Q3 gold demand driven by investment & reached up 55%
Gold jewellery demand decline 19% y/y in consumption for Q3, 2025
The World Gold Council’s Q3 2025 Gold Demand Trends report reveals that quarterly gold demand reached 1,313t, or US $146bn in value terms and was the highest quarter for demand on record. Growth was driven primarily by investment demand which accelerated in Q3 reaching 537t (+47% y/y) and accounted for 55% of overall net gold demand.
This momentum was driven by a powerful combination of an uncertain and volatile geopolitical environment, US dollar weakness and investor FOMO as the price climbed higher.
Investors continued to pile into physically backed gold ETFs for a third consecutive quarter, adding a further 222t with global inflows reaching US$26bn. Year-to-date, gold ETFs have added a total of 619t (US$64bn) to their holdings with North American listed funds leading the charge (346t), followed by European (148t) and Asian funds (118t).
Bar and coin
investment rose 17% y/y, totalling 316t, with growth in almost all markets but
with significant contributions from India (92t), China, (74t).
On the other hand,
gold jewellery demand was weighed down by 50 record gold prices this year,
seeing a 19% y/y decline in consumption for Q3. While the two largest consumer
markets - India and China – both saw a quarter-on-quarter uplift, largely due
to seasonal factors, the y/y picture across both markets remained weak.
Central banks picked up the pace in Q3 with net purchases totalling 220t in the third quarter, up 28% on Q2 and 10% y/y, despite the record-high gold price.
On a year-to-date basis, net buying totalled 634t, trailing behind the exceptional highs of the last three years, but comfortably above pre-2022 levels.
Total gold supply reached a quarterly record of 1,313t, up 3% y/y. Mine production increased by 2% y/y to 977t while recycling was up 6% y/y at 344t, staying relatively stable given the soaring gold price. Louise Street, Senior Markets Analyst at the World Gold Council, commented, “Gold’s climb towards US$4,000/oz in the third quarter underscores the strength and persistence of the factors that have been driving demand throughout the year.
Heightened geopolitical tensions, stubborn inflationary pressures and uncertainty around global trade policy have all fuelled appetite for safe-haven assets as investors look to build resilience in their portfolios.
The outlook for
gold remains optimistic, as continued US dollar weakness, lower interest rate
expectations, and the threat of stagflation could further propel investment
demand. Gold has set record after record this year, and the current environment
suggests there could be more upside gains for gold. Our research indicates the
market is not yet saturated, and the strategic case to hold gold remains firmly
in place.”



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