In France, you cannot be paid in cash when you sell gold to a professional buyer: the law requires a traceable payment, meaning a bank transfer or a crossed cheque, whatever the value of the metal.
No. In France, a professional gold buyer cannot pay you in cash for gold, whatever the amount. When you sell jewellery, coins or bars to a registered dealer, French law requires the payment to be traceable, which means a bank transfer or a crossed cheque. Cash is excluded by rule, not by the dealer's preference. This applies to every transaction with a professional, from a small chain to a full ingot. The reasoning is straightforward: precious metals are easy to move and hard to trace, so the state channels every sale through the banking system. If a buyer offers you notes on the spot, that alone is a warning sign the transaction is not being handled correctly. A traceable payment protects you as much as it protects the tax authority: it gives you a dated, named record of the sale.
The ban exists so every gold sale leaves a paper trail linking a named seller to a named buyer. Alongside the payment rule, a professional buyer must record your identity from a valid ID document and log the transaction in a mandatory police register (livre de police). Together these obligations make each sale identifiable after the fact. This framework fights money laundering and undeclared trade, and it is also what makes taxation possible. The gold you sell is taxed either under the flat-rate tax on precious metals, applied to the sale price, or under the capital-gains regime if you can prove your original purchase with an invoice. A traceable payment and a registered transaction are what allow you to claim the capital-gains route later, so the rules that stop you being paid cash are the same ones that can reduce your tax bill.
Because the payment method is fixed by law, the real variable is the buyback rate, not whether you get cash. The spot price of gold is public, quoted per gramme, and identical for every dealer at a given moment. What actually changes your payout is the margin: the percentage of spot each buyer chooses to pay, which they are under no obligation to publish. Two shops facing the same spot price can offer very different sums. Your metal's value is driven by measurable factors: fineness (24k=999, 22k=916, 18k=750, 14k=585, 9k=375), weight, a readable hallmark, condition, and for collectible coins any numismatic premium above the melt value. Ask each buyer for the rate applied to your fineness and how they weigh the piece, then compare gold buyers in your city before you sign anything.
No. For a purchase of precious metals by a professional, French law requires a traceable payment, so you receive a bank transfer or a crossed cheque. A cash offer means the sale is not being handled lawfully.
Yes. Unlike some everyday purchases where cash has a legal ceiling, the sale of gold to a professional must be settled by traceable means regardless of the sum, even for a single light item.
Your sale is taxed either under the flat-rate tax on precious metals or, with a purchase invoice, under the capital-gains regime. The traceable payment and the dealer's register are what let you evidence the capital-gains option.