Global Gold Demand Q1 2026: US$193 Billion Record as Bar, Coin, and Central Bank Buying Surge
Global gold demand reached 1,231 tonnes in Q1 2026 (up 2% YoY), but the value hit a record US$193 billion — a 74% increase — driven by record prices averaging US$4,873/oz.
What this actually means
The headline tension: global gold demand barely grew in weight (up 2%) but in dollars it was a blowout (US$193 billion, up 74%). The world is paying dramatically more for roughly the same amount.
The bar and coin surge is the clearest demand signal. At 474 tonnes — the second-highest quarter ever — physical investment demand is telling you something about household sentiment worldwide.
Central bank buying at 244 tonnes confirms that the post-2022 trend is not fading.
The jewellery decline is the price story in microcosm. Consumers are buying lighter pieces, exchanging old jewellery, or switching to standardised formats.
The supply side is quietly important. Mine production is roughly flat — mines cannot increase output quickly.
What the report says
- Global gold demand rose 2% year-on-year to 1,231 tonnes in Q1 2026. The value hit a record US$193 billion — a 74% increase — because the average gold price reached US$4,873/oz.
- Bar and coin investment surged 42% year-on-year to 474 tonnes, the second-highest quarter on record.
- Central bank net purchases totalled 244 tonnes in Q1, exceeding both the previous quarter and the five-year quarterly average.
- Gold ETFs added 62 tonnes in Q1, notably lower than the 230 tonnes added in Q1 2025.
- Jewellery demand volumes declined 23% year-on-year globally. However, jewellery spending rose 31%.
- Technology demand was stable at 82 tonnes (up 1%), driven by AI infrastructure growth.
- Total supply matched demand at 1,231 tonnes. Mine production was 885 tonnes, recycled gold rose 5% to 366 tonnes.
Common misunderstandings
- The US$193 billion headline reflects price inflation, not a demand surge. In tonnage, growth was only 2%.
- Central bank buying is a sovereign reserve decision, not a retail endorsement.
- The ETF slowdown does not mean institutional investors are abandoning gold.
- Do not interpret the jewellery volume decline as people not wanting gold anymore. Spending is up 31%.
Source and attribution
Based on World Gold Council: Gold Demand Trends Q1 2026, published 29 April 2026.
Published: 29 April 2026. Last reviewed: 2026-05-21.
Original source: Gold Demand Trends: Q1 2026 — https://www.gold.org/goldhub/research/gold-demand-trends/gold-demand-trends-q1-2026
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Written by
Vittarq Research Desk
The Vittarq editorial team covers gold markets, investment strategies, and precious metals education to help Indian buyers make informed decisions.