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Florida Tests Hard Money: Gold And Silver Enter Legal Tender, Dollar Still Reigns
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) (Analysis) Florida has approved a law that would let people and public agencies, on a voluntary basis, use certain gold and silver as legal tender for in-state payments starting July 1, 2026.
The twist is how it works: no passing coins across a counter. Any government office that opts in must accept payments electronically through licensed Florida custodians that vault the metal, keep audited records, and carry insurance.
The law sets high purity thresholds (about 99.5% for gold and 99.9% for silver), exempts qualifying coins from state sales tax, and tasks regulators with writing detailed rules by November 2025.
Businesses and individuals can choose to accept metal-backed payments, but no one is forced to. This is not a first. Utah recognized U.S.-minted gold and silver as legal tender in 2011, with Oklahoma, Arizona, and Wyoming taking related steps later.
Nor is it a challenge to federal law: dollars remain legal tender nationwide, and nothing in Florida displaces them. The state is building an optional parallel rail, not a replacement currency.
The story behind the story is about trust and diversification. After years of inflation concerns and periodic banking jitters, some Americans want savings that don't depend entirely on the banking system or on future monetary policy.
Florida Tests Hard Money: Gold and Silver Enter Legal Tender, Dollar Still Reigns
Florida's framework tries to make that preference usable-turning vaulted metal into spendable balances-while imposing consumer protections (licensing, audits, and security standards) that bullion markets have often lacked at the retail level.
Supporters see a hedge against policy mistakes and financial shocks. Skeptics note metal's price swings, storage and spread costs, and the network hurdle: unless many billers and merchants opt in, usage will remain niche.
For readers abroad, the significance is twofold. First, a U.S. state in the world's reserve-currency issuer is formalizing a legal, regulated path to pay with precious metals-illustrating demand for alternatives without signaling a collapse in dollar usage.
Second, the experiment is testable: watch whether major Florida agencies adopt it, whether fees stay low enough to matter for everyday bills, and whether user-friendly apps make it feel like any other instant transfer.
If those pieces come together, Florida could show how“hard money” can coexist with the dollar in modern payments-complement, not coup.
The twist is how it works: no passing coins across a counter. Any government office that opts in must accept payments electronically through licensed Florida custodians that vault the metal, keep audited records, and carry insurance.
The law sets high purity thresholds (about 99.5% for gold and 99.9% for silver), exempts qualifying coins from state sales tax, and tasks regulators with writing detailed rules by November 2025.
Businesses and individuals can choose to accept metal-backed payments, but no one is forced to. This is not a first. Utah recognized U.S.-minted gold and silver as legal tender in 2011, with Oklahoma, Arizona, and Wyoming taking related steps later.
Nor is it a challenge to federal law: dollars remain legal tender nationwide, and nothing in Florida displaces them. The state is building an optional parallel rail, not a replacement currency.
The story behind the story is about trust and diversification. After years of inflation concerns and periodic banking jitters, some Americans want savings that don't depend entirely on the banking system or on future monetary policy.
Florida Tests Hard Money: Gold and Silver Enter Legal Tender, Dollar Still Reigns
Florida's framework tries to make that preference usable-turning vaulted metal into spendable balances-while imposing consumer protections (licensing, audits, and security standards) that bullion markets have often lacked at the retail level.
Supporters see a hedge against policy mistakes and financial shocks. Skeptics note metal's price swings, storage and spread costs, and the network hurdle: unless many billers and merchants opt in, usage will remain niche.
For readers abroad, the significance is twofold. First, a U.S. state in the world's reserve-currency issuer is formalizing a legal, regulated path to pay with precious metals-illustrating demand for alternatives without signaling a collapse in dollar usage.
Second, the experiment is testable: watch whether major Florida agencies adopt it, whether fees stay low enough to matter for everyday bills, and whether user-friendly apps make it feel like any other instant transfer.
If those pieces come together, Florida could show how“hard money” can coexist with the dollar in modern payments-complement, not coup.

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