The Complete Guide to Buying Physical Gold from Dealers
Physical gold purchases from online dealers follow a structured process that, once understood, becomes straightforward and secure. This comprehensive guide walks you through every step—from creating your account to receiving and verifying your gold—providing the practical knowledge needed to execute purchases confidently. Whether you’re buying your first gold coin or making a substantial investment, understanding these procedures protects your money and ensures a smooth transaction.
The gold buying process involves seven distinct phases: account setup, product selection, order placement, payment execution, price confirmation, shipping, and post-delivery verification. Each phase has specific requirements, timelines, and best practices that vary somewhat between dealers. Major dealers like JM Bullion, APMEX, and SD Bullion have refined these processes over millions of transactions, creating systems that balance security with convenience.

Part 1: Account setup and registration
Creating your dealer account
Opening an account with a major gold dealer takes approximately five minutes and requires minimal information. Most dealers allow purchases through guest checkout, but creating a registered account provides significant advantages: order tracking, saved payment methods, price alerts, and faster future purchases.
Standard information required for account creation:
- Full legal name (first and last)
- Email address (serves as your username)
- Password meeting security requirements
- Phone number (for order notifications)
- Shipping and billing addresses (entered at checkout)
JM Bullion automatically creates an account with your first order if you haven’t registered beforehand. APMEX and SD Bullion require manual registration but make the process simple. All dealers require customers to be at least 18 years old to purchase.
The account creation process itself doesn’t require identity documents. You won’t need to upload a driver’s license or utility bill simply to register. This changes only when certain thresholds are reached or specific payment methods are used.
Identity verification requirements
Gold dealers implement Know Your Customer (KYC) verification based on transaction size and payment method rather than applying blanket requirements to all customers. This threshold-based approach means most purchases proceed without document submission.
When dealers require additional verification:
| Dealer | Verification Trigger | Documents Required |
|---|---|---|
| SD Bullion | Purchases over $10,000 | Government-issued photo ID |
| APMEX | Account reaches preset thresholds | Driver’s license or ID |
| JM Bullion | Large or high-risk orders | Varies by circumstance |
For most retail purchases under $10,000, your payment method serves as your identity verification. Credit card companies, banks processing wire transfers, and financial institutions handling ACH transfers have already performed KYC on you—dealers rely on this existing verification rather than duplicating it.
Wire transfer orders at most dealers require a credit card on file even though you’re paying by wire. This serves two purposes: identity verification and enforcement of the market loss policy (protecting the dealer if you fail to complete the transaction).
Address verification procedures
Credit card orders face the strictest address verification. JM Bullion requires the shipping address to exactly match your credit card billing address for orders under $5,000. This prevents fraud but can create issues if your billing address differs from where you want the gold delivered.
For larger credit card orders, dealers employ additional verification programs including Verified by Visa and MasterCard SecureCode. These programs add a layer of authentication during checkout, requiring you to verify your identity through your card issuer.
Bank wire and ACH orders face less rigid address requirements since these payment methods require direct access to your bank account—a strong indicator of legitimate identity.
Setting up payment methods
Major dealers accept multiple payment methods, and setting up your preferred option varies by type:
Credit and debit cards are entered during checkout. Most dealers accept Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover. SD Bullion notably does not accept American Express. Your card information can be saved to your account for future purchases.
ACH and eCheck payments use Plaid, a secure third-party verification system. During checkout, you’ll connect your bank account through Plaid’s interface, which verifies your account ownership without sharing your login credentials with the dealer. Only checking accounts are accepted—not savings accounts. Once linked, your bank account remains connected for future purchases.
Wire transfer setup doesn’t require advance configuration. When you select wire transfer as your payment method, the dealer emails complete wiring instructions after you place your order. You’ll receive the dealer’s bank name, account number, routing number, and your unique order reference number to include with the wire.
Cryptocurrency payments process through BitPay at most dealers. No advance setup is needed—during checkout, BitPay generates an invoice with a wallet address for that specific transaction.
Account approval timelines
Standard retail accounts receive instant approval at all major dealers. You can register and begin shopping immediately. However, certain circumstances trigger manual review:
- First-time credit card orders over $5,000
- Orders flagged by automated fraud detection
- Requests to ship to addresses not matching payment information
- Accounts reaching dealer-defined thresholds
When manual review is required, expect 24 to 48 business hours for approval, though some reviews complete within hours. JM Bullion’s documentation suggests reviews may extend to “a few hours to a couple of business days” in complex cases.
Guest checkout versus registered accounts
All major dealers offer guest checkout, allowing purchases without creating an account. Here’s how the options compare:
Guest checkout advantages:
- Faster initial purchase
- Minimal information stored
- No password to remember
- Option to create account after purchase
Registered account advantages:
- Complete order history and tracking
- Saved shipping addresses (multiple addresses possible)
- Saved payment methods for faster checkout
- Price alert notifications when gold reaches target prices
- Access to loyalty programs (APMEX Bullion Club)
- Streamlined selling process if you later sell to the dealer
- Portfolio tracking tools (APMEX app)
For ongoing gold investment, registered accounts prove more practical. The initial five-minute setup saves time on future purchases and provides valuable tracking capabilities.
Loyalty and rewards programs
APMEX operates the most developed loyalty program in the industry, the Bullion Club, which automatically enrolls new account holders at the Select tier. Higher tiers unlock through purchase activity:
| Tier | Requirements | Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Select | Free with registration | Base pricing, order tracking |
| Premier | 10+ orders or $10,000 spent | Enhanced pricing, priority support |
| Elite | 50+ orders or $25,000 spent | Better pricing, dedicated support |
| VIP/VIP+ | Higher thresholds | Best pricing, exclusive offers |
Other dealers don’t operate formal tiered programs but may offer repeat customer benefits or volume pricing negotiations for established buyers.
Part 2: Order placement mechanics
Browsing and selecting products
Gold dealer websites organize products systematically, making navigation straightforward once you understand the structure. Products are categorized first by metal type (gold, silver, platinum, palladium), then by form (coins, bars, rounds), and often further by weight, mint, and series.
Product pages typically display:
- High-resolution images (front and back)
- Metal content, weight, and dimensions
- Purity (fineness) specification
- Mint or manufacturer information
- Quantity-based tiered pricing
- Availability status (in-stock, pre-sale, out of stock)
- Estimated ship date for pre-sale items
APMEX carries over 40,000 products from more than 90 mints and refineries worldwide, offering the broadest selection among major dealers. JM Bullion and SD Bullion carry smaller but still comprehensive inventories focused on popular investment products.
Understanding product conditions
Gold products are sold in various conditions, each carrying different premiums. Understanding these terms helps you select appropriate products for your investment goals.
Brilliant Uncirculated (BU): Coins that have never entered circulation, retaining their original mint luster and sharp details. BU coins grade between MS60 and MS70 on the Sheldon Scale. They’re produced efficiently—struck twice from hand-finished dies by automated equipment—resulting in high quality at reasonable premiums. BU represents the sweet spot for most investors: recognizable, liquid, and fairly priced.
Proof coins: Premium collectible coins produced through a specialized process for exceptional visual appeal. Proof coins are struck three to six times with polished dies, hand-fed into the press at lower pressure. This creates the distinctive “cameo” effect—frosted designs against mirror-like fields. Production is limited to approximately 50 coins per hour per press, compared to much faster rates for standard coins. Proof coins command significantly higher premiums and are better suited for collectors than pure investors.
Bullion grade: Mass-produced coins intended for investment, with value derived primarily from metal content. These may show minor imperfections like bag marks from automated handling. Premiums are lowest among coin options, making bullion grade ideal for investors focused purely on gold content.
Mint State (MS): A grading designation indicating a coin has never circulated. The scale runs from MS60 (heavily marked but uncirculated) to MS70 (perfect). “Gem Brilliant Uncirculated” refers to coins grading at least MS65.
Proof-like: BU coins struck with polished dies but not to full proof standards. They exhibit some mirror characteristics without the full cameo effect, sitting between standard BU and proof in both appearance and premium.
Real-time pricing mechanics
Gold prices fluctuate constantly during market hours—spot prices can change multiple times per minute during active trading. Online dealers receive professional price feeds that update their website pricing in real-time when markets are open (approximately 69% of weekly hours).
The pricing formula: Spot Price + Premium = Retail Price
Premiums vary based on several factors:
- Product type: Bars typically carry lower premiums than coins; proof coins carry the highest
- Quantity purchased: Volume discounts reduce per-ounce premiums
- Payment method: Wire, ACH, and check payments receive approximately 4% discount versus credit cards
- Market conditions: Premiums increase during high demand (price spikes, economic uncertainty)
When browsing, understand that displayed prices assume the cash/check discount at most dealers. Credit card prices run approximately 4% higher. The exact price you’ll pay depends on your payment method selection at checkout.
How price locks work
Price locking is perhaps the most critical concept in gold purchasing. Given that gold prices change constantly, dealers must establish the exact moment when your price becomes fixed.
JM Bullion price lock: Your price locks when you click “Checkout Now” from your shopping cart. You then have 10 minutes to complete the checkout process. If you exceed 10 minutes, a pop-up appears allowing you to accept updated prices or cancel. Note that prices in your cart before clicking checkout are not locked—they continue updating with the market.
APMEX price lock: Prices lock at the moment you submit your completed order. During normal market conditions, you then have 5 business days (for orders under $25,000) or 3 business days (for orders over $25,000) to make payment. During extreme volatility, APMEX has reduced checkout time to as little as 5 minutes.
SD Bullion price lock: Prices lock upon order confirmation. Payment windows are:
- Bank wire: 3 business days (72 business hours)
- Check/money order: 7 business days
- Credit card/PayPal/Crypto: Immediate at order placement
What happens when price locks expire
Failing to complete payment within the specified window triggers consequences that protect dealers from market risk:
APMEX penalties: Market loss fee (difference between your locked price and current market price if gold has dropped) plus the greater of $50 or 5% of order total.
JM Bullion penalties: The credit card on file is charged for any market loss.
SD Bullion penalties: Penalty fees, order cancellation, or both. Account may face restrictions for future trading.
Critical point: If gold prices have risen since you locked your price, you don’t receive that gain—it remains the dealer’s property. The market loss policy only flows one direction: protecting the dealer when prices drop.
⚠ Warning
Price lock deadlines are strictly enforced. Missing a payment window can trigger market loss fees of 5% or more plus the price difference if gold has dropped. Have your payment method ready before clicking checkout.
Order minimums and quantity requirements
Minimum purchase requirements vary by dealer and payment method:
| Dealer | Minimum Order | Free Shipping |
|---|---|---|
| JM Bullion | None (varies by payment) | $199+ |
| APMEX | $299 standard | $199+ |
| SD Bullion | None standard | $199+ (sometimes $499) |
| Bullion.com | 1 oz gold | $199+ |
Payment-specific minimums:
JM Bullion:
- Bank wire: $500 minimum
- Paper check: $100 minimum
- Credit card: No minimum
- Klarna: $35 minimum
SD Bullion:
- Bank wire: $500 minimum (required for orders over $20,000)
- Other methods: No minimum
APMEX:
- IRA accounts: $2,000 minimum
- Buyback: $1,000 minimum
Combining products in single orders
You can combine different gold products—coins, bars, different weights, even different metals—in a single order. All major dealers support mixed carts without restrictions.
Important caveat: If your order contains both in-stock items and pre-sale items, the entire order ships together once the pre-sale items become available. This means in-stock items wait until everything is ready.
Recommendation: Place separate orders for in-stock items and pre-sale items if you want your available products shipped immediately. Orders cannot typically be combined or split after placement—dealers process orders through automated systems that don’t accommodate post-placement modifications.
The checkout process step by step
JM Bullion checkout procedure:
- Add products to cart, selecting quantities for each
- Review cart—select payment method here (this affects displayed prices but doesn’t lock them)
- Click “Checkout Now” to lock prices for 10 minutes
- Enter or confirm shipping and billing addresses
- Enter credit card information (required even for wire/check orders)
- Select shipping option
- Review order summary
- Accept terms and conditions
- Click “Finish and Place My Order”
- Receive confirmation with order number and (for wire/check) payment instructions
APMEX checkout procedure:
- Browse and add products to cart
- Select payment method (cash/check options show 4% discount)
- Submit order—price locks at this moment
- Receive confirmation email with order number and locked prices
- For wire/check orders: Submit payment within deadline
- QuickShip® orders begin processing next business day
SD Bullion checkout procedure:
- Add products to cart
- Enter shipping information and select shipping method
- Enter billing and payment information
- Review complete order
- Place order
- Receive confirmation email with locked prices
- Payment processes according to method selected
At JM Bullion, your price locks when you click "Checkout Now" -- but you have only 10 minutes to complete the process. Exceeding this window means accepting updated prices or canceling. Have your payment details ready before starting checkout.
Part 3: Payment methods and execution
Wire transfer procedures
Wire transfers represent the gold standard for purchasing precious metals—they clear immediately, enabling fastest shipping, and qualify for cash discounts. The tradeoff is additional effort and typically a bank fee.
Domestic wire transfer process:
- Place your order online, selecting “Bank Wire” as payment
- Receive detailed wiring instructions via email confirmation
- Take instructions to your bank or initiate through online banking
- Include your order reference number in the wire’s memo/notes field
- Wire must be received within dealer’s deadline (typically 1-3 business days)
Information needed for wire:
- Dealer’s bank name
- Dealer’s account number
- Routing number (ABA number)
- Your order reference number
Timing requirements by dealer:
- JM Bullion: Received within 1 business day
- APMEX: Received within 3 business days (same-day wires only—not ACH)
- SD Bullion: Received within 72 business hours
- Hero Bullion: Submitted within 24 hours
Costs: Most banks charge $10-$30 for domestic outgoing wires. Some banks offer free wires for premium account holders. Online-only banks sometimes charge less.
Critical distinction: Wire transfers and ACH transfers are not the same thing. Wires settle same-day; ACH takes days. If a dealer specifies wire, do not send ACH—it won’t arrive in time and may trigger late fees.
International wires: Available for international customers but may pass through intermediary banks that deduct additional fees. SD Bullion passes these intermediary charges to customers.
ACH and eCheck payments
ACH (Automated Clearing House) transfers offer the cash discount without visiting a bank, making them popular for moderate-sized orders. The tradeoff is a clearing period before shipping.
How ACH/eCheck works:
- Select ACH/eCheck at checkout
- Connect your bank through Plaid (secure verification) or manually enter routing/account numbers
- Only checking accounts accepted—not savings
- Funds are immediately debited from your account
- Dealer holds order for clearing period before shipping
Clearing times by dealer:
| Dealer | Processing Time | Hold Period |
|---|---|---|
| JM Bullion | 1 business day | 3-5 business days |
| SD Bullion | Same day | 3-5 business days |
| Hero Bullion | Same day | 5-10 business days |
| APMEX | Not accepted | N/A |
Important: APMEX does not accept ACH for purchase orders—wire transfers only for electronic bank payments.
Advantages of ACH:
- 4% cash discount (same as wire)
- No bank visit or wire fee
- Faster than mailing checks
- Bank account saved for future purchases
Disadvantages:
- Immediate fund withdrawal from your account
- 3-10 day hold before shipping
- Limited to checking accounts
- Some banks incompatible with Plaid
Credit and debit card payments
Cards offer maximum convenience—instant processing with no additional steps—at the cost of approximately 4% higher prices.
Why cards cost more: Merchant processing fees in the precious metals industry average 3.5-4%, covering base processing, fraud screening, and service charges. Dealers pass these costs to card-paying customers rather than absorbing them or averaging across all customers.
Card limits by dealer:
| Dealer | Maximum Card Purchase |
|---|---|
| JM Bullion | $250,000 |
| APMEX | Subject to per-order review |
| SD Bullion | $5,000 |
| Hero Bullion | $20,000 |
Processing time: Typically 24-48 hours, though some orders receive manual fraud review that extends this timeframe. Once cleared, orders enter the shipping queue.
Address matching: Credit card orders require billing address verification. For maximum security, many dealers require shipping address to match billing address, at least for orders under certain thresholds.
Cards accepted: Visa, MasterCard, and Discover are universal. JM Bullion and APMEX accept American Express; SD Bullion does not.
Cryptocurrency payments
Cryptocurrency offers a middle ground: better than credit card pricing with relatively fast processing, plus the privacy some buyers prefer.
Accepted cryptocurrencies:
- Bitcoin (BTC): Universal acceptance
- Bitcoin Cash (BCH): APMEX, SD Bullion
- Ethereum (ETH): SD Bullion, APMEX
- Litecoin (LTC): SD Bullion
How crypto payments work:
- Select cryptocurrency at checkout
- BitPay generates an invoice with a specific wallet address
- You have 15 minutes to complete payment
- Send exact amount from your wallet
- Wait for blockchain confirmation (minutes to hours)
- Order enters shipping queue
Cryptocurrency discounts:
| Dealer | Crypto Discount |
|---|---|
| JM Bullion | 3% |
| SD Bullion | 3% |
| Hero Bullion | 2% |
| APMEX | No stated discount |
Limits:
- JM Bullion: Up to $2,000,000
- SD Bullion: Up to $250,000
- Hero Bullion: Up to $20,000
Important considerations:
- Refunds issued in crypto at current USD conversion rate
- Must use BitPay-compatible wallet
- Cannot change payment method after selecting crypto
- 15-minute payment window is firm—expired invoices require new checkout
Paper check procedures
Checks offer the full 4% discount but with the longest timeline to shipping. For patient buyers making larger purchases, the savings can be substantial.
Process:
- Place order, selecting “Paper Check” or “Personal Check” as payment
- Credit card still required on file (for identity verification and market loss enforcement)
- Write check payable to the dealer
- Include your order number in the memo line
- Mail to address provided in confirmation email
Mailing deadlines:
| Dealer | Postmark Deadline | Receipt Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| JM Bullion | Within 1 day | Within 10 days |
| SD Bullion | Within 72 hours | Within 7 days |
| APMEX | Within 24 hours | Not specified |
| Hero Bullion | Within 1 day | Not specified |
Hold periods after receipt:
All paper payments—personal checks, cashier’s checks, and money orders—require hold periods before shipping. Even cashier’s checks are held due to sophisticated counterfeiting:
- JM Bullion: 3-5 business days
- APMEX: 4-6 business days
- SD Bullion: 3-5 business days
- Hero Bullion: 5-10 business days
Total timeline: Expect 6-13+ business days from order placement before shipping begins.
PayPal and digital payment methods
PayPal availability and limits vary significantly between dealers:
| Dealer | PayPal Limit |
|---|---|
| JM Bullion | $250,000 |
| APMEX | Varies by order tier |
| SD Bullion | $500 |
| Hero Bullion | Not accepted |
PayPal specifics:
- Clears immediately upon completion
- Ships only to PayPal-verified addresses
- No cash discount (treated like credit card pricing)
- Occasional manual fraud review may delay processing
Other digital options:
- Google Pay: JM Bullion ($250,000 max)
- Apple Pay: JM Bullion on Apple devices/Safari only ($250,000 max)
- Klarna: JM Bullion ($35 min, $30,000 max)—buy-now-pay-later option
Payment method comparison: making the right choice
| Scenario | Best Payment Method | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Fastest shipping | Bank wire | Clears same day |
| Lowest cost | Wire, ACH, or check | 4% discount |
| Maximum convenience | Credit card | Instant, no extra steps |
| Large order ($50K+) | Bank wire | Higher limits, fastest, discount |
| Small order under $1,000 | ACH/eCheck | Discount without wire fee |
| Privacy priority | Cryptocurrency | Limited identity exposure |
| No bank access | Credit card or PayPal | Immediate electronic payment |
Example cost comparison for $10,000 purchase:
| Payment Method | Effective Price |
|---|---|
| Wire/ACH/Check | $10,000 (base price) |
| Cryptocurrency | ~$10,100 (1% more than cash) |
| Credit Card/PayPal | ~$10,400 (4% more than cash) |
On a $10,000 purchase, paying by wire instead of credit card saves approximately $400.
✓ Pro Tip
For purchases over $1,000, the wire transfer or ACH discount almost always outweighs the convenience of credit cards. The 4% savings compounds significantly over an investment lifetime — on $100,000 in cumulative purchases, you save $4,000 simply by choosing your payment method wisely.
Part 4: Order confirmation and price lock management
Understanding order confirmation
After completing checkout, you’ll receive an order confirmation email within minutes. This email serves as your binding agreement with the dealer and contains critical information.
Confirmation email contents:
- Order confirmation number
- Locked prices for each item
- Order subtotal, shipping cost, and total
- Payment method selected
- For wire/check: Complete payment instructions with dealer’s banking information
- Expected shipping date range
- Link to track order status in your account
Save this email. You’ll need the order number for any customer service inquiries, and the pricing documentation is essential for your records. For wire orders, the email contains the exact information your bank needs.
When orders become finalized
Order finalization differs by payment method:
Immediate finalization (credit card, PayPal, cryptocurrency): Your order is final the moment you complete checkout. Payment processes automatically, and the order enters the fulfillment queue.
Conditional finalization (wire, ACH, check): Your order is placed and prices are locked, but completion depends on receiving payment within the specified window. The order becomes fully binding once payment arrives.
During the conditional period, the dealer has reserved your products at the locked price. If you fail to complete payment, the order cancels and products return to inventory—but you may face market loss fees if prices have dropped.
Cancellation and modification policies
Once an order is placed, modification options are extremely limited:
JM Bullion: Orders cannot be modified. To change anything, you must cancel and place a new order. Cancellation triggers market loss policy.
APMEX: Orders cannot be changed after placement. A cancellation option may appear in your order history approximately one hour after placement. Market loss fees and cancellation charges apply.
SD Bullion: Orders cannot be canceled after confirmation without cancellation charges and potential market loss differential.
The universal rule: If you need to change something, contact customer service immediately. The longer you wait, the more complicated and costly changes become.
Handling back-orders and pre-sale items
Pre-sale items are products available for purchase at current prices but not yet physically in the dealer’s possession—typically new releases or items awaiting delivery from mints.
How pre-sales work:
- Product page shows estimated ship date
- You purchase at today’s price
- Price remains locked regardless of future market movement
- Product ships when dealer receives inventory
Back-order policies:
- APMEX: May delay delivery up to 28 calendar days from expected ship date
- SD Bullion: Entire order held until pre-sale items arrive
- JM Bullion: Order delayed until pre-sale item ready
- US Gold Bureau: Up to 30 days delay possible
APMEX AlertMe! feature: For out-of-stock products with no restocking date, you can sign up for notifications when items become available.
Best practice: Separate in-stock and pre-sale items into different orders if you want your available products shipped immediately.
Part 5: Delivery and shipping
Shipping timeframes by dealer
Shipping speed depends on your payment method and the dealer’s processing systems:
JM Bullion:
- Credit card/PayPal/Wire: Ships within 1 business day of cleared payment
- Check/eCheck: Ships after 4-6+ day hold period
- Transit time: 1-10 business days after shipping
APMEX:
- QuickShip® eligible orders (credit card, PayPal, crypto, wire): Next-business-day processing
- Check/eCheck: 4-6 day hold before shipping
- Pre-33 Gold or jewelry: Ships within 3 business days
- Transit time: 1-10 business days
SD Bullion:
- Standard processing: 1-3 business days after payment clears (normal conditions)
- FedEx expedited typically delivers within 2 days after leaving warehouse
- Transit time: 5-10 business days total
Provident Metals:
- Bank wire/credit card/Bitcoin/money orders: 5-10 business days
- Personal check: Minimum 5-day hold plus processing
Shipping carriers
| Dealer | Carriers Used |
|---|---|
| JM Bullion | USPS, FedEx, UPS, armored car (large orders) |
| APMEX | USPS Registered Mail, UPS |
| SD Bullion | USPS, UPS, FedEx |
| Provident Metals | USPS, UPS, FedEx |
Carrier selection depends on order size, weight, destination, and service level chosen. JM Bullion operates from a Las Vegas airport fulfillment center, allowing direct loading onto carrier aircraft for reduced delays.
Insurance coverage
All shipments from major dealers are fully insured through specialized precious metals insurance policies. Standard carrier insurance (FedEx, UPS) explicitly excludes precious metals coverage, so dealers maintain separate policies.
SD Bullion insurance limits by shipping method:
- First Class USPS: Up to $10,000
- USPS Priority: Up to $25,000
Critical insurance conditions:
- Coverage ends when carrier obtains signature or delivery confirmation
- Must notify dealer within 48 hours of delivery for damage/tampering claims
- Must notify within 7-30 days for lost package claims (varies by dealer)
- USPS “Lost in Transit”: No tracking update for 5+ calendar days
- UPS “Lost in Transit”: No tracking update for 3+ calendar days
Insurance becomes void if:
- Package left without signature
- Delivered to third party (neighbor, building manager, UPS Store)
- Customer previously waived signature requirement with carrier
- Shipped to mail locker or drop-off location
★ Important
Insurance coverage ends the moment the carrier obtains a signature or delivery confirmation. Never authorize a carrier to leave precious metals packages without your personal signature, and never redirect delivery to a UPS Store or neighbor.
Signature requirements
| Dealer | Signature Policy |
|---|---|
| JM Bullion | Required on orders over $1,000; optional for smaller orders |
| APMEX | Optional at checkout; included with expedited shipping |
| SD Bullion | Recommended; insurance void without signature |
| Provident Metals | Required on orders over $1,000 |
| US Gold Bureau | Required on all orders |
Signature requirements exist to maintain insurance coverage. Without proof of delivery to the actual customer, insurance claims cannot be filed if packages go missing.
Discreet packaging practices
All major dealers use discreet packaging that conceals contents:
JM Bullion:
- Nondescript parcels with inconspicuous labels
- No indication of contents on exterior
- Return address uses pseudonym (not “JM Bullion”)
- Products individually wrapped to prevent scratches
- Packing peanuts for cushioning
- All packing filmed under HD cameras for quality assurance
APMEX:
- Plain brown or white corrugated boxes
- No external indication of contents
- Discrete interior wrapping
SD Bullion:
- Shipped under pseudonym return address
- No external indication of contents
- Secure interior packaging
The discreet approach serves security purposes—packages don’t advertise their valuable contents to handlers or anyone who might observe delivery.
Shipping costs and free shipping thresholds
| Dealer | Free Shipping Threshold | Below-Threshold Fee |
|---|---|---|
| JM Bullion | $199+ | Varies |
| APMEX | $199+ | $9.95 |
| SD Bullion | $199+ | $9.95 flat rate |
| Provident Metals | $199+ | $9.95 |
| Bullion Express | $149+ | Varies |
Expedited shipping is available at additional cost from all dealers. During volatile market periods, SD Bullion has temporarily raised its free shipping threshold to $499.
PO Box delivery
| Dealer | PO Box Policy |
|---|---|
| JM Bullion | Yes, via USPS only |
| APMEX | Yes, via USPS Registered Mail only |
| SD Bullion | Yes, up to $10,000 value |
| Provident Metals | Yes, but insurance may not cover |
FedEx and UPS cannot deliver to PO Boxes. If you select expedited shipping for a PO Box address, dealers typically switch automatically to USPS Priority.
International shipping
| Dealer | International? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| JM Bullion | No | US only |
| APMEX | Yes | Canada ~$34.95 + $0.15/oz; EU $49.95+ |
| SD Bullion | Yes | Select countries; wire, card, or Bitcoin only |
| Provident Metals | No | US only |
International considerations:
- Physical address required (no international PO Boxes)
- Full customs declaration required
- Customer responsible for duties, taxes, and VAT
- Longer transit times
- Different carrier handling in destination country
Wire Transfer
Fastest processing, full 4% discount, same-day clearing. Best for orders over $5,000 where the $20-35 bank fee becomes negligible.
ACH / eCheck
Same 4% discount as wire with no bank fee. Trade-off is 3-10 day hold before shipping. Ideal for orders $1,000-$5,000.
Credit Card
Maximum convenience with instant processing, but costs 4% more. Provides chargeback protection. Best for smaller or first-time orders.
Cryptocurrency
2-3% discount at most dealers, fast processing, enhanced privacy. 15-minute payment window is strict. Best for crypto holders seeking gold exposure.
Part 6: Receiving and verifying your order
Inspecting packages upon delivery
The moment of delivery is critical for maintaining your insurance protection and ensuring you can file claims if needed.
Before signing:
- Inspect the package exterior for damage, tears, holes, stains, water damage, or dents
- Check that packaging tape and seals appear intact
- Look for signs of tampering or resealing
- If the package appears damaged or tampered: Refuse delivery
Refusing a damaged package sends it back to the dealer for inspection. This is your safest option when something appears wrong—you maintain full protection.
If you’ve already accepted a damaged package:
- Save all packaging immediately
- Contact dealer within 48 hours
- Do not discard any materials until claim is resolved
Documentation before opening
Before opening your package, create a documentation record:
- Photograph the exterior from all sides
- Photograph the shipping label clearly
- Document any damage or irregularities with close-up photos
- Consider video recording the unboxing process
- Open carefully—don’t cut through tape in ways that might damage seals or contents
This documentation protects you if discrepancies emerge. A timestamped photo or video showing the sealed package provides evidence that any problems existed before you opened it.
ℹ Note
Video recording your unboxing creates powerful evidence for insurance claims and dispute resolution. Store the footage alongside your purchase documentation for at least 30 days after delivery.
Verifying contents against your order
Once opened, systematically verify everything:
- Count all items against the packing slip and your order confirmation
- Check each product against its description (weight, type, mint, year)
- Inspect for damage (scratches, dents, discoloration)
- Verify packaging (tubes, assay cards, capsules should be intact)
- For bars: Confirm serial numbers match documentation if provided
- Document any discrepancies in writing with photographs
Weight verification
For serious investors, verifying weight adds another layer of assurance:
- Use a precision scale accurate to at least 0.1 grams
- Standard 1 oz gold coins should weigh approximately 31.1 grams (1 troy ounce)
- American Gold Eagles (22-karat) weigh approximately 33.93 grams due to copper alloy
- Gold bars list exact weight on the bar and assay card
Weight discrepancies beyond normal tolerances warrant immediate dealer contact.
What to do if products don’t match
If your delivery doesn’t match your order:
- Stop unpacking once you notice the discrepancy
- Document everything with photos showing what you received
- Contact dealer customer service immediately by phone
- Do not use or further handle the incorrect products
- Retain all packaging and materials
Most discrepancies result from picking errors at the warehouse. Dealers resolve these by shipping correct products and arranging return of incorrect items, typically at no cost to you.
Return and exchange policies
| Dealer | Return Window | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| JM Bullion | 5 business days | Original packaging required; market loss fee may apply |
| APMEX | 7 days | Phone call required; 5% restocking fee on card orders |
| SD Bullion | 3 business days | Contact required; market loss policy applies |
| Provident Metals | 5 business days | Original packaging; market loss applies |
Universal conditions:
- Contact dealer before returning anything
- Original packaging typically required
- Market loss policy applies (you pay the difference if gold price dropped)
- Any market gains remain dealer property
- Shipping costs usually non-refundable
- Returns for buyer’s remorse (not dealer error) face strictest policies
Damage claim procedures
If you receive damaged products:
- Contact dealer immediately (within 48 hours of delivery)
- Preserve all packaging—do not discard anything
- File police report if theft is suspected (some dealers require this)
- Dealer files insurance claim on your behalf
- Cooperate fully with investigation (sign affidavits, provide information)
- Resolution timeline: Typically 30+ days
- Outcome: Dealer provides reshipment or refund at their discretion
Failure to follow protocol may result in loss of insurance coverage and inability to receive compensation.

Part 7: Documentation and record keeping
Essential documents to save
Maintain a complete file for every gold purchase:
Purchase documentation:
- Order confirmation emails
- Invoices and receipts
- Payment records (credit card statements, wire confirmations, canceled checks)
- Shipping receipts and tracking confirmations
Product documentation:
- Certificates of authenticity
- Certificates of analysis (for bars)
- Serial numbers for bars over 100 grams
- Grading certificates for numismatic coins
- Photographs of products (front, back, any distinguishing features)
Post-purchase:
- Delivery confirmation
- Any correspondence with dealer
- Notes on storage location
Photographing your gold
Create a photographic record for insurance and identification purposes:
- Front and back of each piece
- Include ruler/scale for size reference
- Capture serial numbers clearly (for bars)
- Photograph mint marks and any unique features
- Date-stamp photos or maintain metadata
- Store photos with corresponding purchase documentation
For valuable pieces, photograph against a plain background with good lighting. These images serve insurance claims, verification, and inventory tracking.
Creating an inventory system
Experienced gold buyers track their holdings systematically:
Information to record for each purchase:
- Purchase date
- Dealer name and contact information
- Product description (weight, purity, mint, year)
- Serial numbers (if applicable)
- Quantity purchased
- Spot price at purchase
- Premium paid over spot
- Total cost including shipping
- Storage location
- Link to photographs
Tracking methods:
- Spreadsheets (Excel, Google Sheets) with columns for each data point
- Dedicated precious metals portfolio software
- Physical filing system organized by date or dealer
- Digital document management systems
- Dealer account portals (provide transaction history)
IRS reporting requirements
Understanding what’s reported—and what isn’t—helps you maintain proper records.
When dealers report purchases (Form 8300): Dealers must file Form 8300 within 15 days when customers pay more than $10,000 in cash in a single transaction or related transactions within 24 hours.
What counts as “cash” for Form 8300:
- U.S. and foreign currency
- Cashier’s checks under $10,000
- Money orders under $10,000
- Traveler’s checks
- Bank drafts
What does NOT count as cash:
- Personal checks
- Bank wires
- Credit/debit cards
- ACH transfers
- PayPal or payment apps
When dealers report sales (Form 1099-B): Dealers must report to the IRS when customers sell specific products meeting quantity thresholds:
| Product Type | Reporting Threshold |
|---|---|
| Gold bars (.995+ purity) | 1 kilo (32.15 oz) or more |
| Gold Maple Leafs (1 oz) | 25 coins or more |
| Gold Krugerrands (1 oz) | 25 coins or more |
| Gold Mexican Onzas (1 oz) | 25 coins or more |
Products exempt from 1099-B reporting:
- American Gold Eagles (all sizes)
- Fractional gold coins (1/2 oz, 1/4 oz, 1/10 oz)
- U.S. coins created after the 1980s reporting list
ℹ Note
Dealer reporting exemptions do not exempt you from tax obligations. You must report all capital gains on gold sales on Schedule D of your tax return, regardless of whether the dealer files a 1099-B. Maintain your own cost basis records for every purchase.
Important: Form 1099-B applies to sales to dealers, not purchases. There is no 1099 reporting when you buy gold—only when you sell.
Cost basis tracking for taxes
Gold is classified as a “collectible” by the IRS, subject to special capital gains rates:
- Long-term (held over 1 year): Maximum 28% federal rate
- Short-term (held 1 year or less): Taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%)
- High-income investors may also owe the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax
Cost basis calculation:
Cost Basis = Purchase price + Premiums + Shipping + Storage fees + Appraisal costs + Any commissions
When you sell, your capital gain equals: Sale Price - Cost Basis
Report gains and losses on Schedule D (Form 1040).
Special situations:
Gifted gold: Recipients use the giver’s original cost basis.
Inherited gold: Receives a step-up in basis to fair market value at date of death, eliminating prior capital gains liability.
Wash sales: Unlike stocks, wash sale rules do not apply to collectibles. You can sell at a loss and immediately repurchase.
Without documented purchase records, the IRS may assume a zero cost basis -- making your entire sale proceeds taxable as capital gains. Keep all purchase invoices, payment confirmations, and receipts for 7+ years after any sale.
How long to retain records
IRS guidelines:
- 3 years minimum: Standard audit period
- 6 years: If income underreported by 25%+
- 7 years: For worthless securities/bad debts claims
- No limit: If fraud involved or no return filed
Best practice: Keep purchase records as long as you own the gold, plus 7 years after sale. Store digital backups in cloud storage and originals in a fireproof safe or bank safe deposit box.
Part 8: First-time buyer guidance
Starting with small test orders
Experienced gold buyers consistently recommend starting small. A first purchase of $1,000-$5,000 lets you learn the process with lower stakes:
- Test the dealer’s communication and customer service
- Experience the shipping and delivery process
- Verify product quality firsthand
- Build confidence before larger purchases
- Identify any issues with your chosen payment method
One industry expert advises beginners to start with “an ounce or two of gold bullion and some silver” before committing to larger positions. This approach reveals any friction in the process without significant financial exposure.
Common mistakes first-time buyers make
1. Not checking spot prices before buying Always know the current spot price and calculate the premium you’re paying. Standard bullion premiums range from 2-7%—anything significantly higher should raise questions.
2. Buying from unverified dealers Stick to established dealers with verifiable credentials, physical addresses, and customer reviews. The risk of fraud or counterfeit products from unknown sellers isn’t worth any potential savings.
3. FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) investing Making impulsive purchases during price spikes often means paying elevated premiums when demand surges. Physical gold is a long-term investment—rushing rarely helps.
4. Over-allocating to gold Most financial advisors recommend precious metals represent 5-15% of a diversified portfolio, with 20% as an upper limit. Going all-in on gold creates concentration risk.
5. Buying numismatic coins for investment Collector coins carry high premiums based on rarity and condition—premiums you won’t recover when selling. For pure investment, bullion coins and bars are more efficient.
6. Confusing product types Proof coins aren’t more valuable as investments than BU coins—they’re collectibles with higher premiums. Understand what you’re buying and why.
7. Paying unnecessary fees Using credit cards when you could wire or ACH costs roughly 4% more. For a $10,000 purchase, that’s $400 lost.
8. Not keeping records Every purchase needs documentation for tax purposes. Failing to track cost basis creates problems when you eventually sell.
9. Ignoring storage costs Physical gold requires secure storage. Factor in safe costs, safety deposit box fees, or professional vault storage when calculating total investment.
10. Falling for subscription services Some companies push monthly gold delivery subscriptions at inflated prices. Buy when and what you choose, not on someone else’s schedule at their marked-up prices.
Questions to ask before first purchase
Before placing your first order, satisfy yourself on these points:
- How long has this dealer been in business?
- What is the total price including all fees and shipping?
- What is the premium over spot price, and is it reasonable?
- What is the return policy?
- Does the dealer offer buyback programs for when I eventually sell?
- Is shipping fully insured?
- What payment methods are accepted, and what are the cost differences?
- Is there a physical address and phone number for customer service?
What’s normal versus concerning
Normal in the gold buying process:
- Requiring identification for large purchases
- 1-3 business day processing before shipping
- Different prices for different payment methods
- 4% discount for bank wire, check, or ACH
- Requiring signature upon delivery
- Credit card on file required even for wire orders
- Brief manual reviews on first orders
Red flags that should concern you:
- Prices significantly below market (too good to be true)
- High-pressure sales tactics or urgency demands
- Insistence on wire transfer or cryptocurrency only
- Promises of guaranteed returns or specific profits
- Unsolicited phone calls or emails with “special offers”
- Reluctance to provide written transaction details
- No verifiable physical address
- Requests to keep transactions secret from family
When to call customer service
Call before purchasing when:
- Making your first-ever gold purchase
- Ordering over $100,000 (you may negotiate better pricing)
- Needing to verify wire transfer details
- Having questions about specific product authenticity
- Something about the transaction seems unclear
- Wanting to discuss volume pricing
Proceed online when:
- You’re familiar with the dealer and comfortable
- Making routine purchases of standard products
- Prices and products are clearly displayed
- You’ve already established a relationship
Conclusion: executing purchases with confidence
The gold buying process, while involving multiple steps, becomes routine after one or two purchases. Success requires attention to four critical areas: dealer selection (addressed in Page 2), payment execution (meeting deadlines and choosing cost-effective methods), delivery security (maintaining insurance through proper receipt), and documentation (creating records that serve tax and verification purposes).
For first-time buyers, the recommended path is clear: choose an established dealer with verifiable credentials, start with a modest test order of $1,000-$5,000, pay by ACH or wire to receive the cash discount, be present to sign for delivery, and document everything. This approach minimizes risk while building familiarity with the process.
The 4% savings from using wire, ACH, or check instead of credit cards represents significant money over time. For a buyer investing $50,000 in gold, that’s $2,000 in savings—enough to purchase additional gold. Payment method selection isn’t a minor detail; it’s a material factor in investment returns.
Price locks protect both buyer and dealer in volatile markets, but they come with responsibilities. Missing payment deadlines doesn’t just cancel orders—it can trigger fees exceeding 5% of order value plus market loss charges. Setting reminders and initiating payment promptly prevents these costly errors.
Finally, proper documentation transforms gold from a physical asset that’s difficult to track into a well-managed investment with clear cost basis, provenance, and verification records. When you eventually sell—whether years or decades from now—complete records make the process straightforward and ensure accurate tax reporting.
With the knowledge from this guide, you have everything needed to execute gold purchases confidently, cost-effectively, and securely. The process that might seem intimidating initially becomes as routine as any other online purchase—just with better documentation and more careful delivery handling.