CAN YOU SELL PART OF A GOLD BAR OR COIN

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If you're holding a gold bar or coin and wondering whether you can sell just a portion of it, you’re not alone.

CAN YOU SELL PART OF A GOLD BAR OR COIN

Many UK-based investors ask: “Is it possible to sell part of a gold bar or coin, and what are the practical, legal and tax consequences?” This article will cover the key points you need to know; what is possible, what the limitations are, how tax rules apply, and how to approach it in a sensible way.

1. What does “part of” a gold bar or coin mean?

When we talk about selling part of a gold bar or coin, it could mean one of several scenarios:

From a practical standpoint, splitting a physical gold bar into smaller pieces introduces additional costs and risks (see below). With gold coins the “sell part” case is simpler: you sell some but not all of your coins.

2. Can you legally sell part of a gold bar or coin?

Gold coins

Yes, if you own multiple coins, you can choose to sell some of them and keep others. For coins minted by a recognised UK issuer, this is straightforward.

Gold bars

Technically, you can dispose of part of your gold bar holdings (e.g. sell one bar out of several) but physically cutting up a bar to create smaller units is far less common, and significantly more complex.

For instance, some specialist sources note that splitting a single bar (fractionating) is possible but involves professional cutting, assay verification, costs and potential value loss.

So, yes you can “sell part” in the sense of disposing part of your holding, but splitting one bar into pieces for sale raises practical and costly complications.

3. Key practical issues when selling part of a gold bar

If you are thinking “I’ll just slice 100g off my 1kg bar and sell that,” here are the things to consider:

Purity and authenticity

Bars usually carry stamps showing weight, purity (e.g. 999.9 fine) and sometimes serial number and refiner. When you split a bar, you may lose that provenance and the parts may lose value for the buyer.

Costs of splitting

Professional cutting, re-assaying and certification cost money. These processes will incur charges and therefore lessening your return.

Resale and liquidity

Smaller pieces or fragments may be harder to sell; many buyers prefer known bar sizes from reputable refiners. The premium or discount may widen.

Buyer acceptance

Some buyers (bullion dealers) may refuse to accept non-standard sizes or re-shape bars unless they are certified. This raises risk.

Alternative: sell whole bar vs. splitting

It is going to be more straight forward and cost-effective to sell whole bar(s) rather than physically split one. Potentially look to buy smaller bars/coins in the first place if you want flexibility.

4. Coins versus bars: which is easier to ‘part?sell’?

In many cases, for investors who want flexibility, buying smaller bars or coins from the outset is more practical.

5. Tax and regulatory considerations in the UK

VAT

For investment-grade gold (purity of at least 99.5% for bars, and certain coins) in the UK, VAT is zero-rated. So, whether you sell part or whole, VAT is unlikely to be an issue if the gold qualifies as “investment gold”.

Capital Gains Tax (CGT)

It’s very important to understand CGT in the UK when disposing of precious metals:

Key takeaway

If you sell part of a bar or coins, you must keep good records (purchase cost, date, purity/weight, sale price, date) because the part you sell will generate a gain or loss that must be split accordingly.

6. Scenario examples

Example A - Selling part of coins.


You bought 10 gold coins (UK legal-tender coins) some years ago. You now sell 4 of them, keep 6. Since these are CGT-exempt coins, you do not pay CGT on those 4 coins’ sale (assuming they indeed qualify). You keep the remaining 6. Straightforward.

Example B - Selling part of a bar holding.


You own five identical 1 kg gold bars purchased for £100,000 total. You sell one bar for £22,000. Your acquisition cost for that bar is deemed £20,000 (i.e. proportion of cost). The gain is £2,000. If your total gains this tax year are below the allowance, no CGT; else you pay CGT on the gain. Since the bars are not CGT-exempt, legal treatment is standard.

Example C – Splitting one large bar into smaller pieces.


You own one 1 kg bar bought for £40,000. You engage a specialist to cut it into smaller units, incur £800 cost, produce five 200 g pieces, and sell two of them. You must: Include the cost of cutting/splitting as allowable cost (reduces gain), Apportion your acquisition cost to the part you sell. Assess if the pieces are acceptable to the buyer (reduced premium?). Calculate gains and pay CGT if applicable.

7. Does splitting a bar affect value and liquidity?

Yes – and this is critical.

Therefore, if you anticipate selling in parts, it may be better to purchase smaller bars or coins initially rather than purchase one large bar and split later.

8. When might selling part make sense?

In each case you need to evaluate: the cost of sale (fees, shipping, splitting), the liquidity of the piece, the tax implications, and the market price.

9. Steps to follow if you decide to sell part of your gold

  1. Check documentation – weight, purity, refiner, serial number (if any), purchase receipt.
  2. Value your gold – check current spot price of gold, what premiums/discounts apply for your bar or coin type.
  3. Decide how much you’ll sell – entire units of coins or whole bars preferred; if slicing a bar, get a reliable quote for splitting.
  4. Find reputable buyer/dealer – compare offers, ask for transparent pricing.
  5. Prepare documentation for tax – keep records of acquisition cost, any splitting costs, sale price, date.
  6. Consider timing – if your gain will push you above the CGT allowance, you may wish to defer sale until next tax year if appropriate (for non-exempt assets).
  7. Arrange secure logistics – shipping gold safely and ensure payment method is secure if selling online.
  8. Keep the part you retain safe – storing the portion you keep in secure, insured conditions.

10. Summary & key takeaways

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