Gold or savings account? What to do with your bonus pay

Published on:
28 May 2026

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Received your bonus pay? Here's how gold performed over the past year

This time of year, many UK workers receive some form of bonus pay - whether that's an annual bonus, a contractual extra payment, or a performance-related sum. The question is always the same: what do you do with it? For most people, it goes toward a holiday, the savings account, or a larger purchase. But what if you had put that money into gold a year ago?

Bonus payments in the UK vary widely by employer and sector, with many workers receiving them in spring or early summer. While there is no universal holiday allowance in the UK the way it exists in parts of continental Europe, the principle is the same: a lump sum that raises the question of what to do with it wisely.

To illustrate what a gold investment would have returned, we compare the gold price on 22 May 2025 with that of 22 May 2026.

On 22 May 2025, gold was priced at approximately £75.80 per gram. A year later, the gold price stood at around £100.80 per gram. That represents a rise of approximately 33 percent in twelve months.

Gold price rose approximately 33 percent over the past year. Source: GoldRepublic

Someone who invested £2,000 in gold a year ago would now be sitting on roughly £2,660. That is a gain of around £660.

In hindsight, parking your bonus in gold paid off handsomely. That offers no guarantee for the year ahead, of course, but the fundamental case for gold remains firmly intact.

Inflation Returns as a Theme

In the background, an old theme is making a comeback: inflation. The war in Iran has fuelled global fears of a new energy crisis. If oil and gas prices rise further, that could reignite inflationary pressure.

The first signals are already visible in bond markets. Investors are demanding higher yields on government bonds, pricing in higher inflation and potentially tighter central bank policy. UK gilt yields are reflecting these same concerns, adding pressure to an already stretched public finances picture.

It is not just US Treasury yields that are rising. In Europe and Japan, rates are also under upward pressure, and the UK is no exception.

For gold, this is a mixed picture in the short term. Higher interest rates and a stronger US dollar can temporarily weigh on the gold price. But the longer-term picture becomes more compelling precisely because of this.

Higher rates make it more expensive for governments to finance their debts. And that is one of the most important arguments for gold.

Governments Are Sinking Deeper into Debt

The debt positions of governments worldwide are already fragile, and the current situation is making that problem worse. The UK is no exception. With public debt above 100 percent of GDP and ongoing pressure on public finances, the headroom for manoeuvre is limited. Rising borrowing costs make every percentage point of debt more expensive to carry, and the options available to the Treasury are narrowing.

Globally, the picture is comparable. The United States is on course for a fiscal deficit of approximately $1.9 trillion this year, equivalent to 5.8 percent of GDP. According to the Congressional Budget Office, Washington will pay more than $1 trillion in net interest on the national debt in 2026 alone. Roughly 14 cents of every federal dollar spent goes not toward defence, healthcare, or social security, but toward servicing past borrowing.

The war in Iran, higher inflation, and rising market rates are not making this problem smaller. If anything, the likelihood is growing that governments will need to take on new debt to refinance existing obligations and cover ongoing deficits.

That theoretically creates a better long-term environment for gold, particularly if investors begin to lose confidence in the sustainability of public finances and the purchasing power of sterling and other currencies.

Gold as Protection Against Political Uncertainty

There is a second argument: geopolitical uncertainty.

The world has become more unstable. The war in Iran is creating tension on energy markets, while the battle for technological dominance between the United States and China is becoming increasingly consequential.

Nobody can say with certainty right now whether America will win the AI arms race, or whether China will eventually take the lead. That uncertainty makes assets that are independent of political and economic outcomes more attractive.

Put simply: gold does not care whether America or China leads the world tomorrow. For shares in companies like Apple, Google, or Nvidia, that question could be everything.

In this context, gold becomes relatively more attractive. Not because your entire portfolio should consist of gold, but because a modest allocation can provide a counterweight to inflation, debt problems, and geopolitical uncertainty.

Silver Could Benefit Twice Over

Gold is not the only precious metal worth considering. Silver deserves attention too.

Silver has a distinctive profile. On one hand, it resembles gold in that investors can buy it as protection against inflation, currency debasement, and financial uncertainty. On the other hand, the silver price is much more closely tied to the real economy.

The metal is used in solar panels, electronics, electric vehicles, semiconductors, and a wide range of industrial applications. This means silver can benefit not only from the same monetary concerns as gold, but potentially also from the structural growth of the AI economy.

Because behind artificial intelligence lies an enormous physical infrastructure. Data centres, chips, power grids, cooling systems, solar panels, batteries, and other industrial applications all require raw materials. Silver plays a far larger role in that than many investors realise.

Silver therefore theoretically has two engines behind it. If inflation returns and investors seek protection, silver can benefit as a monetary metal. And if the AI revolution continues to drive massive investment in infrastructure and electrification, silver can also benefit as an industrial metal.

That makes silver more exciting than gold, but also more volatile. The silver price tends to rise more sharply during periods of optimism, but can also fall more steeply when the economy cools or investors become more risk-averse.

Not Exciting, but Smart

Investing in gold or silver may not be the most spectacular use of your bonus pay. But in the current environment, it can be a genuinely smart move.

Gold offers protection primarily against inflation, government debt, and geopolitical uncertainty. Silver adds an extra dimension, as it can also benefit from structural demand driven by the AI economy and the energy transition.

That does not mean putting all your bonus into precious metals. But anyone looking for a way to make their wealth a little less dependent on stocks, bonds, and currencies will find it hard to ignore gold and silver.

Especially in a world where inflation is returning, debts keep rising, and the balance of power is being redrawn by AI.

Conclusion

Many UK workers receive bonus pay this time of year. Why gold and silver could be a smart destination in times of inflation, debt and geopolitical uncertainty.

Thom Derks

Thom Derks writes for GoldRepublic on gold, macro-economics and geopolitics. He studied Law in Leiden and Economics in Amsterdam. His personal fascination with scarcity and store of value through both bitcoin and gold brought him into the world of financial journalism. Through his own newsletter De Geldpers on Substack, he reaches over 5,800 subscribers with analyses on markets, geopolitics and the monetary system.