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July 14, 2025 | Smart States Are Embracing Gold And Silver

John Rubino is a former Wall Street financial analyst and author or co-author of five books, including The Money Bubble: What to Do Before It Pops and Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom. He founded the popular financial website DollarCollapse.com in 2004, sold it in 2022, and now publishes John Rubino’s Substack newsletter.

 

It’s nice that states are separating themselves into “smart” and “stupid” categories so Americans can tell where and where not to live. The issue of sound money, in particular, is indicative of a whole range of other likely tax/spend/regulate policies that affect quality of life.

Let’s start with a flashing “don’t move here” signal just sent by Washington state:

New WA State Bullion Tax Passes

(Bellview Rare Coins) – Starting in 2026, WA state residents could be paying sales tax on gold, silver, and coins – due to a new bill that recently passed the Washington State legislature.

Currently, bullion is exempt from retail sales tax. But SB5794, a broad bill that recently passed both houses of Washington’s legislature, is set to change that.

If nothing changes, gold could soon be taxed at up to around 10% – meaning that $3,300 ounce of gold could soon cost you over $3,600!

Currently, sales tax applies to most purchases – but bullion, like gold and silver coins and bars, has long been excluded. This means that you can buy bullion with no sales tax.

However, SB5794 completely revokes that sales tax exemption (and makes many other changes to Washington’s sales tax exemptions, as well).

This is a repeal of a “tax preference”, or exemption, and it’s set to take effect at the start of 2026. The bill fully passed both chambers of the legislature and has been signed by the governor, as of late May, 2025.

Reading Between the Lines: Washington’s Budget Shortfall

The Washington State Legislature is scrambling to fill an estimated $15 billion budget shortfall over the next 4 years. As a part of this process, the legislature is surely looking at ways to implement new taxes — or in this case, repeal an existing tax “preference” or exemption.

Washington is a poorly run state with one positive law: no state income tax. But the downside of not taxing incomes is that revenue has to be found elsewhere, so every couple of weeks brings some new nickel-and-dime increase in sales taxes, property taxes, or operating fees.

Taxing gold and silver implies, to a small but wise segment of the population, that the guys in charge don’t understand the concept of “money” — always an ominous sign for a government.

Meanwhile, at the smart end of the spectrum

 

Texas Greenlights Gold and Silver as Legal Tender

(Schiff Gold) – Austin, TX keeps rewriting the monetary rulebook. House Bill 1056, cleared by both chambers in late May, designates properly marked gold and silver “specie” as legal tender in the Lone Star State starting September 1, 2026. A second phase—launching no later than May 1, 2027—authorizes an electronic payment rail fully backed by bullion stored in the Texas Bullion Depository. While Federal Reserve notes remain king for now, the measure lays fresh track for Texans who prefer metal over paper or pixel money.

The bill also sketches out the digital future of hard money. The comptroller may license electronic platforms that let consumers send fractions of ounces with smartphone ease, all fully redeemable in physical metal. Fees must be “reasonable and necessary,” and pricing must reflect commercially available spot quotes at the moment of each transfer—critical guardrails in a world where a Monday rally pushed gold to $3,308 per ounce. Notably, vendors headquartered in Texas receive preference when bidding to build the system, signaling lawmakers’ desire to keep bullion-tech jobs on home soil.


Arizona Senate Committee Passes Bill to Establish Bullion Depository and Transactional Gold-Backed Currency

(GoldFix) – On Monday, an Arizona Senate committee passed a bill that would establish a specie-backed transactional currency and a state bullion depository.

Sen. Jake Hoffman introduced Senate Bill 1633 (SB1633) on Feb. 5. The proposed law would establish the Arizona Bullion Depository. The depository would serve as safe storage for precious metals and would facilitate the issuance of state-minted gold and silver coins, along with a specie-backed transactional currency.

The bullion depository would serve as the “custodian, guardian and administrator of certain bullion and specie that may be transferred to or otherwise acquired by this state or an agency, a political subdivision or another instrumentality of this state.”

Transactional currency backed by gold or silver

Under SB1633 the Director of the Arizona Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions would be required to issue specie (gold or silver coins minted by the state) and establish a transactional currency “as the director determines to be practicable.”


New Jersey Eliminates Sales Taxes on Gold and Silver

(Money Metals) – Sound money advocates are hailing their hard-fought victory today as New Jersey’s Senate Bill 721 was signed into law – thereby removing sales taxes on purchases of gold, silver, and other precious metals above $1,000 effective January 1, 2025.

The long-anticipated bill signing by Gov. Phil Murphy positions New Jersey alongside 44 other states that recognize the importance of exempting constitutional sound money from burdensome taxation.

Senate Bill 721 enjoyed unanimous support from both sides of the political aisle, including 13 Democrat and Republican formal sponsors.


Idaho Reaffirms Gold and Silver As Legal Tender

(Sound Money Defense League) – For the second time this month, new sound money legislation has become law in Idaho.

Faced with the overwhelming likelihood of a veto override from the legislature, Idaho Governor Brad Little signed the Idaho Constitutional Money Act of 2025 reaffirming gold and silver as legal tender and making a symbolic statement in favor of sound money principles.

House Bill 177, sponsored by Rep. Steve Miller, marks the third pro-sound money bill enacted this year, highlighting a sustained national trend that continues to grow.

HB 177 simply affirms that gold or silver coin and specie issued by the United States government are considered legal tender whenever voluntarily agreed upon by both parties to a contract. The measure enjoyed popular support, earning approval in the state House with a 66-3-1 vote and unanimous passage, 35-0, in the Idaho Senate.


Utah Greenlights Gold and Silver Holdings to Protect State Reserve Funds

(Money Metals) – Utah Governor Spencer Cox signed legislation on Thursday empowering the state Treasurer to secure state funds with a significant allocation to physical gold and silver.

Sponsored by Rep. Ken Ivory, House Bill 348 permits the Treasurer to hold up to 10% of certain state reserve accounts in precious metals to help secure state assets against the risks of inflation and financial turmoil and/or to achieve capital gains as measured in Federal Reserve Notes.

The Utah State Treasurer has limited options for holding, managing, and investing state monies, making this enabling legislation necessary.

Utah’s reserves are invested almost exclusively in treasuries, municipal bonds, corporate bonds, and agency debt.

These debt instruments carry risks – especially because they are not inflation-hedged and are therefore largely unprotected from the steady erosion in the real value of principal, coupled with interest rates that are often negative in real terms.


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July 14th, 2025

Posted In: John Rubino Substack

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