The Wutai greenstone belt in central North China Craton (NCC) hosts a number of Precambrian gold deposits and ore occurrences. Based on the host rock association, these can be divided into Banded Iron Formation (BIF), meta-volcano-sedimentary and meta-conglomerate types. The two former types formed during w2.5e2.3 Ga and the third one at w1.85 Ga. The characteristics of these Precambrian gold deposits are broadly similar with those of the orogenic gold deposits. Based on available geochronological data, here we reconstruct the major tectonic events and their relationship with gold mineralization in the Wutai-Hengshan-Fuping region during Neoarchean to Paleoproterozoic as fol- lows. (1) w2.6e2.5 Ga: widespread intrusion of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) magmas in the Hengshan terrane and Fuping continental arc, formation of the Wutai volcanic arc in the southern margin of Hengshan terrane with granitoids emplacement, and the Hengshan-Wutai intra-oceanic arc accretion to the Fuping arc at the end of Neoarchean. (2) w2.5e2.3 Ga: the subduction of Hengshan arc from north leading to persistent magmatism and orogenic gold mineralization. (3) w2.2e2.1 Ga: extension leading to the formation of graben structure in the Wutai and Fuping region, deposition of the Hutuo and Wanzi Group sediments, formation of placer gold through erosion of the orogenic gold deposits. (4) w2.2e2.0 Ga: widespread magmatism in the Wutai-Hengshan-Fuping region. (5) w1.95 e1.8 Ga: regional metamorphism associated with collision of the Western and Eastern Blocks of the NCC and associated orogenic gold deposits. The multiple subduction-accretion-collision history and subsequent deep erosion has signi?cantly affected most of the Precambrian gold deposits in the Wutai greenstone belt.