What Is Tokenized Gold and Who Is It For?
How blockchain-based gold tokens like PAXG and XAUT work, what backs them, and which type of investor benefits most from onchain gold ownership.
Tokenized gold is physical gold represented as a digital token on a blockchain. Each token is backed by real gold bars stored in professional vaults, and the blockchain serves as the ownership ledger instead of a brokerage account or paper certificate.
The concept is straightforward: take one of the oldest stores of value and make it work with one of the newest financial rails. The result is gold you can hold in a crypto wallet, transfer in minutes, trade around the clock, and — in some cases — redeem for actual metal.
How Tokenized Gold Works
The process follows a simple chain:
- An issuer (like Paxos or Tether) purchases London Good Delivery gold bars
- The gold is stored in regulated, insured vaults (typically in London or Switzerland)
- The issuer mints tokens on a blockchain (usually Ethereum), with each token representing one troy ounce of gold
- Token holders can buy, sell, transfer, or redeem these tokens
The token price tracks the spot price of gold because the issuer maintains a 1:1 reserve. If the spot price of gold is $4,492, one PAXG token should trade near that price on any exchange or decentralized marketplace.
Transparency comes from regular third-party attestations of the gold reserves. Paxos publishes monthly attestation reports from a registered accounting firm, showing that the amount of gold in custody matches or exceeds the number of tokens in circulation.
The Two Major Products
PAXG (Pax Gold)
- Issuer: Paxos Trust Company, regulated by the New York State Department of Financial Services
- Blockchain: Ethereum (ERC-20)
- Backing: Allocated London Good Delivery bars at Brink’s vaults in London
- Redemption: Physical delivery available for holders of 430 oz or more (approximately one standard bar)
- Fees: No custody fee; 0.02% transfer fee on-chain
XAUT (Tether Gold)
- Issuer: TG Commodities Limited, associated with Tether
- Blockchain: Ethereum (ERC-20) and Tron (TRC-20)
- Backing: Allocated London Good Delivery bars in Swiss vaults
- Redemption: Physical delivery available in Switzerland for qualifying holders
- Fees: No custody fee; fees apply on creation and redemption
Both products aim for the same outcome — gold exposure on a blockchain — but they differ in regulatory jurisdiction, vault location, and issuer governance.
Tokenized Gold vs Physical Gold vs ETFs
Each gold ownership method solves a different problem:
Physical gold gives you the highest degree of sovereignty. You hold the metal, no intermediary can freeze it, and it works even if the financial system goes offline. But it is expensive to store, hard to divide, and slow to sell.
Gold ETFs give you the most liquid, lowest-friction exposure through a brokerage account. But you own shares in a trust, not gold itself. You cannot self-custody an ETF share or trade it on a weekend.
Tokenized gold sits in between. You get self-custody (through your own wallet), 24/7 trading, and fractional ownership. But you still depend on the issuer to maintain reserves and honor redemptions.
The right choice depends on what you are optimizing for:
| If you prioritize… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Absolute sovereignty | Physical gold |
| Low cost + liquidity | Gold ETF |
| Self-custody + 24/7 access | Tokenized gold |
| Programmable finance (DeFi) | Tokenized gold |
| Retirement account eligibility | Gold ETF |
Who Is Tokenized Gold For?
Tokenized gold tends to appeal to a specific investor profile:
Crypto-native investors who already manage wallets and understand on-chain transactions. For this group, tokenized gold is a natural portfolio diversifier — hard-asset exposure without leaving the blockchain ecosystem.
International investors who want gold exposure without the friction of cross-border brokerage accounts. A PAXG token works the same whether you are in Singapore, Brazil, or Germany.
DeFi participants who want to use gold as collateral in lending protocols, provide liquidity in trading pools, or earn yield on gold positions. This is something neither physical gold nor ETFs can do.
Younger investors comfortable with digital-first financial products. The idea of holding gold in a mobile wallet feels more natural than calling a dealer or opening a brokerage account.
Tokenized gold is probably not ideal for investors who distrust digital custody, are unfamiliar with blockchain wallets, or need the tax treatment of traditional gold investments.
Risks to Understand
Issuer risk. If the issuer fails, mismanages reserves, or faces regulatory action, your token could lose its peg to gold. This is the single most important risk in tokenized gold.
Smart contract risk. Bugs in the token contract could, in theory, be exploited. Both PAXG and XAUT use audited, relatively simple ERC-20 contracts, but the risk is not zero.
Regulatory risk. Governments could restrict or ban tokenized commodities. The regulatory status of these products varies by jurisdiction and is still evolving.
Liquidity risk on smaller venues. While PAXG and XAUT trade on major exchanges, liquidity on decentralized exchanges or smaller platforms can be thin, leading to wider spreads.
Getting Started
- Choose a product — PAXG if you value regulatory clarity, XAUT if you want multi-chain flexibility
- Set up a wallet — MetaMask, Ledger, or any Ethereum-compatible wallet
- Buy on an exchange — Kraken, Binance, or Coinbase list PAXG; Bitfinex lists XAUT
- Transfer to self-custody — move tokens to your own wallet if you want full control
- Monitor your position — the token price tracks gold spot, so standard gold analysis applies
Frequently Asked Questions
Is tokenized gold real gold? Yes. Each token represents ownership of allocated physical gold bars stored in professional vaults. The gold is real; the ownership record is digital.
Can I redeem tokenized gold for physical bars? Yes, but minimums apply. PAXG requires approximately 430 troy ounces (one London Good Delivery bar) for physical redemption. Below that threshold, you sell the token for cash or crypto.
What happens if the issuer goes bankrupt? Because the gold is held in allocated (not commingled) form, token holders have a legal claim on the underlying metal. However, the resolution process would depend on jurisdiction and could take time.