Physical gold (GC=F) held inside a retirement account can’t be stored at home. It must be held in a facility that meets Internal Revenue Service (IRS) custody requirements and is approved for that purpose.

​​Outside an IRA, a person can hold gold directly. Within a gold IRA, the gold assets must meet the account’s custody and reporting requirements.

Retirement accounts follow tax and reporting rules that require assets to be held and documented consistently. In the U.S., the IRS sets the tax rules that govern how IRA assets are held, reported, and distributed.

Physical metals don’t exist as electronic records tied to an exchange. Ownership is documented through custody records and inventory tracking rather than trade settlement systems. Storage rules address that gap. Metals must be held in a qualifying facility so they can be tracked and valued for reporting using market prices and account records.

The goal isn’t to change the asset. It’s to make a physical holding work inside a system built for oversight and tax reporting. Storage rules sit alongside separate IRS rules on what kinds of bullion and coins an IRA can hold.

The IRS has clear rules for holding precious metals in an IRA. These requirements are designed to preserve the account’s tax treatment by ensuring assets remain within a controlled custody structure.

A qualified custodian — an IRS-approved financial institution — must administer the account.

All metals must be stored in an approved depository.

An account holder can’t take possession of the assets.

When precious metals are removed from storage, the IRS generally treats that as a distribution, which triggers tax reporting and may result in penalties, depending on the account type and timing.

Physical metals associated with the gold IRA account must be valued for reporting purposes.

Custodians determine the value of gold in an IRA using widely quoted market prices and records from the depository confirming the holdings. That information is used to generate annual statements and IRS forms tied to the account.

Related: Is a gold IRA a good investment?

Custodian: Administers the account, maintains records, processes transactions, and handles IRS reporting.

Dealer: Executes the purchase or sale of precious metals. Once a transaction is complete, the metals are transferred to the storage facility.

Depository: Stores the metals, maintains inventory records, and provides security and insurance. These facilities are designed for asset custody, not personal access.

Process: Custodian → Dealer → Depository

That separation creates a structured process — custody, transaction, and storage are handled independently and recorded at each step.

Transactions move through the account, not the depository. When precious metals are purchased, the custodian processes the transaction, the dealer fulfills the order, and the depository receives and records the assets. When metals are sold, the process runs in reverse.

The account holder never takes custody of the metals during normal transactions. The metals remain within the depository unless the account holder requests a formal distribution.

Depositories typically offer two storage methods.

Segregated storage: Metals are stored separately and identified as belonging to a specific account. The same bars or coins are held in place for that account.

Non-segregated storage: Metals from multiple accounts are pooled and stored together. Ownership is tracked by weight and type rather than by specific items.

The distinction affects how metals are tracked and returned, not the underlying asset or its market value.

Read more: If you divorce, who gets the gold coins?

Holding physical assets introduces additional costs, including storage fees, insurance, and account administration.

These costs exist because the asset requires physical handling and secure storage. Securities held in traditional accounts don’t carry the same requirements.

Over time, these expenses become part of the total cost of maintaining a gold IRA.

Access to precious metals in an IRA is indirect. Account holders don’t retrieve precious metals from storage at will. Any movement requires coordination among those parties and is processed through the account.

Liquidation: Metals are sold through the account. Proceeds are returned as cash within the retirement account.

Physical delivery: Metals are shipped out of the depository. This is generally treated as a distribution and reported to the IRS.

Both paths involve formal steps and are designed to maintain records and ensure compliance.

Physical storage can affect how quickly transactions are completed.

Selling metals typically requires multiple steps and coordination between the custodian and dealer, with confirmation from the depository. Delivery introduces additional handling, verification, and shipment from the storage facility.

Storage rules don’t change the asset. Gold remains gold. The change is how the asset is held, recorded, and accessed within the IRA. Custodians, storage providers, and transaction controls create the framework that makes a physical asset fit within a retirement plan.

A gold IRA is a retirement account that holds physical metals rather than financial securities. Here's how it works, what metals are allowed, and how it differs from other IRAs.

A gold IRA and physical gold differ in liquidity, tax treatment, storage, and fees.

Whether a gold IRA is a good investment depends on how it behaves within a portfolio. Here's how it works, the trade-offs involved, and how it fits alongside other assets.

Gold IRAs apply the tax advantages of traditional and Roth IRAs to your long-term precious metal holdings. Here's how they work.

A gold IRA is a type of retirement account that allows investors to hold physical precious metals. Here's how it differs from a traditional IRA.

A gold IRA is a self-directed IRA designed for gold and other precious metals. Learn the differences between it and traditional IRAs, tax implications, pros and cons, and alternatives.