Gold Reserves · Latin America

Mexico flagMexico Gold Reserves

Mexico holds 120 tonnes — a reserve built in a single 2011 purchase, and later the subject of an awkward question: was the gold really there?

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

120
tonnes
official holdings
#33
world rank
of 38 nations
6.6%
of reserves
held in gold
≈$16B
notional value
at ~$4,160/oz

Mexico at a glance

Gold as a share of total reserves 6.6% of reserves
Share of all official gold worldwide 0.3% of 36,535 t
World rank
#33 of 38 nations
Holdings
120.1 tonnes
Notional value
≈$16B (at ~$4,160/oz)
Trend
stable
Stored at
Banco de México — much held at the Bank of England

Rank in context

Sweden 126 South Africa 126 Mexico Mexico: 120 tonnes 120 Qatar 115 Greece 115
Official holdings, tonnes

Mexico sits at #33 in the global table of national gold holders, holding steady on its reserve.

Reserves over time

2010: 7 t 2012: 125 t 2026: 120 t 7 t 120 t 2010 2026
Mexico official gold holdings, tonnes · World Gold Council · IMF IFS

The 2011 purchase

Mexico’s gold reserve is, in essence, the product of a single decision. For years the Banco de México held almost no gold — a few tonnes, a rounding error in its reserves. Then, in early 2011, it bought around 100 tonnes in one of the largest single central-bank purchases of the era, transforming its holding overnight into one of Latin America’s largest.

The timing drew scrutiny: 2011 was a year of soaring gold prices, and Mexico bought near what would prove a multi-year peak before a subsequent correction. But the strategic logic was sound — diversifying a reserve heavily weighted toward the U.S. dollar, fitting for an economy so deeply tied to its northern neighbor. The purchase marked Mexico’s arrival as a meaningful gold holder, and it has held the position broadly steady since.

Is the gold really there?

Mexico’s reserve later became the center of an unusually public controversy — not about how much gold it held, but about whether anyone had checked. Investigations and audits revealed that the overwhelming majority of Mexico’s gold sat at the Bank of England in London, and that much of it had been acquired and held without the Banco de México having physically inspected, bar by bar, the specific gold it owned.

The revelation touched a nerve. Lawmakers and commentators asked pointed questions about whether Mexico truly possessed identifiable, allocated gold or merely a claim on a pool held abroad, and demands grew for the central bank to verify or repatriate the reserve. The episode echoed the suspicions that swirl around Fort Knox and drove the European repatriations — a reminder that gold held in a distant vault rests, ultimately, on trust, and that the public’s instinct is to want to see it.

A low ratio, a dollar economy

Gold makes up under 7% of Mexico’s total reserves — one of the lower ratios among major holders. Mexico maintains large foreign-currency reserves, overwhelmingly in dollars, reflecting an economy bound tightly to the United States through trade, investment, remittances and the shared border.

That low ratio places Mexico, like Brazil, among the large emerging economies with substantial reserves but modest gold allocations — nations with the latent capacity to buy far more should they choose to diversify further. For now, Mexico’s single great gold purchase stands largely alone, a one-time move rather than a sustained program, leaving the country a significant but lightly-allocated holder.

The custody question lingers

Mexico’s experience crystallises a question that hangs over every nation storing gold abroad: what does it mean to ‘own’ gold you have never seen, held in another country’s vault? For most of the era of trust in the international financial system, the answer seemed not to matter. The Bank of England’s word was enough.

But in an age of repatriations and sanctions, the question has sharpened, and Mexico’s reserve sits squarely within it. The country has weighed verification and repatriation against the convenience and liquidity of London storage, navigating the same trade-off that confronts holders from Germany to Romania. Its 120 tonnes are a case study in the modern dilemma of gold custody: the metal is only as reassuring as one’s confidence that it is truly, identifiably, there.

Where the gold is held

The Banco de México holds the large majority of its gold abroad, principally at the Bank of England in London, with only a small share in Mexico. That custody arrangement became a matter of public controversy when it emerged how little of the gold had been physically inspected.

Mexico gold reserves — your questions

How much gold does Mexico have?
Mexico holds 120.1 tonnes (World Gold Council, as of May 2026) — under 7% of its total reserves.
When did Mexico buy its gold?
Mostly in a single purchase of around 100 tonnes in early 2011, which transformed its previously tiny holding into one of Latin America’s largest — though it bought near a price peak.
Why was there controversy over Mexico’s gold?
Audits revealed that most of Mexico’s gold was held at the Bank of England and that much of it had not been physically inspected bar by bar, prompting public questions about whether the gold was truly verified and calls to repatriate it.
Where is Mexico’s gold stored?
The large majority is at the Bank of England in London, with only a small share held domestically by the Banco de México.
Is Mexico still buying gold?
Not significantly. Its 2011 purchase was largely a one-time move, and the reserve has been broadly stable since at around 120 tonnes.

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

Mexico 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
#33
Mexico's rankof 38 nations
6.6%
in goldof its reserves

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