Gold Futures Explained — COMEX Contracts, Symbols & How to Read Them
Gold futures are standardized contracts to buy or sell a specific amount of gold at a predetermined price on a future date. They're traded on exchanges like COMEX (part of CME Group) and are essential to understanding how gold is priced globally.
What Are Gold Futures?
A gold futures contract is an agreement to buy or sell 100 troy ounces of gold at a specific price on a specific delivery month. Most traders never take physical delivery — they close positions before expiry or roll to the next contract.
100 oz
Standard contract size
~$11,000
Initial margin (approx.)
GC
COMEX ticker symbol
Why it matters: Futures prices heavily influence the spot price you see quoted everywhere. When traders talk about "the gold price," they're often referring to the most active futures contract.
COMEX Contract Specifications
| Spec | Standard (GC) | Micro (MGC) |
|---|---|---|
| Contract Size | 100 troy ounces | 10 troy ounces |
| Tick Size | $0.10/oz = $10/contract | $0.10/oz = $1/contract |
| Trading Hours | Sun–Fri, nearly 24h | Sun–Fri, nearly 24h |
| Delivery Months | Feb, Apr, Jun, Aug, Oct, Dec | Same as GC |
| Settlement | Physical delivery | Physical delivery |
| Delivery Grade | 995+ fineness (COMEX approved) | 995+ fineness |
| Initial Margin | ~$11,000 (varies) | ~$1,100 (varies) |
Reading Futures Symbols
Futures symbols follow a standard format:
GC + Month Code + Year
| Month Code | Month | Example (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| G | February | GCG26 |
| J | April | GCJ26 |
| M | June | GCM26 |
| Q | August | GCQ26 |
| V | October | GCV26 |
| Z | December | GCZ26 |
See current gold futures contracts and prices on our Gold Futures page.
Margin and Leverage
Futures use margin — you only need to deposit a fraction of the contract's full value. This creates significant leverage:
Example: A 100 oz contract at $3,000/oz = $300,000 value. With ~$11,000 margin, you control $300,000 of gold — roughly 27:1 leverage. A 1% move in gold = 27% gain or loss on your margin.
Warning: Leverage amplifies both gains and losses. A 3.7% adverse move wipes out your entire margin. Futures are for experienced traders, not beginners.
Settlement and Delivery
COMEX gold futures settle by physical delivery — the seller delivers 100 oz of gold to a COMEX-approved vault. In practice, less than 1% of contracts result in delivery. Most traders close before expiry.
Contango and Backwardation
Contango (Normal)
Futures price > spot price. This is the normal state — the premium reflects storage and financing costs. The further out the contract, the higher the price.
Backwardation (Rare)
Futures price < spot price. This signals extreme demand for physical gold now. It's rare and often indicates market stress or supply shortages.
Futures vs. Spot Price
| Aspect | Spot Price | Futures Price |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery | Immediate (T+2) | Future date |
| Leverage | None (pay full price) | ~27:1 |
| Storage costs | Buyer pays | Priced into contract |
| Best for | Physical buyers | Traders, hedgers |
Who Trades Gold Futures?
Hedgers
Gold miners and jewelers lock in future prices to manage risk.
Speculators
Traders betting on gold price direction with leverage.
Market makers
Banks and dealers providing liquidity on both sides.
Central banks
Occasionally use futures for gold reserve management.
Track current COMEX contract prices on our Gold Futures page, or check the live gold spot price.