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President Donald Trump said on May 10, 2026 that he still wants to visit the U.S. Bullion Depository at Fort Knox to personally verify the nation’s gold holdings.
In an interview on Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson, Trump repeated comments first made in early 2025 — when Elon Musk and some Republican lawmakers also questioned whether the gold remained in the Kentucky vault — saying “they steal a lot” though he did not specify who he meant.
The U.S. Mint reports Fort Knox holds about 147.3 million fine troy ounces of gold, historically valued on the books at $42.22 per ounce and worth roughly $700 billion at market prices.
Treasury officials have said the depository is audited regularly; Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in 2025 that “all the gold is present and accounted for.” Fort Knox, built in the 1930s, remains tightly restricted to visitors; public inspections have been rare, with limited access provided to select officials and delegations in past decades.
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Commenters emphasize that because the dollar is no longer gold‑backed, any physical discrepancy at Fort Knox would be largely symbolic, yet political claims about missing gold could still cause market anxiety or be exploited for partisan or personal gain.






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