Gold IRAs Could Cost You 33% in Taxes. Here’s What Aggressive Commercials Won’t Tell You
Key takeaways
- The host is right, and the math is uglier than most investors realize.
- Under the Internal Revenue Code, physical gold and silver, including American Eagle coins and bullion bars held in a self-directed IRA, are classified as collectibles.
- Say you put $100,000 into gold coins, hold seven years, and sell for $160,000.
Gold IRAs Could Cost You 33% in Taxes. Here’s What Aggressive Commercials Won’t Tell You Sabrina Bracher / Shutterstock.com Don Lair Fri, May 22, 2026 at 10:19 PM GMT+7 5 min read DX-Y.NYB CL=F Turn on talk radio during an oil price spike or a Middle East flare-up and you will hear the pitch within minutes: roll your IRA into gold before the dollar collapses. The host of the Retire SMART Podcast pushed back on those ads in the episode The Entrepreneur s Journey, pt. 4, warning listeners about "these commercials that just bombard people, these, you know, put your money in a gold IRA, it s an unlicensed person not selling a security, and they don t understand how gold is taxed." Follow the pitch without understanding the tax code, and a chunk of your retirement savings you thought belonged to you actually belongs to the IRS.
The host is right, and the math is uglier than most investors realize. Gold is taxed as a collectible, the same category the IRS uses for baseball cards.
Under the Internal Revenue Code, physical gold and silver, including American Eagle coins and bullion bars held in a self-directed IRA, are classified as collectibles. When you sell at a gain held longer than a year outside a retirement account, the IRS applies a maximum 28% federal capital gains rate, not the 15% or 20% rate that applies to stocks and most index funds. Add state income tax on top, and the combined hit reaches 33%.