Wyoming Sales Tax on Gold & Silver

Illustration: a US map outline with a gold coin and a percent symbol

Does Wyoming tax gold & silver?

No. Wyoming does not charge sales tax on investment-grade precious metals. Purchases of gold, silver, and platinum bullion and investment coins are exempt, with no minimum purchase required. Other items like jewelry, accessories, and processed or collectible items outside the exemption remain taxable.

Wyoming: Exempt — no sales tax on bullion.

Sales tax on precious metals is set at the state level — there is no federal sales tax on bullion. Here is how Wyoming treats it, what to watch for, and where to confirm the current rule.

What’s exempt and what’s taxed in Wyoming

Wyoming exempts gold, silver, and platinum bullion and investment coins from sales tax. The exemption is about the metal, not the seller — it applies whether you buy locally or have bullion shipped to a Wyoming address. Still taxable: jewelry, accessories, and processed or collectible items outside the exemption. Wyoming exempts bullion and specie under its Legal Tender Act (2018).

Base rate and local tax

Wyoming’s base state rate is 4%, and local jurisdictions can add to it, so the effective rate on any taxable portion depends on your delivery address. Where bullion is exempt, this rate only matters for taxable items like jewelry or accessories.

How to confirm the current rule

Tax law changes — several states have added or removed bullion exemptions in the last few years. Before a significant purchase, verify with the Wyoming Department of Revenue or ask a CPA.

Verify before you buy: Sales-tax rules change and local rates vary. This is general information, not tax advice — confirm the current rule with the Wyoming Department of Revenue (official site) or a CPA before a large purchase.

Sales tax is not the same as capital gains tax

Two different taxes get confused here. Sales tax is charged (or not) when you buy, and is the state matter covered on this page. Capital gains tax applies when you sell at a profit — the IRS treats physical metal as a collectible (up to a 28% federal long-term rate) no matter which state you live in. See our guide to gold & silver taxes for the selling side.

Does Wyoming charge sales tax on gold and silver?

No. Wyoming does not charge sales tax on investment-grade precious metals. Purchases of gold, silver, and platinum bullion and investment coins are exempt, with no minimum purchase required. Other items like jewelry, accessories, and processed or collectible items outside the exemption remain taxable.

Is there a minimum purchase to avoid sales tax in Wyoming?

No — Wyoming's bullion exemption has no minimum purchase amount.

Will I owe tax when I sell my metals?

Possibly — but that's capital gains tax, not sales tax. The IRS taxes profits on physical gold and silver as collectibles (up to 28% long-term), regardless of your state. See our gold & silver taxes guide.

All states — sales tax on gold & silver