Posts

No-KYC Gold Buying by Country: A 2026 Jurisdiction Guide

The first thing to know about "anonymous" gold is that the rules are written nationally, but the enforcement is increasingly coordinated. Over the past three years the Financial Action Task Force has pushed every major economy toward a tighter version of the same template: a hard cash ceiling on bullion purchases, mandatory ID above that ceiling, and reporting obligations on dealers above a second, larger threshold. The result is a patchwork that still has real gaps for the small and medium retail buyer, but the gaps are closing. This guide goes through the countries that actually matter for retail bullion buyers and explains what the thresholds are today, what is changing in the next 18 months, and where crypto-paid purchases fit into the picture. The United States: $10,000 cash, more flexibility with crypto The headline US rule is unchanged from a decade ago. Cash payments above $10,000 to a precious metals dealer trigger IRS Form 8300, which captures the buyer's ide...

Buy Gold With Monero (XMR) in 2026: The Privacy Coin Investor's Guide

 Monero is the only major cryptocurrency where privacy is the default rather than an opt-in feature. That single technical choice, made when the protocol forked from Bytecoin in 2014, is what makes XMR the natural payment rail for the slice of the bullion market that takes privacy seriously. It is also why, in mid-2026, "buy gold with Monero" is a real product flow at a small number of dealers and not at most of them. This guide walks through what makes XMR different, where the market sits after the 2024 wave of exchange delistings, and what the practical end-to-end process looks like for a buyer who wants to convert XMR into physical metal without leaving an on-chain trail. Why Monero, specifically, and not Bitcoin Bitcoin's privacy model is pseudonymous, not anonymous. Every transaction is publicly recorded, every address is permanent, and every address that ever interacted with a KYC'd exchange is, in principle, attributable to a real identity. Chain analysis fi...

How to Buy Gold Anonymously With Bitcoin in 2026: A Privacy-First Investor's Guide

 Most articles on this topic tip-toe around the real question buyers are asking. So let's put it plainly: in 2026, you can still legally buy physical gold without surrendering a passport scan, a selfie, and your tax ID. The rules are narrower than they were a decade ago, but they are also clearer, and the few dealers that operate inside those rules have become the default for crypto-native investors who actually use their coins. This is a working guide to how that path looks now: what the thresholds actually are, which payment rails preserve the most privacy, and where the trade-offs sit between convenience and discretion. Why "anonymous" gold is a real category, not a workaround Privacy and legality are not opposites. Cash transactions for bullion are reportable above defined thresholds in most jurisdictions, but transactions below those thresholds are explicitly permitted. In the United States, the cash reporting threshold remains $10,000 per transaction (triggering ...