Gold$4,690+$12.50
Silver$73.75+$0.45
Platinum$1,826+$8.00
Palladium$1,530-$5.00
Copper$4.85/lb+$0.02
G:S Ratio63.6:1
📊 Reference prices (Apr 2026) — Update manually below

🥇 2026 Precious Metals Calculator: Gold Melt Value, Junk Silver & IRS Tax

The only free precious metals melt value calculator featuring true dealer bid/ask spreads, the IRS 28% collectibles capital gains tax, 90% constitutional junk silver face-value multipliers, complete troy ounce and pennyweight (dwt) conversions, a 5-metal bullion stack tracker, Self-Directed Gold IRA (SDIRA) depository fees, and a CPA-ready appraisal PDF.

💰 True Dealer Breakeven 🧾 28% Collectibles Tax 🪙 Junk Silver Coins ⚖️ All 8 Weight Units 🔁 Gold:Silver Ratio Signal 📄 Business PDF Report
⚙️
Update Spot Prices
🥇
Metal Details
💸
Dealer Spread & True Cost
ⓘ Spot prices are reference values. Melt value assumes 100% refined value at spot. Actual dealer prices vary. Not investment advice.
🥇

Select metal, hallmark, weight unit, and quantity to calculate melt value — with true all-in dealer cost, breakeven spot price, and weight equivalents in all 8 international units including dwt, tola, baht, and tael.

🪙
US Junk Silver Coin Calculator
Wear Factor: The industry standard is 0.715 oz per $1 face value (not the theoretical 0.723) to account for coin wear. Toggle below to switch.
ⓘ War Nickels (1942-1945 with mint mark above Monticello) contain 35% silver. Kennedy halves 1965–1970 are 40% silver. Morgan/Peace dollars: 0.7734 oz each. Verify dates and mint marks carefully.
🪙

Enter coin quantities to compute total silver content and melt value — with the industry-standard 0.715 wear factor for circulated coins, individual coin breakdown, and value per face dollar.

🧾
Precious Metals Capital Gains Tax Calculator
28% Collectibles Rate: Physical gold, silver, platinum, and palladium are classified as “collectibles” under IRC §408(m). Long-term capital gains are taxed at a MAXIMUM of 28% — NOT the 0%/15%/20% equity rate. Gold ETFs (GLD, etc.) are also subject to 28% as collectibles.
🧾

Enter your cost basis, sale price, and tax profile to see the 28% collectibles rate vs. standard equity rates — including state tax and a comparison across all precious metals asset types.

🔁
Gold:Silver Ratio Signal & Rebalancer
Current Gold:Silver Ratio
63.6:1
Historical Mean ~65:1 — Near Neutral
📊
5-Metal Portfolio Tracker
🏦
Gold IRA / 401k Holding Cost Analyzer
📈
Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) Simulator
🏦

Model the true 10-year cost of a Gold IRA including dealer premium, custodian fees, storage, and liquidation — and run a DCA simulation with historical gold/silver prices to see actual returns.

⚙️ Calculating True Melt Value: Spot Price vs. Dealer Premiums

Each tab solves a different precious metals problem. This guide walks you through exactly what to enter, what each output means, and how to read the results for real buying, selling, and investment decisions.

🥇 Melt Value 🪙 Junk Silver 🧾 28% Tax Rate 🔁 Ratio Signal 🏦 IRA + DCA
5
Calculator Tabs
8
Weight Units
28%
Collectibles Tax
5
Metals Tracked
Free
No Sign-Up
📌 How to read this guide: Each step below maps to one tab of the calculator. Read the step that matches your situation — most users only need Tab 1, but IRA holders, coin collectors, and active sellers typically use 3–5 tabs together.
1
🥇 Melt Value + True Dealer Breakeven
The core calculator — find out exactly what your gold, silver, platinum, palladium, or copper piece is worth at today’s spot price
TAB 1
📥 Your Inputs
Metal type (Gold, Silver, Platinum, Palladium, Copper)
Hallmark / purity (24K, 22K, 18K, 14K, 10K, .999, .925, etc.)
Weight unit (Troy oz, gram, dwt, tola, baht, tael, kg, lb)
Weight amount and quantity of pieces
Dealer buy / sell premium % (optional)
Custom spot price override (optional)
📤 Your Results
Pure metal melt value at live spot price
All-in dealer cost (spot + premium)
Breakeven spot price to recover purchase
Value per piece and per unit weight
Weight equivalents in all 8 international units
Effective purity % and fine metal weight
Troy oz
31.1035 g
Gram
Standard SI
DWT
Pennyweight 1.5552 g
Tola
South Asia 11.664 g
Baht
Thailand 15.244 g
Tael
Hong Kong 37.429 g
Kilogram
1,000 g
Troy Pound
12 troy oz
📊 Example Calculation — 18K Gold Ring
Spot price (Gold)$3,280 / troy oz
Hallmark purity (18K)75.0% fine gold
Weight7.00 grams = 0.2251 troy oz
Fine gold weight0.1688 troy oz
Melt value at spot$553.50
Dealer buy price (+12% premium)$619.92
Breakeven spot price needed$3,673.60
⚖️ Why breakeven matters more than melt value: Most dealers charge 8–20% premiums above spot. Your breakeven is the spot price gold must reach before your purchase is profitable. Always enter the actual premium your dealer charged.
Most popular input
22K / 18K gold
Jewelry & coins
Most used weight unit
Troy oz & gram
Industry standard
Typical dealer premium
8%–20%
Coins / bars vary
2
🪙 Junk Silver Coins — Pre-1965 US Coin Calculator
Calculate the true silver content and melt value of 90% silver bags using the industry-standard 0.715 wear factor
TAB 2

“Junk silver” refers to pre-1965 US coins (dimes, quarters, half dollars, dollars) that are 90% silver by composition but have no numismatic premium — they trade purely for their silver content. The term “junk” means no collector value, not low quality.

📥 Your Inputs
Coin type (Mercury Dime, Roosevelt Dime, Washington Quarter, Walking Liberty Half, Morgan Dollar, Peace Dollar, etc.)
Quantity of each coin type
Current silver spot price (auto-populated)
Condition adjustment if mint state (optional)
📤 Your Results
Actual troy oz of fine silver per coin type
Total silver content applying 0.715 wear factor
Melt value by coin and total bag value
Face value total
Silver value per dollar of face value
Full breakdown table exportable to PDF
🔬 The 0.715 Factor Explained
Nominal silver content (90% silver quarter)0.18084 troy oz theoretical
Wear factor adjustment× 0.715 (circulated loss)
Actual recoverable silver0.7234 ozt per $1 face value
$100 face bag at $32/ozt silver≈ $2,314.88 melt value
Industry standard “715 bags”Commonly traded unit
CoinCompositionSilver (ozt) eachCommon use case
Mercury / Roosevelt Dime90% silver0.07234 oztMost liquid junk silver
Washington Quarter (pre-1965)90% silver0.18084 oztMost common in bags
Walking Liberty Half Dollar90% silver0.36169 oztPremium junk, easy to count
Kennedy Half (1965–1969)40% silver0.14792 oztOften overlooked in change
Morgan / Peace Silver Dollar90% silver0.77344 oztOften has numismatic premium
🪙 Morgan/Peace Dollar note: These often carry collector premiums well above melt value. Tab 2 gives you the melt floor — always check PCGS or NGC populations before selling a Morgan Dollar at spot.
3
🧾 Capital Gains Tax — The 28% Collectibles Rule
Precious metals are taxed differently from stocks. Most investors pay more than they expect — calculate your exact after-tax proceeds before you sell
TAB 3
⚠️ Physical Gold/Silver
28%
IRS collectibles rate — long-term regardless of income bracket
✅ Gold ETFs / Stocks
15% – 20%
Standard long-term capital gains rate based on income
📥 Your Inputs
Original purchase price (cost basis)
Sale price or current melt value
Holding period (short-term or long-term)
Filing status and income bracket
State tax rate (optional)
Asset type (physical coin, bar, ETF, mining stock)
📤 Your Results
Federal tax owed at 28% collectibles rate
State tax owed (if applicable)
Net after-tax proceeds in dollars
Effective total tax rate on the gain
Side-by-side comparison: 28% vs 15%/20% rates
Break-even hold period analysis
📊 Capital Gains Example
Sale price$35,000
Cost basis$22,000
Total capital gain$13,000
Federal tax at 28% collectibles rate−$3,640
State tax (e.g. CA 9.3%)−$1,209
Net after-tax proceeds$30,151
Effective total tax rate on gain37.3% (vs 23.8% for stocks)
🚨 Short-term = ordinary income rates: If you sell within 12 months of purchase, the 28% collectibles cap does not apply — your gain is taxed at your ordinary income rate, which could be as high as 37% federally. Hold longer than 12 months whenever possible.
IRS Form
Schedule D
Report on 1040
Gold ETFs taxed as
Collectibles too
SPDR GLD = 28%
4
🔁 Gold:Silver Ratio + 5-Metal Portfolio Tracker
Use the ratio as a market signal and track your entire precious metals holdings — gold, silver, platinum, palladium, and copper — with live melt value and portfolio weights
TAB 4
CURRENT RATIO (EXAMPLE)
85:1
1 troy oz gold buys 85 troy oz silver
🟢 Silver historically cheap vs gold
Historic average ratio
~60:1
20th century mean
2020 peak (COVID)
125:1
Extreme gold premium
1980 hunt brothers
14:1
Extreme silver premium
📥 Ratio Tab Inputs
Live gold and silver spot (auto-fetched)
Custom ratio threshold (your signal level)
📤 Ratio Outputs
Current ratio vs 20-year average
Signal: gold undervalued / silver undervalued / neutral
oz of silver your gold position could swap for
Ratio trend over 1–10 year timeframes
MetalEnter your weightCalculator providesUse case
🥇 Goldoz, grams, bars, coinsLive melt + % of portfolioCore wealth preservation
🥈 Silveroz, bags, roundsLive melt + % of portfolioIndustrial + monetary
⬜ Platinumoz, gramsLive melt + % of portfolioIndustrial demand play
🔲 Palladiumoz, gramsLive melt + % of portfolioAuto catalyst exposure
🟤 Copperlbs, ozLive melt + % of portfolioInflation hedge / industrial
📊 Portfolio tracker tip: Use the donut chart in Tab 4 to see your allocation at a glance. Most financial advisors suggest precious metals represent 5–15% of a balanced portfolio — Tab 4 helps you visualize that against your full metals holdings.
5
🏦 Gold IRA True Cost + DCA Simulation
Most Gold IRA marketing hides the real 10-year cost. This tab shows you every fee — dealer premium, custodian, storage, and liquidation — then runs a real return simulation using historical DCA data
TAB 5

Most Gold IRA promotions show you the raw gold spot price increase over 10 years and call it your return. They ignore dealer markup on the buy, annual custodian fees, segregated storage costs, and the liquidation spread when you sell. This calculator shows the real net return after every fee.

📥 IRA Cost Inputs
Initial investment amount ($)
Dealer buy premium % (typical: 5–15%)
Annual custodian fee (flat $ or % AUM)
Annual storage fee (segregated vs commingled)
Liquidation spread % when selling
Projected holding period (years)
📤 IRA Cost Outputs
Total fees paid over 10 years (cumulative $)
Fee drag as % of initial investment
Breakeven spot price needed just to cover fees
Net value at end of holding period
Side-by-side vs standard Roth IRA comparison
Gold price needed to equal S&P 500 performance
Initial investment$50,000
Dealer premium at purchase (8%)−$4,000
Setup + first year custodian fee−$280
Annual storage fee × 10 years ($175/yr)−$1,750
Annual custodian renewal × 9 years ($175/yr)−$1,575
Liquidation spread at sale (3%)−$1,500 est.
Total fees over 10 years$9,105
Breakeven: gold must rise just to cover fees+18.2% from entry
📥 DCA Inputs
Monthly contribution amount ($)
Start date (historical simulation)
Metal: Gold or Silver
Premium % on each purchase
📤 DCA Outputs
Total dollars invested
Average cost per troy ounce (DCA price)
Total ounces accumulated
Current portfolio value at live spot
Gain/loss vs total invested and vs lump sum
📈 DCA insight: Historical DCA simulations show that consistent monthly buyers of gold over any rolling 10-year window since 1970 have never had a negative real return. Tab 5 lets you run this simulation from any start date using actual historical gold and silver price data.
Avg IRA fee drag
12–22%
Over 10 years
IRS approved metals
.995+ purity
Gold bars/coins
RMD age (2026)
73 years old
SECURE 2.0 Act

Quick Tab Reference — Which Tab Do You Need?
Your situation Tab to use Key output Time needed
I want to know what my gold jewelry / coin is worth at today’s priceTab 1Melt value + breakeven~2 min
I have a jar of old dimes, quarters, and half dollarsTab 2Total silver content + melt value~3 min
I’m about to sell gold/silver and want to know my tax billTab 3After-tax net proceeds~3 min
I want to decide if I should buy gold or silver right nowTab 4Gold:Silver ratio signal~1 min
I have all my metals and want to see my total portfolio valueTab 4Portfolio allocation + total value~5 min
A Gold IRA company sent me a proposal — is it worth it?Tab 5True 10-year net return after all fees~5 min
I invest $200/month in silver — how is my DCA performing?Tab 5DCA average cost vs current spot~3 min
Ready to calculate? Start with Tab 1 →

Select your metal, enter your weight and purity — melt value appears instantly. No account, no ads, no paywalls.

All spot prices shown in examples are illustrative. Live spot prices are fetched from market data feeds and may be delayed. Precious metals melt values are estimates only — actual dealer buy/sell prices vary. Not financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified advisor before making investment decisions. IRS collectibles tax rules reference IRC Section 1(h)(4). Last updated: April 2026 · USFinanceCalculators.com

💡 The IRS Tax Trap: 28% Collectibles Capital Gains Tax

25 expert tips drawn from real precious metals investor scenarios, IRS guidance, dealer pricing research, and commodity market data. Each tip is mapped to a specific calculator tab so you can apply it immediately.

🥇 Melt Value Mastery 🪙 Junk Silver Secrets 💰 Tax Optimization 📊 Ratio & Timing 🏦 IRA Strategy 🛡️ Audit Defense
25
Pro Tips
6
Categories
5
Calculator Tabs
$
Savings Focused
IRS
Source-Backed
2026
Current Rules
📌 How to use this section: Each tip shows an ⚡ HIGH IMPACT or ✔ MEDIUM label. Tips marked 🔴 CRITICAL involve tax or legal consequences — verify with a qualified advisor before acting.
🥇
Category 1 — Melt Value Mastery
Get an accurate calculation before any transaction. The dealer’s offer should never be your first number — your melt value should be.
Tips 1–5 · Tab 1
1
Always weigh in grams, convert in the calculator
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
A jeweler’s scale measuring in grams is the most precise tool for small items. Enter grams in Tab 1 — never try to mentally convert to troy ounces. A troy ounce is 31.1035 grams, not 28.35 grams (the avoirdupois ounce). Confusing the two produces a 9.7% error in your melt value calculation — enough to misjudge a sale by hundreds of dollars on a larger lot.
📐 Formula
Fine ozt = (Grams ÷ 31.1035) × Purity%
Example: 18g of 14K = (18÷31.1035)×0.583 = 0.3376 ozt fine gold
Error if using wrong ounce type −9.7%
2
Verify the karat stamp — don’t assume the hallmark is accurate
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
Karat stamps can be wrong, especially on older jewelry or imports from countries with looser standards. A piece stamped “14K” may test as 13.2K on an acid test. Before entering purity in Tab 1, consider using an acid test kit (~$15) to verify. For items worth more than $500 in melt value, a professional XRF (X-ray fluorescence) assay from a refinery gives a precise purity reading.
⚡ Action Step

Run Tab 1 twice: once at the stamped purity, once at 1 karat lower. The difference shows your downside risk if the stamp is inaccurate.

3
Use 95% of spot as your realistic refinery floor
✔ MEDIUM
No buyer pays 100% of spot price for scrap. Refineries typically pay 92–97% of melt value for gold and 85–93% for silver depending on lot size and form. Tab 1 automatically shows a “Refinery Value” estimate at 95% as a conservative floor. If any buyer offers below 85% of melt value, walk away — that is a pawn-shop-level offer, not a refinery offer.
⚡ Action Step

Get quotes from at least 3 dealers/refineries. Compare each quote to the Tab 1 melt value as a percentage to identify the best offer instantly.

4
Separate clasps and settings before weighing jewelry lots
✔ MEDIUM
A gold necklace has a gold chain but a steel or base-metal spring ring clasp. That clasp weighs 0.3–0.8 grams but contains zero gold. If you weigh the entire piece and apply the full karat purity, you overestimate fine gold content. Professional refiners subtract non-precious weight — but dealers rarely do this math in your favor. Always remove non-gold components before weighing, or manually subtract their estimated weight.
⚠️ Watch Out

White gold prongs on a ring may be 14K white gold — not the same purity as a yellow gold shank. Weigh components separately if possible.

5
Check spot price timing — morning vs afternoon matters
✔ MEDIUM
Gold and silver spot prices move throughout the trading day — sometimes by $20–$60/ozt in a single session. The LBMA sets the global reference price twice daily (AM and PM Fix, London time). Most US dealers lock their buy prices at the morning fix. Running your Tab 1 calculation at the current live price gives you an accurate real-time snapshot. Do not rely on yesterday’s close price when making a same-day transaction decision.
⚡ Action Step

Override the auto-fetched spot price in Tab 1 with the confirmed spot price your dealer quotes at the exact moment of the transaction to verify their calculation.

🪙
Category 2 — Junk Silver Secrets
Pre-1965 90% silver coins are one of the most undervalued and misunderstood precious metals positions — both at purchase and at sale.
Tips 6–10 · Tab 2
6
The 0.715 factor is a floor — some lots contain more
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
The 0.715 troy ounce per $1 face value is the conservative industry standard for circulated coins. Uncirculated or lightly worn pre-1965 coins contain 0.7234 ozt — the theoretical maximum. If you are buying a bag of mostly uncirculated coins (BU rolls, original bank bags), use 0.7234 in the custom purity field in Tab 2. On a $1,000 face value bag, that difference is 0.84 extra troy ounces — about $30 at current silver prices.
Extra value in a $1,000 face BU bag vs circulated +$25–$35
7
Sort before selling — key dates are worth far more than melt
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
Before selling any junk silver lot for melt, manually sort for key date coins. A 1916-D Mercury Dime looks identical to any other dime in a bag but is worth $800–$2,500 in G-4 condition — far above its $2.50 melt value. Key dates to pull: 1916-D Mercury Dime, 1932-D and 1932-S Washington Quarters, 1921 Walking Liberty Half. A 30-minute sort of a $500 face value bag could reveal hundreds in numismatic premium you would otherwise lose.
⚡ Action Step

Use the PCGS price guide (pcgs.com/prices) to check any unusual date-mint combinations before selling any 90% silver lot for melt.

8
Kennedy Half Dollars: 1964 is 90%, 1965–1970 is 40%
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
This is one of the most common junk silver errors. A 1964 Kennedy Half contains 0.36169 ozt of silver. A 1965 Kennedy Half (same size, same appearance) contains only 0.1479 ozt of silver — 40% silver clad, not 90%. Mixing these two groups and applying the 0.715 factor overstates value on 1965–1970 halves and understates value on 1964 pieces. Tab 2 has separate inputs for 90% and 40% silver coins precisely for this reason.
📐 Silver Content per Half Dollar
1964 Kennedy: 0.36169 ozt silver
1965–1970 Kennedy: 0.1479 ozt silver (40% clad)
Difference per coin: 0.2138 ozt = $7.70 at $36/ozt
9
Buy junk silver by face value, not by the ounce
✔ MEDIUM
When purchasing junk silver, dealers quote a price per dollar of face value (e.g., “17× face” means $17 per $1 of face value). To verify if this is a good deal, enter the face value into Tab 2, note the total troy ounce equivalent, and compare: is $17/face value cheaper or more expensive than buying the equivalent number of silver rounds at the current silver round premium? If silver is $36/ozt and rounds trade at $38.50/ozt, a bag at 17× face ($17 per $1 = $24.35/ozt equivalent) is 37% cheaper.
Potential per-ounce saving vs silver rounds $3–$8/ozt
10
War nickels (1942–1945) contain 35% silver — often missed
✔ MEDIUM
Jefferson Nickels from 1942–1945 were minted with 35% silver (56% copper, 9% manganese) to conserve nickel for the war effort. Each wartime nickel contains 0.05626 ozt of silver. They are identifiable by a large mint mark (P, D, or S) above Monticello on the reverse. At $36/ozt silver, each war nickel is worth about $2.03 in silver — vs 5 cents face value. A roll of 40 war nickels is worth about $81 in silver melt. Enter them as custom 35% silver in Tab 2.
⚡ Action Step

Check any coin roll or jar of old nickels for the 1942–1945 date range and large mint mark. They look like regular nickels and are easily overlooked.

💰
Category 3 — Tax Optimization
The 28% collectibles rate is the law — but when and how you sell makes a substantial difference in what you actually keep.
Tips 11–15 · Tab 3
11
Hold exactly 366 days to qualify for long-term rates
🔴 CRITICAL
Short-term gains on precious metals (held 12 months or less) are taxed at your ordinary income rate — up to 37% federally. Long-term gains are capped at 28% for collectibles. For a $20,000 gain, a high-income earner in the 37% bracket saves $1,800 in federal tax by waiting one extra day past the 12-month mark. Use Tab 3’s holding period toggle to see the exact dollar difference between short-term and long-term tax for your specific scenario.
Tax savings on $20K gain (37% bracket → 28%) $1,800
12
Harvest losses from underperforming metals to offset gains
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
If you have silver coins bought at a higher price that are now underwater, selling them in the same tax year as a gold gain allows you to net the loss against the gain (tax-loss harvesting). Collectibles losses offset collectibles gains dollar-for-dollar, reducing your 28% taxable amount. Run both positions through Tab 3 to see the net gain after combining the profitable gold sale with the silver loss — then decide whether to harvest before December 31.
⚡ Action Step

Run Tab 3 twice — once for the gaining position and once for the losing position. The combined net gain determines your actual collectibles tax liability for the year.

13
Document every purchase with the dealer invoice — the IRS requires it
🔴 CRITICAL
Your cost basis for precious metals is your original purchase price plus any transaction fees. Without a receipt, the IRS may default your cost basis to $0, making 100% of the sale proceeds a taxable gain. Keep every dealer invoice, online order confirmation, wire transfer record, or credit card statement showing the purchase. Store digital copies in a cloud folder labeled by year. The IRS statute of limitations for audit is 3 years from filing — keep records for at least 4 years.
⚠️ IRS Rule

Missing cost basis documentation is one of the top audit triggers for precious metals sales. A $0 cost basis on a $50,000 gold sale means $14,000 in unexpected tax.

14
Spread large sales across two tax years to stay below AMT threshold
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
If you have a large gold position to liquidate, selling half in December and half in January puts the gains in two separate tax years. This can prevent a large one-time gain from triggering Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) for high-income earners, or from pushing you into a higher effective bracket. Use Tab 3 twice — model this year’s gain and next year’s gain separately — and compare total tax vs selling everything at once. The spread strategy can save $2,000–$8,000 on a $50,000+ gain.
Potential tax savings from year-split on $80K gain $3,000–$8,000
15
Include state tax in your true after-tax return calculation
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
Many investors plan around the 28% federal collectibles rate but forget that most states also tax precious metals gains as ordinary income. In California, state income tax can add 9.3%–13.3% on top of federal. Combined, a California investor in the 32% federal bracket pays up to 28% federal + 13.3% state = 41.3% total tax on long-term gold gains. Enter your state rate in the Tab 3 state tax field to see the true combined tax rate and after-tax proceeds.
📐 True After-Tax Rate Example
CA investor, long-term gold gain $30,000:
Federal: 28% × $30,000 = $8,400
State CA: 9.3% × $30,000 = $2,790
Total tax: $11,190 (37.3% effective)
📊
Category 4 — Ratio & Timing Intelligence
The gold-to-silver ratio is one of the most powerful free signals in precious metals investing — but only if you know how to read and act on it correctly.
Tips 16–19 · Tab 4
16
The historical average ratio is ~55:1 — extreme readings are actionable
⚡ HIGH IMPACT
The gold-to-silver ratio averaged approximately 55:1 over the 20th century. When the ratio exceeds 80:1, silver is historically cheap relative to gold. When it falls below 40:1, gold is cheap relative to silver. At a ratio above 80, many investors systematically swap a portion of gold for silver. At a ratio below 40, they reverse the trade. Tab 4 displays the live ratio with a historical context indicator so you know exactly where the current reading falls in the long-term distribution.
Ratio LevelSignalHistorical Frequency
> 90:1Silver extremely cheapRare — seen in 2020
70–90:1Silver cheap — accumulate~20% of time
50–70:1Neutral — hold~50% of time
30–50:1Gold cheap vs silver~25% of time
< 30:1Swap silver → goldRare — seen in 1980
17
Model the full swap cost — premiums and tax both erode the trade
🔴 CRITICAL
A ratio swap (selling gold, buying silver) looks compelling when the ratio is elevated — but two costs frequently make it unprofitable: (1) Dealer premiums eat 5–25% of the silver purchase over spot, meaning the ratio needs to revert further for the swap to break even. (2) Capital gains tax on the gold sale reduces proceeds available for silver purchase. Tab 4 models both of these — enter current premiums and your tax rate to see the ratio level silver must reach for the swap to profit.
⚠️ Common Mistake

Swapping gold for silver at 85:1 sounds smart — but if you pay 20% premium on American Silver Eagles and owe 28% capital gains on the gold, you may need a ratio reversion to 60:1 just to break even.

18
Use the portfolio tool to check your metals-to-total-assets ratio
✔ MEDIUM
Most financial planners recommend keeping 5–15% of a diversified portfolio in precious metals as an inflation hedge and portfolio insurance. Tab 4’s portfolio tool calculates your current metals position as a percentage of total assets once you enter your total portfolio value. Above 20% in metals is generally considered over-concentrated — you are taking on significant commodity price risk without yield. Below 5% provides minimal inflation protection.
⚡ Action Step

Enter your total gold value, silver value, platinum/palladium value, and total portfolio value into Tab 4. The output shows your metals percentage and flags it as under-weight, within range, or over-concentrated.

19
Platinum offers the deepest value when it trades below gold
✔ MEDIUM
Historically, platinum has traded at a premium to gold (it is rarer and harder to mine). When platinum trades at a discount to gold — as it has done since 2015 — many commodity analysts consider this a long-term value signal. Tab 4 automatically calculates the platinum-to-gold ratio alongside the gold-to-silver ratio. Add your platinum holdings to see their contribution to portfolio value and compare current pricing to historical platinum-gold relationships.
Platinum discount to gold (April 2026) ~-65%
🏦
Category 5 — Gold IRA Strategy
Gold IRA marketing is aggressive and fee structures are opaque. These three tips reveal what the sales pitch never shows you.
Tips 20–22 · Tab 5
20
Run the “Break-Even Return” calculation before every Gold IRA decision
The single most important number no Gold IRA company ever shows you: how much must gold appreciate just to offset the fee drag and match what a zero-cost index fund would return?
Tab 5 calculates this break-even return automatically. For a typical $75,000 Gold IRA with $500/year in custodian + storage fees and a 1% advisor commission, the fee drag over 20 years compounds to a significant headwind. Gold must generate a real after-fee return exceeding the S&P 500’s historical 10.5% annual average just to match — a hurdle it has not consistently cleared. This does not mean Gold IRAs are wrong for everyone — for a small insurance allocation, the cost may be worth the inflation protection. But the math must be clear before you sign.
📋 What Tab 5 Shows You

Total fees over 5/10/15/20 years at your custodian’s rate schedule. Fee drag as % of initial investment. Annual gold appreciation needed to exceed fees.

⚠️ What Salespeople Omit

Setup fees, transaction fees per purchase, wire transfer fees, liquidation fees, and account closing fees. The annual numbers in brochures rarely include all of these.

✅ What To Ask The Custodian

“What is my total all-in annual cost in dollars, not percentages, for a $75,000 account?” Then enter that exact number into Tab 5 for an honest projection.

21
Segregated storage costs more — but it matters for large positions
✔ MEDIUM
Gold IRA custodians offer two storage types: Commingled (your bars/coins mixed with other clients’ holdings, lower cost, ~$100–$150/year) and Segregated (your specific bars stored in your own vault section, higher cost, ~$200–$350/year). For positions under $50,000, commingled storage is typically cost-effective. Above $100,000, many investors prefer segregated for the verifiability — you can physically audit your exact items. Tab 5 lets you model both cost levels to see the 20-year fee difference.
Annual savings: commingled vs segregated $100–$200/yr
22
Never do a 60-day indirect rollover for a Gold IRA — use direct trustee-to-trustee transfer
🔴 CRITICAL
An indirect rollover (custodian sends you a check, you deposit it elsewhere within 60 days) triggers a mandatory 20% federal withholding on the distribution amount. To avoid tax, you must deposit 100% of the gross amount — meaning you fund the difference out of pocket. Miss the 60-day window and the entire distribution becomes taxable income plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty. Always use a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer for IRA rollovers — the Gold IRA custodian requests funds directly from your current custodian with no withholding and no deadline pressure.
⚠️ IRS Rule — IRS Pub 590-A

You are allowed only ONE indirect rollover per 12-month period across ALL your IRAs. A second indirect rollover in the same year is a fully taxable distribution regardless of whether you meet the 60-day window.

🛡️
Category 6 — Audit Defense & Documentation
Precious metals are a cash-heavy market. The IRS knows this. These three tips are your paper trail protection.
Tips 23–25 · All Tabs
23
Keep a metals ledger — one row per transaction
🔴 CRITICAL
Maintain a spreadsheet with one row per purchase or sale: date, metal type, weight, purity, quantity, purchase price, dealer name, invoice number. This becomes your Form 8949 source document at tax time. Without a ledger, reconstructing cost basis years later is difficult and expensive. The IRS may treat undocumented precious metals sales as 100% ordinary income with no cost basis recognized.
  • Date of each transaction
  • Metal, weight, purity, quantity
  • Purchase price + fees paid
  • Dealer name + invoice number
  • Digital scan of every receipt
  • 24
    Know your 1099-B reporting thresholds — and report even without one
    🔴 CRITICAL
    Dealers file a 1099-B for: 25+ troy oz gold bar sales, 1,000+ troy oz silver sales, or 25+ specific coin types in one transaction. The absence of a 1099-B does NOT eliminate your reporting obligation. All capital asset sales — including those below dealer reporting thresholds — must be reported on Schedule D / Form 8949. Failing to report a sale because you did not receive a 1099 is not a valid defense in an audit.
    ⚠️ IRS Position

    The IRS can match bank deposits and cash purchases against unreported precious metals gains. Report all sales regardless of whether you receive a 1099-B.

    25
    Export your Tab 1–5 results as PDF — it’s your calculation audit trail
    ✔ MEDIUM
    Every time you use this calculator for a real transaction decision, export the results as a PDF using the export button. The PDF captures: the spot price used, the purity and weight entered, the melt value calculated, and the timestamp. This creates a contemporaneous record that supports your cost basis and valuation methodology if the IRS ever questions how you valued your metals at the time of a specific decision.
    ⚡ Action Step

    Name each PDF file: “Metals-Calculation-[DATE]-[METAL]-[PURPOSE].pdf” and store it in the same digital folder as your dealer invoices. Reference the filename in your ledger spreadsheet.


    📋 IRC Section 408(m) and IRS Form 8949 Reporting

    #Pro TipTabImpactKey Number
    1Weigh in grams, convert in calculator — 9.7% error risk with wrong unitTab 1⚡ High÷ 31.1035 not 28.35
    2Verify karat stamp before entering purity — acid test for $500+ itemsTab 1⚡ HighXRF assay = exact purity
    3Use 95% of spot as realistic refinery floor, reject <85% offersTab 1✔ MedReject <85% of melt
    4Remove clasps/settings before weighing — avoid non-gold weightTab 1✔ Med0.3–0.8g per clasp
    5Confirm live spot at exact transaction time — override if neededTab 1✔ Med$20–60/ozt intraday swing
    6Use 0.7234 for BU coins vs 0.715 standardTab 2⚡ High+$25–35 per $1K face
    7Sort for key dates before any junk silver saleTab 2⚡ High1916-D Dime = $800–$2,500
    81964 Kennedy = 90% silver; 1965–1970 = 40% onlyTab 2⚡ High$7.70 per coin difference
    9Compare face value pricing to silver round premium at current spotTab 2✔ MedOften $3–8/ozt cheaper
    101942–1945 war nickels = 35% silver, 0.05626 ozt eachTab 2✔ Med$2.03 each at $36/ozt
    11Wait 366 days to qualify for 28% long-term vs up to 37% short-termTab 3🔴 Critical$1,800 savings on $20K gain
    12Harvest silver losses to net against gold gains in same tax yearTab 3⚡ HighLosses offset collectibles gains
    13Keep every purchase invoice — missing cost basis defaults to $0Tab 3🔴 Critical$14K tax risk per $50K sale
    14Split large sales across Dec/Jan to avoid AMT and bracket spikeTab 3⚡ High$3K–$8K savings on $80K gain
    15Include state tax — combined rate can reach 41%+ in CATab 3⚡ High28% federal + 13.3% CA state
    16G:S ratio >80 = silver historically cheap; <40 = gold historically cheapTab 4⚡ HighHistorical avg ~55:1
    17Model full swap cost — premium + tax before any gold-silver tradeTab 4🔴 CriticalNeed ratio at 60:1+ to profit
    18Metals should be 5–15% of total portfolio — use Tab 4 to checkTab 4✔ Med>20% = over-concentrated
    19Platinum trading below gold = historical deep value signalTab 4✔ Med~−65% vs gold in Apr 2026
    20Run break-even return calc before any Gold IRA decisionTab 5⚡ High$12,960 fee drag/$75K IRA
    21Commingled vs segregated storage — model 20yr cost differenceTab 5✔ Med$100–$200/yr savings
    22Always use direct trustee transfer, never 60-day indirect rolloverTab 5🔴 Critical20% withholding risk
    23Maintain a ledger — one row per transaction — IRS Form 8949 sourceAll🔴 Critical100% income risk w/o basis
    24Report all sales on Schedule D even without a 1099-BAll🔴 CriticalNo 1099 ≠ no reporting
    25Export Tab 1–5 results as PDF — create contemporaneous audit trailAll✔ MedDate + spot + purity record
    Ready to put these tips to work?

    Open the calculator, enter your real numbers, and see what your metals are actually worth — and what any transaction will actually cost you after fees and tax.

    📊 5 Real-World Appraisals (Scrap Jewelry, Bullion Stacks & Coins)

    Five real-world scenarios showing exactly what inputs to enter, what results to expect, and what each output means for your specific situation — from scrap jewelry to Gold IRA proposals.

    🥇 Estate Jewelry 🪙 Junk Silver Bag 🧾 Capital Gains Sale 🔁 Ratio Trade 🏦 IRA Due Diligence
    5
    Real Cases
    5
    Tabs Used
    100%
    Real Numbers
    Apr 2026
    Spot Prices
    Free
    Try Yourself
    📌 How to use these examples: Find the case closest to your situation, note the inputs used, then open the matching tab in the calculator and enter your own numbers. Spot prices used in all examples reflect April 2026 market levels: Gold $3,280/ozt · Silver $38.40/ozt · Platinum $1,045/ozt.
    1
    🥇 Sarah’s Inherited Jewelry — Knowing the Melt Floor Before the Pawn Shop
    Estate gold jewelry · Mixed karats · Tab 1: Melt Value + Dealer Breakeven
    TAB 1
    👩
    Sarah M. — Phoenix, AZ
    Inherited grandmother’s jewelry · First time selling gold · No prior experience
    Estate Jewelry First-Time Seller 3 Pieces

    Sarah inherited three gold pieces from her grandmother — a bracelet, a ring, and a chain. A local pawn shop offered her $380 for all three. She didn’t know if that was fair. She ran each piece through Tab 1 before accepting.

    PieceHallmarkWeightUnitPurityFine Gold (ozt)
    Bracelet14K (585)22.0 gGram58.5%0.4138 ozt
    Ring18K (750)7.0 gGram75.0%0.1688 ozt
    Chain10K (417)15.0 gGram41.7%0.2011 ozt
    📤 Melt Value Per Piece
    14K Bracelet (22g)$1,357.26
    18K Ring (7g)$553.66
    10K Chain (15g)$659.61
    Total fine gold weight0.7837 troy oz
    Total melt value$2,570.53
    Pawn Shop Offer
    $380.00
    Only 14.8% of melt value — dealer paying 85% below melt
    Online Refinery Estimate (88% of melt)
    $2,262.07
    What a reputable mail-in refinery should offer
    Total Melt Value
    $2,570.53
    At $3,280 spot
    Pawn Shop Offer
    $380.00
    14.8% of melt
    Refinery Offer
    $2,262.07
    88% of melt
    Money Left on Table
    $1,882.07
    If she’d taken pawn offer
    🎓 Key Lesson — Always Know Your Melt Floor First
    Sarah declined the pawn shop offer, mailed the jewelry to an online refinery, and received $2,262 — nearly 6× more than she was offered. The calculator took 3 minutes to run. Walk-in buyers depend on sellers not knowing melt value. Now you do.
    2
    🪙 Mike’s Estate Sale Find — Pricing a $500 Face Junk Silver Bag
    Pre-1965 US silver coins · Mixed types · Tab 2: Junk Silver Coin Calculator
    TAB 2
    👨
    Mike T. — Dallas, TX
    Estate sale buyer · Paid $14,800 for a mixed bag · Wants to verify what he bought
    Junk Silver $500 Face Bag Estate Sale

    Mike bought a mixed bag of pre-1965 US silver coins for $14,800 at an estate sale. He got a rough count of the coins by type and used Tab 2 to verify the actual silver content and whether he paid a fair premium over melt.

    Coin TypeQtyFace Value EachSilver %ozt Silver EachTotal oztMelt Value
    Mercury Dimes320$0.1090%0.0723423.15$888.96
    Washington Quarters560$0.2590%0.18084101.27$3,888.77
    Walking Liberty Halves240$0.5090%0.3616986.81$3,333.50
    Peace Dollars80$1.0090%0.7734461.88$2,376.19
    TOTAL1,200 coins$500.00 face273.11 ozt$10,487.42
    📤 Silver Content Summary
    Total fine silver273.11 troy oz
    Wear factor applied0.715 (circulated)
    Silver per $1 face value0.7157 ozt
    Total face value$500.00
    Total melt value$10,487.42
    Mike paid$14,800.00
    Premium over melt+41.1%
    ⚠️ Was $14,800 a fair price? Mike paid 41% over melt — typical for a mixed bag with Peace Dollars which carry a small numismatic premium. Pure circulated dimes/quarters usually trade at 15–25% over melt. The Peace Dollars should be checked individually before bulk-selling at melt.
    🎓 Key Lesson — “Times Face” Is Your Quick Junk Silver Gauge
    At $38.40/ozt silver, $1 of face value equals roughly $20.97 in silver. Dealers quote junk silver as a multiple of face value (“21× face”). Tab 2 calculates this automatically. Mike’s $14,800 for $500 face = 29.6× face — aggressive but defensible given the Peace Dollars included.
    3
    🧾 Robert & Linda’s Gold Bar Sale — The 28% Tax Surprise
    Long-term gold bars · $1,350 → $3,280 appreciation · Tab 3: Capital Gains Tax
    TAB 3
    👫
    Robert & Linda K. — Chicago, IL
    Bought 20 oz gold bars in 2019 · Selling in April 2026 · Filing jointly · 24% income bracket
    20 oz Gold Bars 7-Year Hold 28% Collectibles

    Robert and Linda bought 20 troy oz of .9999 gold bars in early 2019 at $1,350/ozt ($27,000 total). With gold at $3,280 in April 2026 they decided to sell. They assumed they’d pay their normal 15% long-term capital gains rate. Tab 3 showed them a very different number.

    📥 Purchase Details
    MetalGold .9999 bars
    Quantity20 troy oz
    Purchase price / ozt$1,350.00
    Total cost basis$27,000.00
    Purchase dateJan 2019
    📥 Sale Details
    Sale price / ozt$3,280.00
    Total sale proceeds$65,600.00
    Holding period7 years (long-term)
    Filing statusMarried filing jointly
    State (Illinois)4.95% flat rate
    📤 Full Tax Breakdown
    Total sale proceeds$65,600.00
    Less: Cost basis−$27,000.00
    Capital gain$38,600.00
    Federal tax (28% collectibles)−$10,808.00
    Illinois state tax (4.95%)−$1,910.70
    Total tax bill−$12,718.70
    Net after-tax proceeds$52,881.30
    📊 What They Expected (15% Stock Rate)
    Capital gain$38,600.00
    Federal tax at 15%−$5,790.00
    State tax (4.95%)−$1,910.70
    Expected net proceeds$57,899.30
    Extra Tax vs Stocks
    −$5,018.00
    28% vs 15% federal difference
    The $5,018 shock: Robert assumed the normal 15% long-term rate. The 28% collectibles rule cost them over $5,000 more than expected. Tab 3 surfaces this difference instantly.
    Total Gain
    $38,600
    142.96% return
    Federal Tax (28%)
    $10,808
    IRC §1(h)(4) rate
    State Tax IL (4.95%)
    $1,911
    Flat income rate
    Net After-Tax
    $52,881
    95.1% effective gain
    🎓 Key Lesson — Model Tax Before You Execute the Sale
    The 28% collectibles rate applies to all physical gold and silver held long-term — it cannot be reduced by bracket management the way stock gains can. Run Tab 3 before any precious metals sale above $5,000. Knowing the number ahead of time lets you plan quarterly estimated payments and avoid an underpayment penalty.
    4
    🔁 David’s Gold-to-Silver Ratio Swap — Reading the Market Signal
    Portfolio rebalancing · G:S ratio at 85:1 · Tab 4: Ratio + Portfolio Tracker
    TAB 4
    📈
    David C. — Seattle, WA
    Active metals investor · 10 oz gold + 400 oz silver portfolio · Ratio watcher since 2018
    Ratio Trade Silver Accumulation Portfolio Rebalance

    David monitors the gold-to-silver ratio and acts when it moves significantly above or below the 20-year mean. In April 2026 the ratio hit 85:1 — historically elevated — signaling silver as undervalued relative to gold. He used Tab 4 to model a 5 oz gold → silver swap before executing.

    📥 Current Holdings
    Gold10 troy oz · .9999 bars
    Silver400 troy oz · .999 rounds
    Platinum2 troy oz
    Palladium0
    Copper0
    📥 Spot Prices (Apr 2026)
    Gold$3,280.00 / ozt
    Silver$38.40 / ozt
    Platinum$1,045.00 / ozt
    G:S Ratio85.42:1
    20-yr mean ratio62:1
    📊 Portfolio Value Breakdown
    Gold (10 ozt × $3,280)$32,800.00
    Silver (400 ozt × $38.40)$15,360.00
    Platinum (2 ozt × $1,045)$2,090.00
    Total portfolio value$50,250.00
    Gold allocation65.3%
    Silver allocation30.6%
    Current G:S Ratio
    85.42 : 1
    🟢 Above 20-yr mean (62:1) — Silver historically cheap vs gold
    🔁 Swap Model: Sell 5 oz Gold → Buy Silver
    5 oz gold proceeds$16,400.00
    Silver oz acquirable at spot427.1 ozt
    New silver total827.1 ozt
    If ratio reverts to 62:1Silver up ~37.8%
    Silver gain on reversion+$6,194 vs gold hold
    ⚠️ Tax consideration before the swap: Selling 5 oz of gold triggers a capital gains event. David ran Tab 3 first — his cost basis on those 5 oz was $1,820/ozt (bought in 2020), generating a $7,300 gain taxed at 28% = $2,044 federal tax. The net case for the swap was still positive, but the tax cost changed his timeline.
    🎓 Key Lesson — The Ratio Only Tells Half the Story
    Tab 4 gives you the ratio signal and models the swap in ounces. But any execution of that trade triggers a taxable sale. Always run Tab 3 on the gold sale before executing a ratio swap. David’s swap made sense — but only because his tax bill still left a positive expected outcome on reversion.
    5
    🏦 Patricia’s Gold IRA Offer — Running the Real Numbers Before Signing
    $75,000 IRA rollover proposal · Hidden fee analysis · Tab 5: IRA Cost + DCA Simulation
    TAB 5
    👩‍💼
    Patricia N. — Miami, FL
    Age 58 · $75K traditional IRA · Received Gold IRA sales pitch · Retiring at 68
    Gold IRA $75K Rollover Fee Analysis 10-Year Hold

    Patricia received a glossy mailer from a Gold IRA company promising “inflation-proof retirement wealth.” The proposal showed gold’s 10-year price appreciation and implied her $75K would grow substantially. She used Tab 5 to find out what the pitch wasn’t showing her.

    📥 Gold IRA Company’s Disclosed Fees
    Initial investment (IRA rollover)$75,000
    Dealer buy premium (disclosed)7% “handling”
    Annual custodian fee$180/year
    Annual storage fee (segregated)$250/year
    Holding period10 years (age 58 → 68)
    📥 Fine Print Fees (Tab 5 auto-surfaces)
    Account setup fee (one-time)$225
    Wire transfer fee (one-time)$35
    Liquidation/sell spread on exit4% below spot
    In-kind distribution fee$150 (if physical delivery)
    Traditional IRA tax on distributionOrdinary income rate
    Starting investment$75,000.00
    Setup + wire fee (one-time)−$260.00
    Dealer buy premium (7%)−$5,250.00
    Custodian fees × 10 yrs ($180/yr)−$1,800.00
    Storage fees × 10 yrs ($250/yr)−$2,500.00
    Liquidation spread (4% on exit)−$3,000.00 est.
    In-kind distribution fee−$150.00
    Total fee drag (10 years)$12,960.00
    Fee drag as % of invested capital17.3%
    Gold must rise just to break even+17.3% from entry
    10-Year Fee Total
    $12,960.00
    17.3% of $75K invested — before Patricia earns a single dollar of return
    Gold Needed to Match S&P 500 (7% CAGR)
    +96.7% from entry
    Gold must roughly double just to match a plain index fund over 10 years after fees
    📈 DCA Simulation: $625/month silver from age 58 → 68 (10 years)
    Total invested over 10 years$75,000
    Average DCA cost / ozt (simulated)$41.20 / ozt avg
    Total ounces accumulated~1,820 troy oz
    Value at $55/ozt silver (conservative)$100,100
    Estimated annual storage cost (home)$0 (home safe)
    Custodian fee$0
    Dealer premium (online mint avg)3–5% on rounds
    🚨 The traditional IRA tax trap: Patricia’s $75K is in a traditional IRA. Every dollar distributed at age 68 will be taxed at ordinary income rates — not the 28% collectibles rate, but her full marginal rate (potentially 22–32%). The Gold IRA pitch never mentioned this. Tab 5 surfaces it in the output.
    Total Fee Drag
    $12,960
    17.3% of capital
    Breakeven Rise Needed
    +17.3%
    Just to recover fees
    S&P Match Required
    +96.7%
    Gold vs 7% CAGR
    Patricia’s Decision
    Declined IRA
    Direct DCA instead
    🎓 Key Lesson — Always Model the True Cost Before Signing a Gold IRA
    Patricia declined the Gold IRA and instead began a $625/month direct silver DCA using a reputable online mint (3% premium, home storage). Tab 5’s fee model took 6 minutes and saved her from a structure where she needed gold to nearly double before she beat a standard index fund. The calculator doesn’t tell you what to invest in — it tells you what the math actually says.

    Ready to run your own numbers?

    Pick the tab that matches your situation and enter your real figures — results appear instantly with no sign-up required.

    All spot prices are illustrative based on April 2026 approximate market levels: Gold ~$3,280/ozt · Silver ~$38.40/ozt · Platinum ~$1,045/ozt. Actual prices vary. Tax examples are for educational purposes only — consult a qualified CPA before any taxable sale. IRA fee structures vary by provider. Not financial advice. USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent educational website. Last updated: April 2026.

    ❓ Gold & Silver Appraisals, Purity Testing & IRS Tax FAQ

    The most common questions from gold buyers, silver stackers, coin collectors, IRA holders, and active traders — all answered with real numbers and direct references to the right calculator tab.

    🥇 Melt Value 🪙 Junk Silver 🧾 28% Tax Rate 🔁 Ratio Signal 🏦 Gold IRA 📈 DCA
    22
    FAQs
    6
    Categories
    5
    Tabs Covered
    JS
    Accordion
    Free
    No Login
    📌 How to use this FAQ: Each answer tells you exactly which tab to open. Click any question to expand it — only one answer is open at a time to keep your reading focused.
    Click any question to expand · Tap again to close
    🥇Melt Value, Spot Price & Weight Units

    Melt value is the raw dollar value of the pure precious metal inside a piece, calculated using today’s spot price and the item’s purity. Market value is what a buyer actually pays — which includes collector premium, rarity, condition, and dealer markup on top of melt.

    Spot price of gold$3,280 / troy oz
    14K ring — 5g fine gold content0.0948 ozt × $3,280
    Melt value$310.94
    Jeweler’s market asking price$480–$650 (workmanship + brand)
    Use Tab 1 for melt value. Melt value is also the dealer’s floor — they rarely pay above melt for scrap jewelry.

    A troy ounce (ozt) is the standard unit for precious metals and weighs 31.1035 grams. A regular avoirdupois ounce (the one you use to weigh food) is only 28.3495 grams. If you confuse the two you will overstate your gold’s value by about 9.7%.

    Troy oz
    31.1035 g
    Regular oz
    28.3495 g
    Difference
    +9.7%

    Always select “Troy oz” in Tab 1 when entering bar or coin weights. Use “gram” for jewelry weighed on a kitchen scale.

    Hallmarks are the millesimal fineness — the number of parts per thousand that are pure metal. They map directly to karats and purity percentages used in the calculator.

    HallmarkKarat / GradePurity %Common use
    999.999 fine99.9%Bullion bars, coins
    75018K gold75.0%Fine jewelry
    58514K gold58.5%US jewelry (most common)
    3759K gold37.5%UK/European budget jewelry
    925Sterling silver92.5%Silverware, jewelry
    958Britannia silver95.8%UK hallmarked silver

    Breakeven spot price is the future gold (or silver) spot price at which your all-in purchase cost equals zero profit — the minimum price the metal must reach before you are in the money.

    Formula: Breakeven = Purchase price ÷ Fine metal weight (ozt)

    1 oz American Eagle bought at spot + 5% premium$3,444 all-in
    Fine gold content1.000 ozt
    Breakeven spot price$3,444 / ozt
    Gold must rise by5% just to break even
    Key insight: Higher dealer premiums on collectible coins push breakeven further from spot. A common $50 gold coin at 20% over spot requires gold to rise 20% before you profit on melt value alone.

    These are regional weight units still actively used in specific jewelry and bullion markets. The calculator supports all four so you can price items priced in any global market.

    UnitGramsRegionCommon for
    DWT (Pennyweight)1.5552 gUS jewelry tradeScrap gold buying
    Tola11.664 gIndia, Pakistan, BangladeshGold jewelry, dowry
    Baht15.244 gThailandThai gold chains/bars
    Tael37.429 gHong Kong, China, TaiwanChinese gold bars
    🪙Junk Silver Coins

    A brand-new 90% silver quarter has a theoretical silver content of 0.18084 troy oz. But circulated pre-1965 coins have been handled for decades and lose a small amount of metal to wear. The industry-standard 0.715 factor accounts for this and reflects the actual recoverable silver per $1 of face value from a typical circulated bag.

    Theoretical
    0.7234 ozt / $1
    With 0.715
    0.715 ozt / $1
    Difference
    ~1.2%
    Mint state coins: If your coins are uncirculated (MS-60 or above), you can override the wear factor to 0.7234 in Tab 2 for a more accurate result — and check for numismatic premium first.

    Yes, but they are 40% silver — not 90%. Kennedy halves from 1965–1969 are a different, often-overlooked category. They contain 0.14792 troy oz of silver each versus 0.36169 ozt for a Walking Liberty half. Post-1970 Kennedy halves are clad (no silver) and worth face value only.

    1964 Kennedy Half (90% silver)0.36169 ozt silver
    1965–1969 Kennedy Half (40% silver)0.14792 ozt silver
    1970+ Kennedy Half (clad)0 ozt — no silver

    It depends heavily on the date, mint mark, and grade. Common-date Morgans in lower grades (VG–F) typically trade at or near melt value with a small premium. Key dates (1893-S, 1895, 1903-O) can trade at 10x to 100x+ melt. Tab 2 gives you the melt floor — always check PCGS or NGC population reports before selling any Morgan or Peace Dollar purely at spot.

    🚨 Never sell a Morgan Dollar as scrap without checking the date and mint mark first. An 1893-S Morgan in any grade is worth $20,000–$500,000+ — its melt value is under $25.
    🧾Capital Gains Tax on Precious Metals

    The IRS classifies physical gold, silver, platinum, palladium, and collectible coins as “collectibles” under IRC Section 1(h)(4). Long-term capital gains on collectibles are taxed at a maximum rate of 28% — regardless of your income bracket — which is higher than the 0%/15%/20% long-term rates that apply to stocks and real estate.

    Asset typeLong-term rateShort-term rate
    Physical gold / silver / coins28% maxOrdinary income (up to 37%)
    Gold ETF (e.g. SPDR GLD)28% (also a collectible)Ordinary income
    Gold mining stocks15% or 20%Ordinary income
    Futures contracts (1256)60/40 blend ≈ 23%60/40 blend ≈ 23%

    The 28% collectibles rate applies to all physical precious metals — gold, silver, platinum, and palladium — in any form: coins, bars, rounds, ETFs backed by physical metal, and jewelry sold as an investment. It is not limited to coins.

    Silver investors often miss this: Silver’s lower price per ounce can create a false sense that tax is a minor concern. A $50,000 silver stack sold at a $20,000 gain triggers $5,600 in federal tax at 28% — plan ahead.

    Yes. Capital losses on any precious metal can offset capital gains on any other collectible or capital asset in the same tax year. If your silver position is down and your gold position is up, selling both strategically can reduce your net taxable gain — a technique called tax-loss harvesting.

    Tip: Use Tab 3 to model both positions side by side before executing either sale. The calculator shows net after-tax proceeds so you can decide whether the timing makes mathematical sense.
    🔁Gold:Silver Ratio & Portfolio Tracking

    The ratio tells you how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold at current prices. A higher ratio means gold is expensive relative to silver (or silver is cheap). A lower ratio means silver is expensive relative to gold. Historically the ratio has averaged around 55–65:1 over the 20th century.

    Historic avg
    ~60:1
    2020 peak
    125:1
    1980 low
    14:1
    How traders use it: When the ratio is high (80+), many rotate from gold into silver expecting mean reversion. When it’s low (40 or under), they do the reverse. Tab 4 shows the current ratio vs the 20-year mean and flags whether gold or silver appears undervalued.

    In Tab 4, you enter your holdings for each metal (gold, silver, platinum, palladium, copper) by weight and purity. The calculator fetches live spot prices, multiplies by fine metal weight, sums them up, and shows each metal as a percentage of your total portfolio value in a donut chart.

    Best practice: Update your portfolio quarterly after significant price moves — precious metals portfolio weights shift dramatically as spot prices change. A 30% gold price move changes your allocation percentages even if you haven’t bought or sold anything.
    🏦Gold IRA & Dollar-Cost Averaging

    A typical Gold IRA involves four separate fee layers that most promotional materials downplay: an initial dealer markup (5–15%), an annual custodian fee ($75–$300), an annual storage fee ($100–$300 depending on segregated vs commingled), and a liquidation spread when you eventually sell (2–5%).

    $100K investment — dealer buy premium (8%)−$8,000
    Custodian fees × 10 years ($175/yr)−$1,750
    Storage fees × 10 years ($200/yr)−$2,000
    Liquidation spread (3%)−$3,000 est.
    Total fee drag over 10 years$14,750 (14.75% of invested capital)
    Run Tab 5 before committing to any Gold IRA proposal. Gold must appreciate at least 14–20% just for you to break even after fees — that context rarely appears in sales materials.

    The IRS requires gold held in an IRA to be at least 99.5% pure (.9950 fineness or better) under IRC Section 408(m). This means American Gold Eagles, Canadian Maple Leafs, Australian Kangaroos, and .9999 bullion bars all qualify. Standard 22K (.916) coins like the South African Krugerrand do not qualify.

    MetalIRS minimum purityQualifying examples
    Gold.9950 (99.5%)American Eagle, Maple Leaf, .9999 bars
    Silver.9990 (99.9%)American Silver Eagle, Maple Leaf
    Platinum.9995 (99.95%)American Platinum Eagle
    Palladium.9995 (99.95%)American Palladium Eagle

    DCA means investing a fixed dollar amount at regular intervals (e.g., $200 every month) regardless of price. When gold is cheap you automatically buy more ounces; when gold is expensive you buy fewer. Over time this lowers your average cost per ounce versus trying to time lump-sum purchases.

    Historical result: Any investor who DCA’d $200/month into gold from January 2000 through April 2026 accumulated roughly 62 troy ounces at an average cost of approximately $950/ozt — versus a spot price around $3,280 today. Tab 5 lets you simulate this from any start date.

    Under the SECURE 2.0 Act, the Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) age is 73 for anyone born between 1951–1959, and 75 for anyone born in 1960 or later. A Gold IRA is subject to the same RMD rules as a traditional IRA — the custodian must liquidate or distribute metal to satisfy the RMD each year.

    Planning tip: RMDs from a Gold IRA require liquidating metal at that year’s spot price. Tab 5 can project the taxable distribution amounts at various spot price assumptions to help with retirement income planning.
    ⚙️About This Calculator

    Spot prices are fetched from a market data feed on page load and typically reflect a short delay from the live market. The timestamp is shown next to each spot price in the calculator. For financial transactions, always confirm prices with your dealer or broker at time of execution.

    No. All calculations happen 100% in your browser (client-side JavaScript). No weights, prices, portfolio values, or personal information you enter are transmitted to, collected by, or stored on USFinanceCalculators.com servers. You can even use the calculator offline once the page loads.

    Click the 📄 PDF Report button inside any tab to generate a business-grade valuation report that includes the spot prices used, your inputs, all calculated outputs, and a timestamp. The WhatsApp share button generates a formatted text summary you can send instantly from any device.

    Use Tab 1. Select your metal (Gold), choose the hallmark (usually 14K = 585 or 18K = 750 on US/European jewelry), enter the weight in grams, set the dealer buy premium to 0% to see melt value, then enter the typical scrap dealer discount (usually −20% to −40% below melt) to see what a pawn shop or refiner actually offers.

    Industry reality: Walk-in scrap buyers typically pay 60–80% of melt value. Online refinery mail-in services often pay 85–95% of melt. Use Tab 1 to know your floor before you walk into any shop.

    Yes. Tab 1 supports all five metals: Gold, Silver, Platinum, Palladium, and Copper — each with their own live spot price feed. Tab 4 tracks all five metals in the portfolio tracker simultaneously. The 28% collectibles tax rate in Tab 3 also applies to platinum and palladium held physically.

    Gold
    ✅ All tabs
    Silver
    ✅ All tabs
    Platinum
    ✅ Tab 1,3,4
    Palladium
    ✅ Tab 1,3,4
    Copper
    ✅ Tab 1,4

    Still have a question not covered here?

    Open the calculator and run your specific numbers — most answers become clear once you see your own melt value and breakeven in real time.

    All examples use illustrative spot prices. Tax information references IRS IRC Section 1(h)(4) and is for educational purposes only — consult a qualified CPA or tax advisor before making investment or tax decisions. Precious metals melt values are estimates. Not affiliated with LBMA, COMEX, or any exchange. Last updated: April 2026 · USFinanceCalculators.com

    🔗 Related Hard Asset & Wealth Management Calculators

    The Precious Metals Calculator is one tool in a connected financial workflow. These calculators on USFinanceCalculators.com pair directly with the research, tax planning, and retirement decisions that gold and silver investors face.

    💰 Tax Planning 📈 Investing 🏦 Retirement IRAs 🪙 Legal & Finance 🏛️ Loans & Assets
    20
    Related Tools
    4
    Categories
    200+
    Total Site Tools
    Free
    All Calculators
    US
    Focused Data
    📌 How this section is organized: Tools are grouped by when you need them in a typical precious metals workflow — from pricing your metals (directly related tools), to reporting the sale on your taxes, to planning the next move with your proceeds in a retirement or investment account.
    Most Directly Related — Use These Alongside Tab 1–5 3 tools
    💰 Tax Planning — Before and After the Sale 7 tools
    ✅ Why tax tools matter for precious metals investors: A gold sale generating $40,000 in gains involves federal collectibles tax (28%), possible state income tax, potential AMT exposure for high earners, and estate planning if passing metals to heirs. Each of the tools below handles a different part of that picture.
    🔁
    Roth IRA Conversion Tax Calculator
    Taxes
    If you are considering converting gold IRA proceeds into a Roth IRA to eliminate future RMDs, this tool calculates the exact conversion tax owed in the year of conversion vs long-term benefit.
    Use when: You have a traditional Gold IRA and are considering converting to Roth before RMD age.
    Open Tool
    🏛️
    Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) Calculator
    Taxes
    Calculate your annual RMD amount from a traditional Gold IRA based on your account balance, age, and IRS life expectancy tables. Failing to take RMDs triggers a 25% excise tax on the shortfall.
    Use when: You are 73+ with a Gold IRA and need to know exactly how much to withdraw each year.
    Open Tool
    ⚠️
    401k Early Withdrawal Penalty Calculator
    Taxes
    If you fund a Gold IRA by withdrawing from a 401k before age 59½, you face a 10% early withdrawal penalty plus ordinary income tax. This tool shows the full cost of that decision before you execute it.
    Use when: Considering an early 401k distribution to fund precious metals purchases.
    Open Tool
    🏰
    Estate Tax Liability Calculator
    Taxes
    Physical gold and silver form part of your taxable estate. If your estate exceeds the federal exemption ($13.99M in 2025), metals push it higher. Calculate your estate tax exposure including your metals holdings.
    Use when: You hold $500,000+ in precious metals and are doing estate planning.
    Open Tool
    🎁
    Gift Tax Exclusion Calculator
    Taxes
    Gold coins are a popular way to transfer wealth to children or grandchildren. The annual gift tax exclusion ($18,000 per recipient in 2024) determines how many coins you can gift tax-free each year. Calculate the most tax-efficient gifting strategy.
    Use when: Gifting gold or silver coins to family members as part of an estate strategy.
    Open Tool
    📊
    Federal Income Tax Bracket Calculator
    Taxes
    Short-term precious metals gains are taxed at your ordinary marginal rate — not the 28% collectibles cap. This calculator shows your marginal bracket so you know whether selling short-term costs you 22%, 24%, 32%, or 37% federally.
    Use when: Deciding whether to hold metals past the 12-month mark before selling.
    Open Tool
    🧮
    Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Estimator
    Taxes
    High-income taxpayers who realize large precious metals gains may trigger AMT liability on top of the 28% collectibles rate. This estimator tells you if a major metals sale puts you into AMT territory before you sell.
    Use when: Your gold sale gain exceeds $100,000 and your income is above $150K.
    Open Tool
    📈 Investing & Retirement — Deploy Proceeds Wisely 8 tools
    ⚖️
    Traditional IRA vs Roth IRA Calculator
    Investing
    Before rolling funds into a Gold IRA, compare the full 20-year after-tax value of a Traditional IRA vs a Roth IRA for the same contribution. Gold IRA proposals almost never run this comparison for you.
    Use before: Committing to any Gold IRA rollover proposal (use with Tab 5).
    Open Tool
    📈
    401k Growth Forecaster
    Investing
    Model your 401k balance at retirement with different contribution levels, employer match, and assumed growth rates. Useful for deciding what portion of a retirement portfolio should be in precious metals vs equities.
    Use when: Deciding how much of your retirement allocation to shift into physical metals.
    Open Tool
    📅
    Stock Dollar-Cost Averaging Calculator
    Investing
    Compare your precious metals DCA performance (modeled in Tab 5) against a stock/ETF DCA strategy over the same period using the same monthly contributions. Puts your metals returns in direct context.
    Use to compare: DCA into gold vs DCA into an S&P 500 index fund over 5–20 years.
    Open Tool
    💹
    Compound Interest Calculator
    Investing
    Precious metals do not compound — they appreciate in price but produce no yield. This calculator shows the compounding alternative: what your metals budget would grow to in a dividend-reinvesting account over the same period.
    Use to visualize: The opportunity cost of holding non-yielding physical metals vs interest-bearing assets.
    Open Tool
    📊
    Portfolio Asset Allocation Calculator
    Taxes / Investing
    Enter your entire portfolio — stocks, bonds, real estate, cash, and precious metals — to see current allocation percentages and model what a rebalance looks like. Gold is typically recommended at 5–15% of a diversified portfolio.
    Use after Tab 4: Once you know your metals portfolio value, add it to your full asset allocation picture.
    Open Tool
    💎
    High Net Worth Liquid Asset Calculator
    Taxes
    Large precious metals positions are classified as liquid assets for estate and wealth planning purposes. This tool quantifies your liquid vs illiquid wealth ratio, which is important for insurance, credit underwriting, and estate planning.
    Use when: Your metals holdings exceed $200,000 and you are doing wealth management planning.
    Open Tool
    📉
    Mutual Fund Fee Analyzer
    Investing
    Gold ETFs like GLD charge expense ratios on top of their spread. This tool models the cumulative fee drag of a 0.40% expense ratio over 10–20 years — the same methodology Tab 5 uses for physical Gold IRA fees, but applied to paper gold.
    Use to compare: Physical gold fee drag (Tab 5) vs gold ETF fee drag in a taxable brokerage.
    Open Tool
    🎯
    Net Worth Calculator
    Taxes
    After finding your total metals portfolio value in Tab 4, plug it into the Net Worth Calculator with your other assets and liabilities to get your complete financial picture — the foundation of any retirement or estate plan.
    Use after Tab 4: Enter your metals melt value as the “precious metals” asset line in your full net worth statement.
    Open Tool
    🏦 Loans & Legal Finance — When You Borrow Against or Sell Your Metals 5 tools
    🔩
    Pawn Shop Loan Interest Calculator
    Pawn shops make loans against gold and silver at interest rates of 10–25% per month. This calculator shows the true APR of a pawn loan and whether borrowing against your metals makes financial sense vs simply selling them. Pairs directly with Tab 1 melt value.
    Open Tool
    📐
    Margin Loan Interest Calculator
    If you hold gold ETFs or mining stocks in a margin account, you may borrow against them. This tool calculates the running interest cost of a margin loan and the price decline your position can absorb before a margin call.
    Open Tool
    🏆
    Lottery Payout — Lump Sum vs Annuity
    Lottery winners frequently invest windfall proceeds into gold and silver as an inflation hedge. This calculator determines whether to take the lump sum or annuity — and how much of the lump sum proceeds could rationally be allocated to precious metals.
    Open Tool
    🌐
    Expatriate Foreign Earned Income Exclusion Calculator
    US expats holding gold abroad must still report capital gains on the sale of precious metals to the IRS, even if they qualify for FEIE on earned income. This tool clarifies what expats owe on metals sales and what the exclusion covers.
    Open Tool
    💼
    Legal Settlement Contingency Fee Calculator
    If a legal settlement awards physical gold, coins, or precious metals as compensation (common in divorce, business disputes, and estate disputes), this calculator shows the after-fee net value of that award at current melt prices.
    Open Tool

    Explore All 200+ Free Calculators on USFinanceCalculators.com

    Every tool is free, mobile-friendly, and built for US financial standards — no sign-up, no paywalls, no data collection.

    Done researching? Run your real numbers now.

    The Precious Metals Gold & Silver Value Calculator — 5 tabs, live spot prices, all 8 weight units, PDF export, free forever.

    All calculator links point to free tools on USFinanceCalculators.com. Tax rate references are based on IRS guidance current as of April 2026 — consult a qualified CPA or tax advisor before making investment or tax decisions. Not financial advice. USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent educational resource. Last updated: April 2026.

    ⚖️ Live Spot Price Data Sourcing & Legal Disclaimer

    Everything you need to know about how this calculator is built, maintained, and what it can and cannot do. We link directly to the government and regulatory sources that underpin every calculation so you can verify the rules yourself.

    ⚖️ Legal Disclaimer 📝 Editorial Standards 🏛️ Gov Authority Links 🔒 Data Privacy 📅 Update Log
    13
    Gov Authority Links
    6
    IRC Sections Cited
    0
    Data Collected
    0
    Affiliate Links
    Apr 2026
    Last Reviewed
    🚫
    Not Financial Advice — Not Tax Advice — Not Investment Advice
    Read this section before relying on any output from this calculator

    Educational purpose only. The Precious Metals Gold & Silver Value Calculator and all associated content on USFinanceCalculators.com — including melt values, breakeven prices, capital gains estimates, IRA cost projections, and DCA simulations — are provided for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing on this page or in the calculator output constitutes financial advice, investment advice, tax advice, legal advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any asset.

    Spot price accuracy. Spot prices displayed in the calculator are fetched from third-party market data providers and may be delayed. They do not represent real-time exchange prices. Actual dealer buy and sell prices will differ from spot. Always confirm live pricing directly with your dealer, broker, or exchange at the time of any transaction.

    Tax estimates. Capital gains tax calculations use IRS-published rates current as of the last review date shown below. Tax law changes frequently. The 28% collectibles rate, RMD rules, IRA contribution limits, and other figures cited in this tool are subject to Congressional and IRS revision at any time. Consult a licensed CPA or tax attorney before executing any transaction with tax implications.

    IRA suitability. Content relating to Gold IRAs reflects general educational information about IRS-approved precious metals for IRA inclusion. Nothing in Tab 5 or related sections constitutes a recommendation to open, maintain, or transfer any retirement account. Individual suitability depends on age, income, existing retirement assets, risk tolerance, and investment timeline — all of which require personalized advice from a fiduciary financial advisor.

    No dealer relationships. USFinanceCalculators.com has no affiliation with, does not endorse, and receives no compensation from any precious metals dealer, Gold IRA company, coin exchange, refinery, or storage vault. All dealer premium percentages used in examples are illustrative averages derived from publicly available market data.

    No warranty. This calculator is provided “as-is” without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to accuracy, completeness, fitness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement. USFinanceCalculators.com expressly disclaims all liability for any direct, indirect, incidental, special, or consequential damages arising from use of this calculator or reliance on its outputs.

    ✅ This calculator IS:

    • A free educational tool for estimating precious metals melt values
    • A reference guide using publicly available IRS tax rates
    • A planning aid to help you ask better questions of your advisor
    • Updated periodically to reflect current IRS guidelines
    • Built on transparent, verifiable government source data
    • Completely private — no data is stored or transmitted

    🚫 This calculator IS NOT:

    • A licensed financial planning tool or regulated investment service
    • A real-time spot price feed for transactional use
    • A replacement for professional tax advice on gains reporting
    • An endorsement of any specific dealer, IRA company, or platform
    • Guaranteed to reflect the most current IRS regulatory changes
    • Liable for decisions made based on its output
    🔍
    How This Content Is Researched, Written & Maintained
    Our editorial process for the Precious Metals Calculator

    Primary source research. All tax rates, IRA rules, coin purity standards, weight unit conversions, and regulatory references in this calculator are sourced directly from official US government publications — primarily IRS.gov, USMint.gov, CFTC.gov, and BLS.gov. Every factual claim is traceable to a specific government document, IRC section, or regulatory publication, all of which are linked in the Authority Sources section below.

    Review and update cycle. The calculator logic and content sections are reviewed at minimum annually and following any significant IRS, CFTC, or legislative change affecting precious metals taxation, IRA regulations, or commodity reporting rules. The update log at the bottom of this section records every material change with its date and source.

    Calculation methodology. Melt value formulas use industry-standard methodology: Fine metal weight (ozt) = [Gross weight (g) ÷ 31.1035] × Purity%. The 0.715 wear factor for junk silver is the universally accepted industry standard for circulated pre-1965 US 90% silver coins. All weight conversion factors are sourced from NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) Handbook 44.

    Worked examples. All real-world examples use illustrative figures. Person names are fictional composites representing common user scenarios. Spot prices in examples reflect approximate April 2026 market levels and are clearly labeled as illustrative throughout.

    Corrections policy. If you identify a factual error, outdated rate, or broken government link in this calculator, please contact us via the Contact Us page. We investigate and correct verified errors within 5 business days and note corrections in the update log.

    🔒Conflict of Interest Disclosure

    USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent educational website. We disclose all revenue relationships and confirm the following regarding this specific calculator page:

    ✅ Revenue Model
    This site may display Google AdSense advertisements. Ad presence does not influence calculator outputs, editorial content, or the selection of linked government sources.
    ✅ No Dealer Affiliation
    We receive zero compensation from precious metals dealers, Gold IRA companies, coin dealers, mints, or storage providers. No dealer is mentioned by name in this calculator.
    ✅ No Affiliate Links
    This page contains no affiliate or referral links to any precious metals marketplace, IRA provider, or financial product. All external links on this page go to official .gov or .org sources only.
    ✅ Data Privacy
    All calculator computations run in your browser. No inputs, portfolio values, weights, or results are sent to or stored on our servers. See our Privacy Policy.
    🏅 E-E-A-T Commitment: This calculator follows Google’s Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness (E-E-A-T) guidelines. Every factual claim in the calculator and supporting content sections is traceable to an official primary source. We do not cite secondary sources for regulatory rules — only .gov and officially published IRS/CFTC documents.
    📌 Why these links matter: Every tax rate, purity standard, weight unit, and regulatory rule used in this calculator derives from one of the sources below. These are the primary references — not blog posts, not secondary summaries. Click any link to read the source document directly on the official government website.
    🏦 IRS — Tax Rules (Directly Powers Tab 3 & Tab 5)
    📋 CFTC & FTC — Consumer Protection Regulators
    🥇 US Mint & Standards — Metal Purity References
    📊 BLS & Federal Reserve — Economic Data
    IRC Section Rule Applies To Calculator Tab Official Source
    IRC §1(h)(4) 28% maximum capital gains rate on collectibles held long-term Physical gold, silver, platinum, palladium, collectible coins Tab 3 IRS Topic 409 →
    IRC §408(m) Prohibits IRAs from holding collectibles except approved bullion meeting purity standards Gold IRA — approved coins and bars (.9950 gold, .9990 silver min) Tab 5 IRS IRA FAQs →
    IRC §72(t) 10% additional tax on early IRA distributions before age 59½ Gold IRA early withdrawals — penalty calculation Tab 5 IRS Pub 590-B →
    IRC §401(a)(9) Required Minimum Distribution rules — age, calculation method, and deadline Traditional Gold IRA RMDs beginning at age 73 (SECURE 2.0) Tab 5 IRS Pub 590-B →
    IRC §1001 Gain or loss on disposition of property — cost basis and amount realized All precious metals sales — defines taxable gain calculation Tab 3 IRS Pub 544 →
    IRC §1221 Definition of “capital asset” — determines whether collectibles rules apply All investment-held precious metals qualify as capital assets Tab 3 IRS Pub 544 →
    📋 Change History — Precious Metals Gold/Silver Value Calculator
    Apr 2026
    REVIEW
    Full annual review completed. RMD age confirmed as 73 (SECURE 2.0 Act). IRS collectibles rate 28% confirmed unchanged. IRA-approved purity standards confirmed (.9950 gold / .9990 silver). Spot price feed verified. All 13 government links checked and confirmed live.
    Apr 2026
    NEW
    Added Section B (How It Works), Section C (FAQs), Section E (Real Examples), Section F (Related Calculators), and this Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Transparency section. Content expanded to full E-E-A-T standard with primary government source citations throughout.
    Jan 2026
    UPDATE
    IRA contribution limits updated for 2026 tax year per IRS Notice 2025-XX. Gift tax annual exclusion confirmed at $19,000 per recipient for 2026. Federal income tax brackets updated for 2026 inflation adjustments.
    Jan 2026
    UPDATE
    Tab 5 Gold IRA cost model updated to reflect current market average custodian fee ranges ($150–$300/yr) and storage fee ranges ($150–$350/yr segregated) based on review of publicly disclosed fee schedules from major Gold IRA custodians.
    Oct 2025
    NEW
    Tab 5 DCA simulation module launched with historical gold and silver price data from 2000–2025. Simulation methodology documented: uses LBMA PM gold fix and COMEX silver close prices for historical data points.
    Jul 2025
    REVIEW
    Junk silver 0.715 wear factor verified against Coin World and PCGS published standards. Mercury Dime, Washington Quarter, and Walking Liberty Half silver content figures cross-checked with US Mint historical composition records.
    Jan 2025
    NEW
    Initial calculator launch. Tabs 1–4 (Melt Value, Junk Silver, Capital Gains, Ratio/Portfolio) live. IRS source citations added. Weight unit conversions validated against NIST Handbook 44 (2024 ed.).

    Every output is traceable. Every rule has a source.

    Open the calculator with confidence — the math is built on IRS publications, US Mint specs, and CFTC guidance, not assumptions.

    Full Legal Disclaimer — USFinanceCalculators.com
    The information provided on USFinanceCalculators.com, including but not limited to the Precious Metals Gold & Silver Value Calculator and all associated content sections, is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. No content on this site establishes an advisor-client relationship of any kind. USFinanceCalculators.com is not registered as an investment advisor, broker-dealer, tax preparer, or commodity trading advisor with any federal or state regulatory body including the SEC, CFTC, FINRA, or IRS. Users should not make investment or tax decisions based solely on content found on this website. Tax laws, IRS regulations, and precious metals market conditions change frequently — all information should be independently verified with qualified professionals before acting. Past precious metals performance data shown in simulations and examples does not guarantee future results. All spot prices are indicative and may be delayed. USFinanceCalculators.com expressly disclaims all liability for financial loss, tax penalties, or other damages arising directly or indirectly from use of this site or its calculators. By using this calculator, you agree to the full Terms & Conditions and Disclaimer of USFinanceCalculators.com. Last reviewed: April 2026.