The surge in gold awakens family treasures that many had forgotten. With a progression by more than 40% over a rolling year in euros, a record at 4,521 euros per ounce at the end of January 2026 and a price which remains around 4,000 euros in May after a spring correction, the ingot stored in the safe for thirty years or the coins inherited from the grandmother are suddenly worth several tens of thousands of euros. Selling, transmitting, declaring, so many questions that arise for heirs and recent buyers alike.
There taxation of gold is nevertheless one of the most unique in the French heritage landscape. “There is no annual declaration, as is the case for financial investments, it is only one declaration, only one, on sale.summarizes Étienne Brois, heritage engineering consultant and author of Protect your savings with gold and silverpublished by Eyrolles at the end of May. This tax discretion takes on its full dimension at the time of transmissionwhere a little-known mechanism can save heirs several tens of thousands of euros.
No annual declaration, two regimes to choose from for resale
Investment gold, whether in bars or coins, produces no taxable income. No dividends, no interest, no rent. As long as the metal remains in the safe, the saver has nothing to declare each year, unlike a bank book, life insurance or a securities account. L’gold physics does not enter into the plate of thereal estate wealth tax (IFI) since its inception in 2018, and the purchase is exempt from VAT since January 1, 2000. Fiscal discretion which contrasts with the taxation of traditional financial products.
Taxation occurs only at the time of sale, and two regimes coexist for cast ingots and non-legal tender coins such as Napoleon or Marianne Coq. The flat tax on precious metals (TMP) at 11.5% applies by default to the entire sale price, from the first euro and without duration conditions. The seller can also opt for capital gains regime at 37.6% in 2026rate raised since January 1 by the increase in the CSG to 10.6% in the social security financing law. This regime only concerns the actual gain, with a reduction of 5% per year from the third year, and leads to a exemption total beyond 22 years of detention.
The most common case in France remains that of inherited bar without invoiceslipped into the estate of a grandmother who had bought it in the 70s without always keeping the voucher. In the absence of nominative proof, the heir cannot opt for the capital gains regime and automatically switches to the TMP at 11.5%. On a sale for 100,000 euros, the tax reaches 11,500 euros and there remains 88,500 euros net in the seller’s pocket. Jewelry, tokens, collectible coins older than 1,800 and minted bars fall under a separate regime, with a flat-rate tax lowered to 6.5% and a total exemption below 5,000 euros per sale, a useful rule for small quantities passed down from generation to generation.
Upon transmission, the deceased’s added value is erased
The most counterintuitive mechanism occurs during succession. Gold enters the estate and remains subject to the rights of succession usual, calculated according to the relationship and after reductions (100,000 euros per child every fifteen years in direct line, first euro taxable at the rate of 5%). But one particularity changes everything on the side of the heirs, the capital gain accumulated during the deceased’s lifetime is purged. “Your children inherit this amount and there is a purge of the capital gain.”confirms Étienne Brois.
The practical consequence is massive. The tax cost price of the heirs becomes the value on the day of death, and not the price paid by the deceased sometimes thirty years earlier. A grandmother who bought her ingot for 50,000 francs in the 1980s, or around 8,000 euros, and who leaves it valued at 120,000 euros upon her death, passes on this ingot without the 112,000 euros earned during her lifetime ever being taxed as capital gains. Better, the inheritance tax paid can be added to the acquisition price to reduce future capital gains if the heirs one day decide to resell.
Gold sells in two to three days
This flexibility contrasts with the rigidity of an investment such as a retirement savings plan. “By nature, you have to wait until retirement.”recalls Étienne Brois about the PER, of which savings are blocked until retirement rights are liquidatedexcept six cases of early release provided for by article L.224-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code (disability, death of spouse, over-indebtedness, expiration of unemployment rights, judicial liquidation, purchase of main residence). Gold, on the other hand, can be resold in two to three days via an established supplier, who can deduct the tax at source and credit the seller’s bank account without additional steps.
The tax regimes mentioned are those in force in France in 2026 and are subject to change. The gold prices quoted are one-off readings and do not prejudge future developments. The application of the rules of taxation and transmission of gold requires compliance with legal conditions and the retention of proof of purchase. For any specific asset situation, personalized advice from a notary or a wealth management advisor is recommended.


