If you already hold crypto, you might be thinking about “real-world” assets like physical gold.
The biggest risk is often not the gold price.
The biggest risk is the process: who you deal with, how you pay, how the price is set, and whether the gold you receive is genuine and insured.
This matters because scams and impersonation are common in the UK. The FCA has warned about crypto-related scams, including professional-looking websites designed to trick people into sending money.
The FCA has also reported thousands of “fake FCA” scam reports, where fraudsters pretend to be trusted names to get people to hand over money or data.
This post is a plain-English guide to doing the process properly, so you reduce avoidable mistakes.
The story
UK regulators keep repeating a simple message: crypto scams are active, and fraudsters often look credible.
The FCA explains that scam adverts and websites can look real, show fake “returns”, and pressure you to move quickly.
Separately, the FCA has also warned about a high volume of impersonation scams, where criminals pretend to be legitimate organisations.
If you are swapping crypto for physical gold, these risks can stack up because you are dealing with:
- A fast payment method (crypto).
- A high-value product (gold).
- A delivery or storage step (logistics).
Plain-English explainer
KYC means “Know Your Customer”. It is the identity checks a legitimate firm uses to meet anti-money laundering rules.
KYC is normal and expected. The danger is when scammers send you to a fake “KYC portal” to steal your documents or get you to pay.
Price lock means the dealer fixes the gold price for a short time while you complete payment. If payment is late, the price can be recalculated.
Investment gold is a category in UK VAT rules. Certain gold coins and gold bullion can qualify for VAT exemption under UK rules.
CGT is Capital Gains Tax. Some UK legal tender coins (for example, certain Sovereigns and Britannias) can be treated as sterling currency for CGT purposes, which can mean gains are exempt. You should always confirm your position for your circumstances.
What it means
The 5-part “Don’t Get Burned” framework
Think in five checks: Counterparty, Cost, Coin/Bar choice, Custody, and Confirmation.
1) Counterparty risk is real, even when the website looks perfect.
- You should assume a polished website proves nothing, because scammers copy branding and reviews.
- You should verify the business identity, not just the domain name, and you should avoid links sent by ads or DMs.
2) With crypto, payment mistakes are hard to undo.
- You should treat every wallet address as high-risk until verified through a second channel.
- You should assume that “urgent” messages and last-minute address changes are a red flag.
3) Pricing traps often hide in the spread, fees, and timing.
- You should expect a difference between the market reference price and the dealer’s final price, because dealers add costs and margin.
- You should ask what exactly is included, such as card fees, crypto settlement fees, vault fees, insurance, and delivery.
4) “Delivered” and “vaulted” are two different experiences.
- Delivered gold means you take physical possession, so you must plan storage, insurance, and safe receipt.
- Vaulted gold means the provider stores it, so you must understand who holds title, whether it is allocated to you, and how withdrawals work.
5) Tax treatment is often misunderstood, so keep it simple and check the basics.
- UK VAT rules can exempt “investment gold” in certain cases, including certain qualifying coins.
- UK CGT treatment can differ by product type, and HMRC guidance notes that certain Sovereigns and Britannias are currency and can fall under the sterling currency exemption.
- You should treat this as a “check and confirm” area, not a “guess and hope” area.
What to do next
You should write a one-page brief stating what you want: delivered or vaulted, coins or bars, your timeline, and your maximum all-in budget.
- You should verify the seller properly by checking their legal entity details, their trading history, and whether you can confirm contact details independently.
- You should demand clarity on pricing by asking for the all-in quote, the price-lock window, and a plain-English list of every fee.
- You should reduce payment risk by confirming wallet details using two separate methods and starting with a small test transfer if the process allows it.
- You should plan the “last mile” by deciding where it will be received, how it will be signed for, and what insurance applies during transit and at receipt.
How Butterfly helps
If you already hold crypto and want a more controlled route to physical gold, Butterfly can help you organise the process before you move any funds.
- We can help you prepare a clear purchase brief and a document pack, so you are not making decisions under pressure.
- We can help you compare routes (delivered vs vaulted, coins vs bars) in plain English, so you can ask better questions.
- We can introduce you to suitable counterparties and help coordinate the steps, including identity checks, pricing confirmations, and logistics planning.
Crypto-to-Physical Gold: 12-Point Safety Checklist (UK)
- This checklist is designed to help you spot common process risks before you pay.
- It works well as a gated download, because it captures the right lead data without feeling salesy.
- Recommended form fields: Name, email, “Delivered or vaulted?”, “Coins or bars?”, “Timeframe”, “Approx. budget band”, and “Do you already hold crypto?”.