FAQ

You ask - We answer

Welcome to the Aeternum Gold FAQ section. Here, our team of professionals provides clear, accurate, and transparent answers to common questions about precious metals, purchasing coins and bars, and using our services.

Please note: the information provided in this section is for educational and informational purposes only. It is intended to help you understand our products, services, and processes, and does not constitute investment advice or recommendations. Aeternum Gold does not provide guidance on where or how to invest your money.

Our FAQ is designed to help you make informed decisions regarding the practical aspects of buying, storing, and handling precious metals, while highlighting the range of products we offer and how to access them. For more insights, updates, and educational content, you can also explore our blog and subscribe to our newsletter.

At Aeternum Gold, we are committed to transparency and professionalism, ensuring you have all the information you need to use our products and services confidently, while respecting your own judgment and decisions regarding investments.

How do I create an account?
Click the "Sign Up" button in the top right corner and follow the registration process.
I forgot my password. What should I do?
Click on "Forgot Password" on the login page and follow the instructions sent to your email.
How do I update my profile information?
Go to "My Account" settings and select "Edit Profile" to make changes.
Why buy gold at all?

Gold protects savings in ways no paper asset can. Bank failures, government confiscations, and currency devaluations have wiped out fortunes, while those who held gold preserved their wealth. A dollar once exchanged 1:1 for a $20 gold coin; today that same coin buys over $1,400 worth of goods, while the dollar has lost most of its purchasing power. A fine suit cost two ounces of gold a century ago - and it still costs two ounces today. Gold doesn’t rely on banks, governments, or promises. It is a tangible, globally recognized store of value that outlasts crises and inflation.

 

Doesn’t gold also fall in price?

Yes, prices fluctuate, just like any market. Gold “breathes” - it rises, pulls back, and rises again. But unlike stocks that can collapse to near zero, gold has never lost its core value in over 5,000 years of monetary history. Every correction has been temporary, and every major peak has eventually been surpassed. Periods of decline often prove the best opportunities to enter the market, as shown when gold dipped from $1,000 to $800 per ounce - and later surged to $1,800.

Why gold instead of stocks?

Stocks can build wealth but are tied to companies, earnings, and sentiment. Entire portfolios have been destroyed in market crashes - shares once worth €40 now trade for €0.40. Gold is different: it’s not a claim on someone else’s performance but intrinsic wealth. It cannot default, be diluted, or declared bankrupt. While equities may fuel growth, gold offsets systemic shocks and currency risk. That’s why professional investors balance both - gold for preservation, stocks for growth.

 

Why not real estate or land?

Property can seem solid, but it carries hidden risks. Real estate is illiquid: a forced sale may slash values by 50%. It lacks divisibility: you can’t sell one-twentieth of a house to cover expenses. And it comes with taxes that can rise overnight, regardless of your means. Gold solves all three problems. Coins can be sold in any quantity, anywhere in the world, without ongoing maintenance or taxation. That’s why even real estate developers and land investors diversify into gold - it offers a flexibility and portability no property can match.

 

How much of my savings should be in gold?

There is no single formula - it depends on your trust in financial institutions. If you rely on banks and governments for 80% of your confidence, then 20% in gold offers balance. If you have little faith in fiat money or policy stability, then a larger allocation makes sense. Importantly, gold is not an “expense” but a currency, with its own code in the global system (XAU), just like USD or EUR. Owning gold is exchanging into a parallel reserve currency - one used by central banks themselves.

 

Is gold really a "currency"?

Yes. Gold is listed in the ISO 4217 currency code system as XAU and trades worldwide alongside dollars, euros, and francs. Central banks call their reserves “gold and foreign currency reserves” - and gold is always listed first. Buying bullion isn’t “spending” but exchanging one form of money for another. Unlike paper currencies, gold has never gone to zero, never been replaced by decree, and remains borderless money that transcends politics and regimes.

Why investment coins and bars - not jewelry?

Jewelry is beautiful, but as an investment it carries VAT on both the metal and the craftsmanship, making it much more expensive upfront. Coins and bars classified as “investment gold” are VAT-exempt in the EU, easier to price, and far simpler to resell near spot market value. A ring must be remelted and assessed as scrap; a bullion coin can be verified and sold instantly. For wealth preservation, standardized coins and bars are always the smarter choice.

 

Should I buy coins or bar?

For most individuals, widely recognized bullion coins are more flexible: you can sell exactly the number you need, and authentication at resale is straightforward. Bars can carry slightly lower premiums at larger sizes but are less divisible and, at times, harder to verify without specialist testing.

How and where should I store gold?

Options include professional non-bank vaults, bank safe-deposit boxes, or private high-security storage. Prioritize insured custody, clear ownership documentation, physical segregation where possible, and access arrangements that fit your needs.

We recommend using AETERNUM Gold's secure storage services. Your gold can be safely stored with us in professionally managed, insured vaults, giving you peace of mind that it is both protected and easily accessible whenever you need it. Unlike banks, we focus exclusively on precious metals, so your holdings are never mixed with financial risk. For those who prefer to hold their gold themselves, we also provide guidance on safe handling and storage solutions, but our insured vault option remains the most secure and convenient choice.

How do I sell investment coins to AETERNUM GOLD, and what are the costs?

Selling your gold back to AETERNUM GOLD is straightforward and transparent. We guarantee competitive buyback rates for all coins and bars we sell, with pricing tied closely to the live global spot price. There are no hidden costs - only a clear spread that reflects market conditions. This means that when you’re ready to sell, you can do so instantly and at a fair price, directly through us.

 

Can I travel with my coins?

Yes. Within the EU, you may carry up to €10,000 per person without declaration, and similar limits apply in many countries. Families can multiply this allowance across members. However, rules can change - for example, Cyprus once capped exports at €3,000 after its crisis. Always check current regulations before traveling. At AETERNUM GOLD, we provide invoices, guidance, and documentation so your coins are secure, discreetly transported, and fully compliant.

Is "paper gold" a good substitute for physical gold?

No. Paper gold - certificates, ETFs, or unallocated accounts - often represents the same bullion sold many times over. It carries counterparty risk, meaning you may hold nothing more than a promise if institutions fail. Physical gold is different: it cannot default or vanish. At AETERNUM GOLD, we sell only verified, investment-grade coins and bars, ensuring you own real metal under your name, not paper claims.

Will gold make new highs $4,000 per ounce?

Gold has never peaked permanently; every high is eventually surpassed. It hit $1,920 in 2011, fell back, and recovered again. Inflation, central bank buying, or geopolitical shocks could easily drive prices above $4,000. The question is not if, but when. With AETERNUM GOLD, you’re positioned to preserve wealth at any price level, from today’s market to the inevitable future highs.

 

What's the difference between karats and fineness?

Karats measure purity in 24 parts (24k ≈ 999 fine; 22k ≈ 916/917), while fineness expresses parts per thousand. Many bullion coins use 999/9999 fine gold; others (e.g., some 22k coins) add copper or silver for hardness without changing the fine-gold content.

© 2026 AETERNUM GOLD, UAB. All rights reserved.