Silver Monthly Price - Swedish Krona per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: 2,024.246 (230.99%)
Chart

Description: Silver (UK), 99.9% refined, London afternoon fixing; prior to July 1976 Handy & Harman. Grade prior to 1962 unrefined silver.

Unit: Swedish Krona per Metric Ton



Source: Platts Metals Week; Metals Week; Metals Statistics; American Metal Market, Australian Mineral Economics Pty. Ltd.,The Silver Institute, Silver World Supply & Demand, London Bullion Market; Thomson Reuters Datastream; World Bank.

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Silver is a precious and industrial metal traded most commonly as a refined bullion product, with prices often quoted in U.S. dollars per troy ounce. The standard market reference is the London spot price for silver of 99.9% fine purity, which serves as a benchmark for physical and financial trading. Silver is valued both for monetary and investment purposes and for its wide industrial utility. It is used in electrical contacts, solder, brazing alloys, mirrors, catalysts, batteries, and a range of electronic and chemical applications. It also has long-standing roles in jewelry, silverware, and coinage. Because silver combines precious-metal characteristics with broad industrial demand, its price reflects both investment flows and manufacturing consumption. The metal is typically traded in refined form, while mine output is often reported as contained silver from ores that also yield lead, zinc, copper, or gold. This by-product structure links silver supply to the economics of other metals.

Supply Drivers

Silver supply is shaped by a mix of primary silver mines and by-product production from lead-zinc, copper, and gold operations. This structure makes output sensitive not only to silver prices but also to the economics of the host metals. In many mining districts, especially in Mexico, Peru, China, Australia, and parts of North and South America, silver is recovered from polymetallic ore bodies formed by hydrothermal processes. Geological grade, ore depth, and metallurgy strongly influence extraction costs and recovery rates. Because mine development requires long lead times, supply responds slowly to price changes. New projects need exploration, permitting, infrastructure, and processing capacity before output can reach market.

Silver production is also affected by ore depletion, mine sequencing, and the availability of smelting and refining capacity. Weather, water access, power reliability, and transport links matter in remote mining regions. Environmental compliance and labor conditions can interrupt output, while recycling from jewelry, silverware, industrial scrap, and photographic material provides an additional but price-sensitive source. Unlike annual harvest commodities, silver supply is constrained by geology and capital intensity, so short-run changes often come from operational disruptions rather than rapid capacity expansion.

Demand Drivers

Silver demand comes from both industrial use and investment demand, which gives the metal a dual character. Industrial consumption is anchored in electronics, electrical conductivity applications, brazing and soldering, chemical catalysts, photovoltaics, and antimicrobial uses. These applications rely on silver’s high conductivity, reflectivity, and chemical properties, which are difficult to replicate fully with cheaper metals. In many uses, however, silver competes with copper, aluminum, nickel, and other materials, so substitution can occur when relative prices change or when engineering standards allow alternative inputs.

Consumer demand includes jewelry, silverware, and bullion products, with investment demand often linked to silver’s role as a store of value and a monetary metal. Fabrication demand tends to follow broader manufacturing activity, consumer electronics production, and capital spending in industrial sectors. Seasonal patterns can appear in jewelry and gift demand, while investment demand can rise when market participants seek precious-metal exposure. Recycling also responds to price incentives, especially from industrial scrap. Because silver is used in small quantities across many products, demand is dispersed across numerous end markets rather than concentrated in a single sector.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Silver prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar, because the metal is globally quoted in dollars and a stronger dollar tends to make dollar-denominated commodities more expensive for non-U.S. buyers. Interest rates also matter: higher real yields can reduce the appeal of non-yielding precious metals, while lower real yields can support them. Silver often trades with a mix of precious-metal and industrial-metal behavior, so it can respond both to inflation expectations and to manufacturing cycles. Storage, insurance, and financing costs affect physical inventories and can shape futures curves through contango or backwardation. Because silver is more industrially exposed than gold, it can show a stronger link to broad economic activity and risk sentiment, while still retaining sensitivity to monetary conditions.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2021876.33-
Apr 2021871.88-0.51%
May 2021919.185.42%
Jun 2021906.16-1.42%
Jul 2021886.76-2.14%
Aug 2021832.91-6.07%
Sep 2021802.23-3.68%
Oct 2021811.851.20%
Nov 2021848.104.46%
Dec 2021819.35-3.39%
Jan 2022847.203.40%
Feb 2022874.633.24%
Mar 2022969.0210.79%
Apr 2022936.88-3.32%
May 2022870.91-7.04%
Jun 2022863.94-0.80%
Jul 2022792.04-8.32%
Aug 2022818.533.34%
Sep 2022824.480.73%
Oct 2022864.904.90%
Nov 2022899.363.99%
Dec 2022966.577.47%
Jan 2023980.691.46%
Feb 2023915.14-6.68%
Mar 2023921.370.68%
Apr 20231,033.9812.22%
May 20231,012.53-2.07%
Jun 20231,007.99-0.45%
Jul 20231,018.141.01%
Aug 20231,013.76-0.43%
Sep 20231,024.481.06%
Oct 2023986.81-3.68%
Nov 20231,008.962.25%
Dec 2023987.33-2.14%
Jan 2024948.82-3.90%
Feb 2024944.63-0.44%
Mar 20241,019.927.97%
Apr 20241,187.9616.48%
May 20241,261.036.15%
Jun 20241,241.54-1.55%
Jul 20241,267.952.13%
Aug 20241,189.49-6.19%
Sep 20241,233.203.67%
Oct 20241,355.299.90%
Nov 20241,356.450.09%
Dec 20241,349.36-0.52%
Jan 20251,348.59-0.06%
Feb 20251,390.293.09%
Mar 20251,347.53-3.08%
Apr 20251,262.02-6.35%
May 20251,265.810.30%
Jun 20251,375.268.65%
Jul 20251,446.515.18%
Aug 20251,463.921.20%
Sep 20251,605.529.67%
Oct 20251,864.5416.13%
Nov 20251,919.422.94%
Dec 20252,322.7021.01%
Jan 20263,386.9245.82%
Feb 20262,944.54-13.06%
Mar 20262,900.58-1.49%

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