Gold Reserves · Western Europe

Italy flagItaly Gold Reserves

Italy holds the third-largest gold reserve on Earth — 2,451.8 tonnes that the country has refused to sell for decades, even at the depths of its debt crises.

World Gold Council · IMF IFS · holdings as of May 2026

2,452
tonnes
official holdings
#3
world rank
of 38 nations
80.6%
of reserves
held in gold
≈$328B
notional value
at ~$4,160/oz

Italy at a glance

Gold as a share of total reserves 80.6% of reserves
Share of all official gold worldwide 6.7% of 36,535 t
World rank
#3 of 38 nations
Holdings
2,451.8 tonnes
Notional value
≈$328B (at ~$4,160/oz)
Trend
stable
Stored at
Rome, with reserves at the NY Fed & BIS

Rank in context

United States 8,134 Germany 3,350 Italy Italy: 2,452 tonnes 2,452 France 2,437 China 2,313
Official holdings, tonnes

Italy sits at #3 in the global table of national gold holders, holding steady on its reserve.

A hoard that was never spent

Italy’s 2,451.8 tonnes place it third in the world and second in Europe, behind only Germany — a remarkable position for an economy that has spent much of the past three decades wrestling with high public debt. Through every fiscal squeeze, every spread crisis, every change of government, the gold has stayed put.

That constancy is not an accident. The Banca d’Italia accumulated the bulk of its reserve during the post-war decades, when Italy’s industrial export economy ran surpluses that were settled partly in gold. Since the 1960s the holding has barely moved. Italy did not join the wave of European central-bank gold sales in the 1990s and 2000s, and it has resisted every domestic temptation to monetize the metal — making it one of the purest examples of gold treated as a permanent, untouchable reserve rather than a tradable asset.

Who actually owns the gold?

The most distinctive chapter in Italy’s gold story is a constitutional one. For years a politically charged question simmered beneath the surface: does the gold belong to the Banca d’Italia, or to the Italian state — and could a government therefore sell it to plug a budget hole or fund spending?

The issue came to a head in 2019, when figures in the governing coalition floated the idea of tapping the reserve. The episode prompted an unusually direct intervention from the European Central Bank, which guards the independence of national central banks and the principle that reserves are not a piggy bank for fiscal policy. Italian lawmakers ultimately moved to affirm that the gold is held and managed by the Banca d’Italia in its capacity as a monetary authority — not an asset the Treasury can simply liquidate. The clash crystallised a tension that runs through the whole story of central-bank gold: the metal’s value makes it perpetually tempting to politicians, and its monetary role makes spending it perpetually dangerous.

Gold as a pillar of credibility

With gold accounting for roughly 81% of Italy’s total reserves, the holding is central to the country’s financial credibility — and, by extension, to confidence in Italian sovereign debt. A large, unencumbered gold reserve is a signal of solvency and stability that matters disproportionately for a heavily indebted member of a shared currency union.

That is precisely why the Banca d’Italia has guarded the reserve so jealously. In a monetary union where Italy cannot print its own currency, the gold functions as a national balance-sheet anchor that belongs to Rome alone. It cannot be inflated away by decisions in Frankfurt, and it stands behind the country’s commitments in a way that euro-denominated assets cannot. For a nation whose borrowing costs are acutely sensitive to market sentiment, that quiet reassurance is worth far more than the metal’s book value.

The European context

Italy’s gold cannot be read in isolation. Together, the major euro-area economies — Germany, Italy, France, the Netherlands and the rest — hold a combined reserve that would top the global table, exceeding even the United States. Italy is a load-bearing pillar of that collective European gold position.

That shared weight matters as the euro area navigates inflation and policy uncertainty. Europe’s central banks, scarred by twentieth-century currency collapses, retain a cultural attachment to gold that the data make plain in their very high reserve ratios. Italy, holding more than four-fifths of its reserves in metal, embodies that conviction as clearly as any nation — a country that has been poor and rich, stable and unstable, and has concluded through all of it that the gold is the one asset worth keeping.

Where the gold is held

The Banca d’Italia keeps a little under half of the national gold — roughly 1,100 tonnes — in its own vaults beneath the Palazzo Koch in Rome. The remainder is held abroad at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Bank of England, and the Bank for International Settlements in Switzerland, a distribution dating back to the post-war settlement of trade balances.

Italy gold reserves — your questions

How much gold does Italy have?
Italy holds 2,451.8 tonnes (World Gold Council, as of May 2026) — the third-largest national reserve in the world and roughly 81% of its total reserves.
Has Italy ever sold its gold reserves?
No. Unlike many European peers in the 1990s and 2000s, Italy declined to sell, and it has resisted repeated domestic proposals to monetize the gold during its debt crises.
Can the Italian government sell the gold to pay debt?
Not easily. The gold is held by the Banca d’Italia as a monetary authority, and its independence is protected by EU law — a point underlined when the ECB pushed back on a 2019 proposal to tap the reserve.
Where is Italy’s gold stored?
A little under half is in the Banca d’Italia’s vaults beneath the Palazzo Koch in Rome; the rest is held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Bank of England, and the Bank for International Settlements.
Why does Italy hold so much gold relative to its economy?
It accumulated the reserve through post-war trade surpluses and never sold. For a heavily indebted member of the euro, the gold is a national balance-sheet anchor and a signal of solvency that the country has chosen to preserve.

Methodology & sources. Holdings are official sector gold reserves reported to the IMF and compiled by the World Gold Council, in tonnes and as a share of total reserves, as of May 2026. Notional US-dollar values are illustrative, computed at a reference price of ~$4,160 per troy ounce (1 tonne = 32,150.7 oz) and will move with the gold price. The IMF and ECB are supranational institutions and are excluded from national rankings.

The Bigger Picture

Italy is one piece of a global gold realignment.

Central banks are buying gold at the fastest pace in half a century. Track who holds what — and why it matters for every investor.

36,535
Tonnes worldwideofficial reserves
#3
Italy's rankof 38 nations
80.6%
in goldof its reserves

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