The Gold Sovereign has been struck by the Royal Mint for over 200 years. First introduced in 1817, it is the longest-running gold coin series in continuous production anywhere in the world. More than one billion Sovereigns have been minted across that period, making it one of the most widely recognised and traded gold coins on the planet.
But the Sovereign is more than a historic coin. As UK legal tender, it is completely exempt from both VAT and Capital Gains Tax, with no annual limit on investment. In Q1 2025, the Royal Mint reported a 306% year-on-year surge in gold coin demand, and the Sovereign remains at the heart of that trend.
This guide covers everything UK investors need to know: what a Sovereign is, what determines its price, how it compares to the Britannia, why certain years and grades command higher premiums, and how to build a tax-efficient gold holding using Sovereigns.
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified adviser for guidance on your specific circumstances.
Gold Sovereign: Key Facts
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| First minted | 1489 (original), 1817 (modern) |
| Produced by | The Royal Mint |
| Gold content (full Sovereign) | 7.32g (0.2354 troy ounces) |
| Total weight | 7.98g |
| Purity | 22 carat (916.7 fineness) |
| Face value | £1 |
| UK legal tender | Yes |
| VAT | Exempt |
| Capital Gains Tax | Exempt (no limit) |
| Reverse design | St George and the Dragon (Benedetto Pistrucci, 1817) |
What Is a Gold Sovereign?
A Gold Sovereign is a British gold coin containing 7.32 grams of fine gold, first minted in 1489 and reintroduced in its modern form in 1817. It carries a face value of £1, making it UK legal tender and therefore exempt from Capital Gains Tax.
The modern Sovereign was introduced as part of the Great Recoinage of 1816, though the name dates back to the first Sovereign struck under Henry VII. The coin was designed as a standard unit of British gold currency, and for much of the 19th and early 20th centuries, one Sovereign was worth exactly one pound sterling in circulation.
Today, the face value of £1 is purely symbolic. The coin’s intrinsic gold value is many times higher. But that £1 face value is what gives the Sovereign its legal tender status and, crucially, its exemption from Capital Gains Tax.
Gold Sovereign Specifications
The Royal Mint produces Sovereigns in four denominations. The full Sovereign is the most widely traded for investment purposes.
| Denomination | Total Weight | Gold Content | Purity | Diameter | Face Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full Sovereign | 7.98g | 7.32g | 22ct (916.7) | 22.05mm | £1 |
| Half Sovereign | 3.99g | 3.66g | 22ct (916.7) | 19.30mm | 50p |
| Quarter Sovereign | 1.99g | 1.83g | 22ct (916.7) | 13.50mm | 25p |
| Double Sovereign | 15.97g | 14.64g | 22ct (916.7) | 28.40mm | £2 |
All denominations are struck in 22-carat gold (91.67% pure), with copper alloyed for durability. This is the same gold standard used since 1817, giving the Sovereign a distinctive warm tone compared to the paler 24-carat Britannia. Every denomination is UK legal tender and carries the same VAT and CGT exemptions.
Why Sovereigns Are 22-Carat, Not 24-Carat
Investors sometimes ask why the Sovereign uses 22-carat gold when the Britannia has been upgraded to 24-carat. The answer is heritage. The 22-carat standard (known as “crown gold”) was established by Henry VIII in 1526 and has been the standard for British gold coinage ever since. The Royal Mint maintains this purity for the Sovereign as a deliberate continuation of a 500-year tradition.
The copper alloy makes the coin harder and more resistant to scratching than pure 24-carat gold. For a coin with a 200-year history of being handled, traded, and stored, that durability is a practical advantage. Each Sovereign still contains a precise, guaranteed quantity of pure gold (7.32g for a full Sovereign), so the investment value is unaffected by the alloy.
The Sovereign’s Design: St George and the Dragon
The reverse of the Sovereign features one of the most iconic coin designs in history: Benedetto Pistrucci’s depiction of St George slaying the dragon. This design was first used in 1817 and has appeared on the Sovereign almost continuously for over 200 years.
Pistrucci was an Italian gem engraver recruited by the Royal Mint. His St George and the Dragon is widely regarded as one of the finest coin designs ever produced. It has become so closely associated with the Sovereign that the design itself adds to the coin’s recognition and liquidity worldwide.
The obverse features the reigning monarch’s portrait. Following the accession of King Charles III, the 2024 and 2025 Sovereigns carry a new portrait by Martin Jennings. Transitional years (the final year of one monarch’s portrait or the first of a new one) are particularly sought after by collectors.
What Determines a Gold Sovereign’s Price?
A Sovereign’s price is driven by four factors. Understanding these helps you assess whether a coin is fairly priced without needing to check a live ticker.
1. The gold content value
Every full Sovereign contains 7.32g of 22-carat gold. Its baseline value moves with the international gold price. When gold rises, every Sovereign rises with it. This provides a hard floor beneath the coin’s value.
2. The dealer premium
When you buy a Sovereign from a dealer, you pay the gold content value plus a markup covering manufacturing, distribution, and the dealer’s margin. For standard modern bullion Sovereigns, this premium is typically modest. When you sell, most dealers buy at or close to the gold content value. The gap between buy and sell price (the “spread”) is one of the narrowest in the physical gold market, making Sovereigns highly liquid.
3. Condition and grade
An uncirculated Sovereign in pristine condition is worth more than a worn example. Professional grading by NGC or PCGS quantifies condition on the 1 to 70 Sheldon scale, removing subjectivity and allowing the market to price condition precisely. Graded Sovereigns in high grades can trade at significant premiums above their gold value.
4. Rarity and collector demand
Certain years, monarchs, and mint marks are scarcer than others. A common-date modern Sovereign trades near its gold value. A low-mintage Victorian Sovereign in high grade can trade at many times its gold content. The 200-year production history creates a depth of date-specific collecting that no other gold coin series can match.
How Much Is a Gold Sovereign Worth?
A standard modern bullion Sovereign is worth its gold content value (7.32g of 22-carat gold) plus a small dealer premium. The gold value moves with the international gold price throughout the trading day.
Historic, rare, or graded Sovereigns can be worth considerably more than their gold content. The premium depends on:
- Year of issue: some dates are much scarcer than others
- Monarch: short-reign monarchs (Edward VII, Edward VIII) tend to command higher premiums
- Condition/grade: a Sovereign graded MS 65+ by NGC or PCGS can trade at multiples of a worn example
- Mint mark: Sovereigns from branch mints (Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Pretoria, Bombay, Ottawa) carry varying premiums based on scarcity
For investors, the critical point is that every Sovereign has a gold price floor. Even if the numismatic premium contracts, you still own 7.32g of gold in a CGT-exempt, globally recognised coin. The premium is upside; the gold is the foundation.
Tax Benefits: CGT-Free and VAT-Free
The Sovereign’s tax status is one of its most compelling features for UK investors.
Capital Gains Tax: completely exempt
Because the Gold Sovereign is UK legal tender, it is exempt from Capital Gains Tax under the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992, Section 21(1)(b). This means any profit you make when selling a Sovereign is entirely tax-free, regardless of the amount.
There is no annual limit on this exemption. Unlike an ISA (capped at £20,000/year) or a pension (capped at £60,000/year), you can invest any amount in Sovereigns and pay zero CGT on the gains. Read our complete guide to Capital Gains Tax on gold.
VAT: also exempt
Gold Sovereigns qualify as investment gold under HMRC rules, meaning they are VAT-free on purchase. This double exemption (no VAT, no CGT) makes Sovereigns one of the most tax-efficient tangible assets available to UK residents.
How much could the CGT exemption save you?
| Sovereign Holding | 50% Gain | CGT If Taxable (20%) | CGT on Sovereigns | Tax Saved |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 Sovereigns | ~£4,500 | £300 | £0 | £300 |
| 50 Sovereigns | ~£22,500 | £3,900 | £0 | £3,900 |
| 100 Sovereigns | ~£45,000 | £8,400 | £0 | £8,400 |
| 200 Sovereigns | ~£90,000 | £17,400 | £0 | £17,400 |
These figures assume a higher-rate taxpayer (20% CGT) and use the £3,000 annual exempt amount. For investors building a significant gold position, the cumulative tax advantage of Sovereigns over bars or foreign coins runs into tens of thousands of pounds.
Want to understand how Sovereigns could fit your portfolio? Book a free call with one of our specialists. Our founder was featured in The Times discussing why UK investors are turning to tax-efficient gold coins.
Gold Sovereign vs Gold Britannia: Which Should You Buy?
This is the most common question UK gold investors ask. Both are Royal Mint coins, both are UK legal tender, and both are exempt from VAT and CGT. The differences are practical, not fundamental.
| Feature | Gold Sovereign | Gold Britannia (1oz) |
|---|---|---|
| Gold content | 7.32g (0.2354 oz) | 31.10g (1 oz) |
| Purity | 22ct (916.7) | 24ct (999.9) |
| VAT exempt | Yes | Yes |
| CGT exempt | Yes | Yes |
| First minted | 1817 | 1987 |
| Collector premium | Higher (200+ years of history, date-specific demand) | Lower (modern series, less date variation) |
| Divisibility | Better (smaller units, sell one at a time) | Less flexible (1oz minimum) |
| Premium per oz of gold | Higher | Lower |
| Graded coin premiums | Significant (rare dates, high grades) | Moderate (less date-specific) |
When Sovereigns are the better choice
Sovereigns suit investors who value flexibility and collector upside. Because each coin contains roughly a quarter of an ounce, you can sell in smaller increments without liquidating a full ounce. This is useful for drawing down a gold holding gradually, for gifting, or for estate planning.
Sovereigns also offer greater numismatic potential. A 200-year production history means certain dates, monarchs, and mint marks carry premiums well above their gold content.
When Britannias are the better choice
Britannias suit investors who want the most gold for the lowest premium. The 1oz denomination carries a lower manufacturing cost per ounce of gold, so you pay a smaller markup. If your primary goal is accumulating gold weight efficiently, Britannias are hard to beat. Read our complete Britannia guide.
The portfolio approach
Many Bullion Club clients hold both. Britannias for core gold exposure at low premiums, Sovereigns for flexibility, collector upside, and the ability to sell in smaller units. The two coins complement each other within a diversified gold portfolio.
Graded Gold Sovereigns: Why Certification Matters
A Sovereign’s value depends on more than its gold content. Condition, rarity, and provenance all play a role, and professional grading by NGC or PCGS quantifies these factors with an objective score.
How grading adds value to Sovereigns
A loose, ungraded Sovereign trades at or near its gold melt value. A graded Sovereign, sealed in a tamper-proof NGC or PCGS slab with a certified condition score, can trade at a significant premium above melt. The grade confirms:
- Authenticity: the coin has been verified as genuine by professional numismatists
- Condition: scored on the 1 to 70 Sheldon scale, removing subjective guesswork
- Provenance: a permanent, verifiable record tied to a unique certification number
For historic Sovereigns (Victorian, Edwardian, George V), grading is particularly important because condition varies enormously. A Victorian Sovereign graded MS 63 (choice uncirculated) could command several times the premium of the same coin in lower grade. Read our complete guide to graded gold coins.
Why Sovereigns are especially well-suited to grading
The Sovereign’s 200-year production history creates a depth of date-specific collecting that the Britannia (first minted 1987) simply cannot match. Collectors seek specific years, monarchs, mint marks, and varieties. Professional grading allows these distinctions to be verified and priced with confidence, creating a market where the numismatic premium can far exceed the underlying gold value.
This is the investment thesis that makes graded Sovereigns compelling: you hold a CGT-free gold asset with a gold price floor, plus a collectible premium that can appreciate independently based on rarity, condition, and collector demand.
Which Sovereign Years Are Most Valuable?
Not all Sovereigns are created equal. While standard modern bullion Sovereigns trade close to their gold content value, certain years and varieties command significant premiums. Common-date Sovereigns trade near gold value, while key dates can command 20% to 200%+ premiums over melt.
High-demand periods
- Victoria Young Head (1838 to 1887): the “shield back” and “St George” reverse varieties from Victoria’s early reign are highly prized. Low-mintage years such as 1841 (mintage: 1.2 million), 1843, and 1858 attract strong collector interest.
- Edward VII (1902 to 1910): short reign, limited mintage years. The 1902 proof Sovereign is particularly sought after.
- George V (1911 to 1932): includes Sovereigns from branch mints (Melbourne “M”, Sydney “S”, Perth “P”, Pretoria “SA”, Bombay “I”, Ottawa “C”) which carry mint marks and varying scarcity. The 1920 Sydney mint Sovereign (mintage: 360,000) is a standout rarity.
- Elizabeth II (1957 to 2022): the 1957 reintroduction Sovereign, the 2002 Golden Jubilee, and the final 2022 issue all carry collector premiums.
- Charles III (2023 onwards): the first Sovereigns of a new reign are historically strong performers. The 2023 and 2024 issues have seen strong demand.
Transition years
The final year of one monarch’s portrait and the first year of the next consistently command premiums. These coins mark a historical moment and are produced in relatively limited quantities compared to mid-reign years. The 2022 (final Elizabeth II) and 2023 (first Charles III) Sovereigns are a recent example.
How to Build a Sovereign Portfolio
There is no single “right” way to invest in Sovereigns, but the approach that works best for most Bullion Club clients combines three elements:
1. Core bullion Sovereigns for gold exposure
Modern bullion Sovereigns (current year or recent years) provide straightforward gold exposure at the lowest available premium. These form the foundation of a Sovereign portfolio. They are highly liquid, easily valued, and carry the full CGT and VAT exemptions.
2. Graded modern proof Sovereigns for numismatic upside
Proof Sovereigns are struck in limited numbers each year with a mirror finish. When professionally graded PF 69 or PF 70 by NGC or PCGS, they can command premiums significantly above their gold content. The combination of gold value, tax-free status, limited mintage, and certified condition creates a multi-layered investment with both a gold floor and collectible upside.
3. Select historic Sovereigns for rarity and collector demand
Victorian, Edwardian, and early Georgian Sovereigns in high grade are finite in supply. As the surviving population in top condition diminishes over time, prices for well-preserved examples have historically appreciated. These coins appeal to both investors and collectors, creating consistent demand from multiple buyer pools.
Want help building a Sovereign portfolio? Book a free call with one of our specialists to discuss a tailored approach.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a gold Sovereign worth?
A standard modern bullion Sovereign is worth its gold content value (7.32g of 22-carat gold) plus a small dealer premium. Historic, rare, or graded Sovereigns can be worth significantly more depending on year, condition, and collector demand. Every Sovereign has a gold price floor beneath its value.
Are gold Sovereigns a good investment?
For UK investors, Sovereigns offer CGT-free status (as UK legal tender), no VAT on purchase, high global liquidity, 200+ years of Royal Mint heritage, and the potential for numismatic appreciation on graded or historic examples. They are best suited to medium and long-term holding horizons (3+ years).
Are Sovereigns CGT-free?
Yes. Gold Sovereigns are UK legal tender and therefore exempt from Capital Gains Tax under TCGA 1992 Section 21(1)(b). This applies to all denominations (full, half, quarter, and double) and to both modern and historic issues.
How much gold is in a Sovereign?
A full Gold Sovereign contains 7.32 grams (0.2354 troy ounces) of pure gold. The total coin weight is 7.98 grams, with the balance being copper alloy. The purity is 22 carats (916.7 fineness).
Are Sovereigns exempt from Inheritance Tax?
Sovereigns are not automatically exempt from Inheritance Tax. They form part of your estate like any other asset. However, if you gift Sovereigns and survive for seven years after the gift, the value falls outside your estate under the standard IHT rules. The CGT exemption makes Sovereigns particularly useful for lifetime gifting because neither the giver nor the receiver incurs CGT on the transfer.
What is the difference between a bullion and proof Sovereign?
A bullion Sovereign is an investment-grade coin sold at a low premium over the gold value. A proof Sovereign is a collector-grade coin with a mirror finish and frosted design, produced in limited numbers by the Royal Mint. Both contain the same amount of gold and carry the same tax exemptions. Proof Sovereigns carry a higher premium reflecting their scarcity and finish quality, and when graded PF 69 or PF 70, can appreciate well beyond their gold content.
Where can I sell gold Sovereigns?
Sovereigns are among the most liquid gold coins in the world. Any reputable bullion dealer will buy them. At Bullion Club, we offer a buy-back guarantee on every coin we sell.
Why Bullion Club for Gold Sovereigns
At Bullion Club, we specialise in investment-grade and graded gold Sovereigns. We source NGC and PCGS-certified examples alongside modern bullion issues, helping clients build portfolios that combine gold exposure, tax efficiency, and numismatic upside.
Our founder, Harry Thorne, was featured in The Times discussing the growing demand for certified gold coins among UK investors. One of our clients, profiled in The Telegraph, built a £120,000 portfolio of 28 graded Royal Mint coins and has already seen £16,000 in tax-free profit.
We have also been featured on GB News covering the tax benefits of gold coins and the MoneyMagpie Invest podcast.
Every client receives:
- A dedicated account manager who builds a portfolio tailored to your goals
- Full NGC or PCGS certification on graded coins
- Free insured delivery or 12 months’ free vault storage
- Buy-back guarantee: we will buy your coins back at a competitive price
Feefo Platinum Trusted Service Award (2024, 2025, 2026). 5/5 customer rating.
Ready to explore gold Sovereigns? Book a free, no-obligation call with one of our gold specialists.