Gold IRA Depositories & Storage Explained

Illustration: a gold bar inside an open vault door

Straight answer

The physical metal in a Gold IRA must be stored at an IRS-approved depository — a specialized, insured vault — not in your closet, safe, or home gun cabinet. You’ll choose between segregated storage (your exact bars and coins held separately, slightly higher fee) and commingled storage (you own a quantity of identical metal in a shared pool, cheaper). Either way, expect roughly $100–300 per year, and the depository — not the dealer — is where your retirement metal actually lives.

A Gold IRA splits one job between two companies: a custodian handles the paperwork and IRS reporting, and a depository physically holds the metal. Understanding the depository side — how storage works, what it costs, and how it’s insured — is how you confirm your retirement savings are actually sitting in a vault and not just on a spreadsheet.

Why IRA metal can’t be stored at home

The IRS treats the metal in a self-directed IRA as a retirement asset that must be held by a qualified trustee or custodian, who in turn stores it at an approved facility. The metal never legally passes into your personal possession while it’s inside the IRA. Take it home and you’ve likely triggered a distribution — the full value becomes taxable, and if you’re under 59½, a 10% early-withdrawal penalty stacks on top.

This is why “home storage Gold IRA” pitches are a recurring trap. Promoters dress them up with LLC structures and claim you can be your own trustee, but the IRS has not blessed that arrangement, and it remains a live audit risk. We cover the specifics in home storage Gold IRAs — the short version is that the depository requirement isn’t a fee-padding scheme, it’s the rule that keeps the account tax-advantaged.

Segregated vs. commingled storage

Once your metal reaches a depository, it’s stored one of two ways. The difference is real, and it affects both your cost and what you actually get back later.

Segregated (also called allocated or “separate”) storage means your specific bars and coins — often with their serial numbers logged — sit in their own labeled space. When you take a distribution, you receive those same physical items. Commingled (also called non-segregated, unallocated, or “pooled”) storage means your metal is stored alongside other investors’ identical product. You own a documented quantity — say, ten one-ounce American Gold Eagles — but not ten specific coins. On withdrawal you get equivalent items of the same type, weight, and purity, just not the literal ones you bought.

Segregated vs. commingled storage at a glance
Feature Segregated (allocated) Commingled (non-segregated)
What you own Your exact, specific bars/coins A quantity of identical metal in a shared pool
Tracking Often by serial number / individual log By type, weight, and purity
On distribution you receive The same physical items you bought Equivalent items of the same spec
Typical cost Higher Lower
Best for Specific bars, numismatic concern, peace of mind Standard bullion, cost-conscious savers
Trade-off Pay more for certainty of identity Save money, accept equivalent (not identical) return

For most people buying standard bullion — generic rounds, common-date Eagles, recognized bars — commingled storage is perfectly reasonable and saves money. One ounce of .999 gold is one ounce of .999 gold. Segregated storage earns its higher fee mainly when you’ve bought specific bars you care about keeping intact, or when the certainty of getting your exact items back is worth paying for. Neither option is safer in terms of theft or loss; both sit in the same insured vault. The difference is identity, not security.

How depository insurance works

Reputable depositories carry all-risk insurance covering theft, damage, and loss, frequently underwritten through Lloyd’s of London or a comparable carrier. Coverage is usually written for the full replacement value of stored metal and is what separates a real depository from a glorified storage unit.

A few things to understand about this insurance. It protects the metal while it’s in the vault; it generally does not insure market price swings — if gold drops, that’s your loss, not an insurable event. And the policy belongs to the depository, not to you directly, so what matters is that the facility carries enough coverage to make every account whole. Before committing, ask for the carrier name and coverage limits in writing. A legitimate depository answers that question without hesitation.

Examples of approved depositories

Several depositories are widely used by IRA custodians. These are factual examples of established facilities, not endorsements — we have no paid relationships with any of them, and you should verify current status yourself:

  • Delaware Depository (Wilmington, DE) — one of the most commonly named facilities for precious-metals IRAs.
  • Brink’s Global Services — the security and logistics company operates vaults used for IRA metals storage in several locations.
  • International Depository Services (IDS) — operates facilities in Delaware and Texas, among others.

You’ll also see CME/COMEX-approved vaults and others. The specific depository you use is often determined by which one your custodian partners with, though some custodians let you choose. There’s no single “best” depository — what matters is that it’s IRS-approved, properly insured, and independently audited.

What storage actually costs

Storage and insurance are billed annually, and depositories use one of two models. A flat fee typically runs about $100–300 per year regardless of how much metal you hold. A scaled fee charges roughly 0.5%–1% of the metal’s value per year — so a $100,000 account might pay $500–1,000 annually.

The math flips depending on account size. On a small account, a flat fee can quietly eat a meaningful slice; on a large account, a percentage fee can balloon past a flat option. Segregated storage usually adds a premium over commingled. This annual storage charge is separate from your custodian’s administration fee, and both belong in your total-cost picture — see Gold IRA fees for the full breakdown. As a rule, the storage fee is rarely the line item that hurts; the dealer’s markup on the metal itself usually dwarfs it.

Flat vs percentage storage fees by account size (illustrative)

$25k (flat)$200$25k (0.75%)$188$150k (flat)$200$150k (0.75%)$1,125

Illustrative only — actual fees vary by depository and storage type. Percentage fees can balloon on larger accounts.

How to verify a depository is legitimate and insured

A real depository will document everything; a sketchy one will deflect. Run through this before you let any facility hold your retirement metal.

Warning signs in a storage arrangement
  • The “depository” is a P.O. box, a residence, or an LLC you control
  • No insurance carrier or coverage limits provided in writing
  • No third-party audit and no account statements you can verify
  • Pressure to use “home storage” or hold the metal personally
  • You can’t get the depository’s name independently of the salesperson

Concrete checks: confirm the facility is on a custodian’s approved list and is named explicitly on your account paperwork. Ask for the insurance carrier and the audit schedule. Look for SOC audits, independent inventory verification, and the ability to request a count of your holdings. You should be able to call the depository directly and confirm your account exists — your metal should be traceable to a named, insured facility, not just to a dealer’s promise.

Be cautious if a company won’t tell you which depository holds the metal until after you’ve funded the account. The depository should be disclosed up front, in writing.

What happens to the metal when you take a distribution

When you’re eligible to withdraw — at retirement, or when required minimum distributions begin for a Traditional account — you have two paths.

In-kind distribution: the depository ships the physical metal to you. With segregated storage you get your exact items; with commingled storage you get equivalent metal. The fair-market value of what you receive is the taxable amount on a Traditional IRA, and you’ll owe applicable taxes that year.

Sell-for-cash distribution: the metal is sold (typically back to a dealer, usually at a price below spot) and you receive the proceeds. This is simpler logistically but means accepting the dealer’s buy-back spread.

Either way, the tax treatment follows IRA rules, not collectibles rules — that’s one quiet advantage of holding metal inside an IRA. The timing and amount of taxes and RMDs deserve their own planning, especially because in-kind metal can be awkward to liquidate exactly to a required distribution figure.

Segregated can make sense if you hold specific bars you want returned intact, or you simply value the certainty of getting your exact items back and don’t mind paying a bit more for it.
Can I store my Gold IRA metal at home?

No. The metal must be held by a qualified custodian at an IRS-approved depository. Taking personal possession is treated as a distribution — taxable, and penalized if you’re under 59½. “Home storage IRA” arrangements remain a recognized audit risk.

Is segregated or commingled storage better?

It depends. Commingled is cheaper and fine for standard bullion, since one ounce of .999 gold equals any other. Segregated costs more but guarantees you get your exact bars and coins back. Both sit in the same insured vault, so security is equal — the difference is identity, not safety.

How much does Gold IRA storage cost?

Typically about $100–300 per year as a flat fee, or roughly 0.5%–1% of the metal’s value per year on a scaled model. Segregated storage usually costs more than commingled. This is separate from your custodian’s administration fee.

Is the metal in a depository insured?

Reputable depositories carry all-risk insurance, often through Lloyd’s of London or a comparable carrier, covering theft, damage, and loss up to the replacement value of stored metal. It does not insure against market price declines. Always confirm the carrier and coverage limits in writing.

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