton’s Two-Century Line

In 1717 Isaac Newton fixed gold at £4.25 an ounce. The price then held nearly flat for almost two hundred years — gold wasn’t an investment, it was the definition of money.

£4.25 Newton’s price — fixed for 197 years
Read more: Gold as Money
Interwar Chaos

The Order Breaks

War broke the standard. Britain’s 1925 return to gold and the Depression finished it; in 1933 Roosevelt outlawed private gold and devalued the dollar 41% overnight.

−41% the dollar’s 1934 gold devaluation
Read more: The Gold Standard & Bretton Woods
Bretton Woods

$35, by Treaty

A new order pegged the dollar to gold at $35 and the world to the dollar. For 27 years the price was a line drawn by treaty — as inflation quietly eroded it.

$35 fixed by treaty for 27 years
Read more: Central Banks & Gold
The Break

Nixon Closes the Window

On 15 August 1971 Nixon closed the gold window. Set free, the price erupted — from $35 to $850 by 1980, the most violent revaluation gold had ever seen.

$35→$850 in nine years, 1971–1980
Read more: The Dollar–Gold Relationship
The Free-Float Era

The Modern Excursions

The floating era is gold’s wildest: the 1980 spike, a twenty-year bear market, the climb past $1,900, and in 2025 a new real high above the 1980 peak.

$3,448 the 2025 average — a new real high
Read more: Gold in the Free-Float Era

Scroll to walk through eight centuries

Each era equal-width · time not to scale

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Read any year, in dollars or in silver

The full eight-century sweep at a glance. Hover or drag across the ribbon to read any single year, and switch the measure between real dollars and ounces of silver.

768 years of the gold price Pre-Newton (Medieval & Early Modern)Classical Gold Standard $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 20× 40× 60× 80× $10$100$1,000 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000 1257 2025 Newton Fixes Gold Executive Order 6102 The Nixon Shock The 1980 Peak The 2011 Peak Above the 1980 High
Real value (2025 $, purchasing power) Nominal price (log scale)
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The Golden Constant

$324

Real value at the 1971 low

By the end of Bretton Woods, gold's inflation-adjusted value had been squeezed to its lowest in centuries — held artificially at $35.

$2,394

The 1980 real peak

Freed to float, gold erupted. In nine years its real value rose more than sevenfold — then began a 45-year real bear market, not surpassed until 2025.

$3,448

Above the 1980 high, at last

In 2025, in real inflation-adjusted terms, gold finally surpassed its 1980 peak — ending the longest real bear market in monetary history.

Five monetary regimes

1257–1717

Pre-Newton (Medieval & Early Modern)

Before a fixed standard — gold priced by mints and markets across a half-millennium of kings, plagues and debasements.

1717–1914

Classical Gold Standard

Newton fixes gold at £4.25/oz. For two centuries the price barely moves — the bedrock of the world’s monetary order.

1914–1944

Interwar Chaos

War, suspension of convertibility, the Depression and confiscation. The classical order breaks down.

1944–1971

Bretton Woods

Gold fixed at $35/oz, the dollar pegged to gold and the world pegged to the dollar — for 27 years.

1971–present

The Free-Float Era

Nixon closes the gold window. Gold floats freely for the first time in modern history — and soars.

Go deeper

Methodology & sources. Gold price: Officer & Williamson, The Price of Gold, 1257–Present (MeasuringWorth) — British official price 1257–1790 (converted to USD at the 1791-fixed ratio, $4.4444/£), US official price 1791–1949, and the London market price 1950–2025. Inflation-adjusted values use the US CPI from 1774 and the UK Retail Price Index before it, spliced to join seamlessly — so the real ribbon spans the full record. Annual figures; pre-1700 prices are historical reconstructions. Details on the methodology page.