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Secretary Bessent says all Fort Knox gold accounted for

Most of the money in your life is a matter of faith. The balance on your banking app, the bills in your wallet, the number on your 401(k) statement - none of it is backed by anything you can hold in your hand.

You trust that it means what it says, and so does everyone you hand it to. That trust is the quiet machinery running beneath every paycheck and every mortgage payment.

For most of American history, a single building stood in for that faith. The United States Bullion Depository at Fort Knox, Kentucky, has been the place where the country keeps its most tangible promise, a vault of gold bars that almost no one is ever allowed to see. The secrecy is the point. A fortress nobody can enter is easier to believe in than a spreadsheet anybody can question.

It's why the question refuses to die. President Donald Trump has again floated the idea of counting the gold inside Fort Knox, a hoard now worth roughly $667 billion.

And once again, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has an answer that lands like a closed door.

What the Treasury keeps telling Fort Knox gold doubters

Bessent's position has not moved an inch since the chatter first erupted. The gold is counted internally every year, and it is all there. "All the gold is present and accounted for," Bessent said, according to Fox Business.

He has been just as blunt about not making a show of it. "I don't have any plans to go to Kentucky," Bessent told Bloomberg Television, pointing to an internal verification dated Sept. 30, 2024, and offering to arrange a visit for any senator who asks, as reported by Business Insider.

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When I line up his comments over the past year, the message hasn't changed a word. The same reassurance cooled the original frenzy in early 2025, when President Trump and Elon Musk, then running the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), spent two weeks raising doubts about the vault. Musk offered to livestream a walkthrough. The audit talk faded soon after.

The doubt has staying power for a reason. The reassurance always comes from the same institution that holds the keys, which is exactly what skeptics object to.

Not everyone is convinced that an in-house tally settles anything. The government's long stewardship of the reserves "has undermined confidence," Stefan Gleason, chief executive of Money Metals Depository, told the Mises Institute.

 President Trump has renewed calls to verify the hoard at Fort Knox.
President Trump has renewed calls to verify the hoard at Fort Knox.

Photo by OsakaWayne Studios on Getty Images

How $42 gold turned into a $667 billion question

The numbers are where this stops being a conspiracy curiosity and starts mattering to your money.

The gold at Fort Knox sits on the government's books at a statutory price of $42.22 an ounce, frozen since 1973, which values the entire stash at about $11 billion.

Related: Gold investors get good news from President Trump's Iran update

I ran that book value against the market, and the gap is staggering. At gold's late-May price near $4,500 an ounce, reported by Fortune, the same metal is worth about $667 billion. The country is carrying its single most famous asset at less than two cents on the dollar of what it would fetch today.

Here is how the math breaks down:

  • Fort Knox holds about 147.3 million troy ounces of gold, roughly 59% of U.S. official reserves, according to the U.S. Mint.
  • That metal is booked at the 1973 statutory price of $42.22 an ounce, or about $11 billion, U.S. Treasury accounting indicates.
  • At a spot price near $4,500 an ounce, its market value is about $667 billion, based on Fortune's daily gold price.
  • The United States holds more gold than any nation, near 8,133 metric tons, according to the U.S. Treasury.
  • The last audit open to outside observers took place in 1974, according to the U.S. Mint.
  • Gold has climbed about 38% over the past year, Trading Economics noted.

Lawmakers have tried to force the issue. Representative Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) introduced the Gold Reserve Transparency Act of 2025, which calls for the first full audit of U.S. gold in more than 65 years and would require the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to repeat it every five years, according to the bill text on Congress.gov.

Americans "deserve to know whether the gold reserves are where they should be," Massie said, according to his congressional office.

Senator Mike Lee (R-Utah) introduced a companion version in November. Neither has moved. The House bill was referred to committee and has sat there since.

What a government gold audit would mean for your money

You do not own a single bar in that vault, and yet its credibility props up the system every dollar you earn runs through. Gold is the asset central banks and foreign creditors fall back on when they stop trusting paper, and the world's largest pile of it has not been opened to independent eyes in more than half a century.

That matters more now than it did a year ago. Gold is sitting near record highs after a 38% run, the federal debt keeps climbing, and investors are paying real money for the idea that the metal is a safer bet than the currency it once backed. An asset worth $667 billion that the public takes on faith is a strange foundation for that much confidence.

Bessent is betting the faith holds, and so far it has. No senator has taken him up on the tour. The Massie bill is collecting dust. The president has stopped knocking on the vault door.

The gold's value, meanwhile, has quietly tripled since the first audit calls, which means the stakes of being wrong have tripled, too.

Watch three things from here.

  1. Whether the transparency bill ever gets a committee hearing.
  2. Whether gold's climb forces a real conversation about revaluing the reserve closer to $667 billion.
  3. Whether anyone with the authority to open the door ever actually does.

Until then, the most valuable question in American finance keeps getting answered by the one institution with the most reason to keep it closed.

Related: What US-Iran peace hopes mean for gold portfolios

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This story was originally published May 31, 2026 at 6:47 AM.

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