Tin Monthly Price - Yuan Renminbi per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 141,619.900 (76.69%)
Chart

Description: Tin (LME), refined, 99.85% purity, settlement price

Unit: Yuan Renminbi per Metric Ton



Source: Platts Metals Week, Engineering and Mining Journal; 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

Tin is a soft, silvery base metal traded on commodity markets primarily as refined tin of high purity, commonly quoted against the London Metal Exchange (LME) benchmark for 99.85% purity in U.S. dollars per metric ton. It is valued for its low melting point, strong wetting properties, and resistance to corrosion. These characteristics make it especially useful in solder, tinplate, and a range of chemical and metallurgical applications. Because tin is traded as a refined metal rather than a bulk ore, market pricing reflects both mining supply and the capacity of smelters to convert concentrates into standardized metal. Physical delivery standards and warehouse stocks are important in benchmark pricing, since tin is a relatively specialized metal with a narrower production base than many industrial metals. Its market is shaped by the interaction of mine output, smelting capacity, transport logistics, and demand from electronics, packaging, and alloys.

Supply Drivers

Tin supply is structurally concentrated in a limited number of geological belts, especially in Southeast Asia, parts of China, South America, and central Africa. The metal is commonly mined from cassiterite-bearing deposits, which can occur in hard-rock lodes or in alluvial deposits formed by weathering and erosion. This geological setting makes supply sensitive to ore grade, depletion of easily accessible material, and the economics of small-scale versus industrial mining. Many tin mines depend on long development timelines, since new projects require exploration, permitting, infrastructure, and smelting arrangements before refined metal reaches market.

Production is also affected by weather, especially where alluvial mining depends on river systems and seasonal rainfall. In some producing regions, transport bottlenecks, power reliability, and port access influence whether concentrate can move efficiently to smelters. Tin smelting is energy-intensive and sensitive to concentrate quality, so disruptions in refining capacity can tighten refined supply even when mine output is available. Because tin is often recovered from relatively small deposits and by-product streams, supply can respond slowly to price changes. Recycling from solder, tinplate scrap, and industrial residues provides an additional source, but it depends on collection systems and processing economics.

Demand Drivers

Tin demand is dominated by solder, where it is used because of its low melting point and reliable bonding properties. Solder demand links tin closely to electronics assembly, electrical equipment, and industrial repair markets. Tin is also used in tinplate, where a thin coating protects steel from corrosion in food and beverage packaging and certain industrial containers. In addition, tin compounds are used in chemicals, catalysts, stabilizers, and specialty glass and ceramic applications, while tin alloys appear in bearings, bronze, and other metallurgical products.

Demand is shaped by substitution and material efficiency. In solder, tin competes with lead, silver, copper, and other metals depending on performance requirements and regulatory constraints. In packaging, aluminum, plastics, and alternative coatings can reduce tinplate use in some applications, while corrosion resistance and recyclability support continued demand in others. Electronics demand tends to be tied to manufacturing activity and product replacement cycles, making it more cyclical than packaging demand. Seasonal effects can appear in manufacturing schedules and consumer goods production, but the broader demand structure is driven by industrial output, urbanization, and the spread of electrical and electronic devices. Because tin is used in relatively small quantities per unit of finished product, demand can grow through broad industrial diffusion rather than through a single dominant end use.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Tin prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because the metal is quoted internationally in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect local-currency costs and purchasing power. Like other industrial metals, tin is sensitive to global manufacturing conditions, credit availability, and interest rates, which affect inventory financing and the willingness of consumers to hold stocks. Storage and financing costs matter because refined tin can be warehoused, creating periods of contango when carrying metal is expensive and backwardation when nearby supply is tight. Benchmark pricing also reflects warehouse availability and deliverable stocks, since physical tightness can move prices independently of mine fundamentals. Tin does not function as a classic monetary hedge in the way precious metals do; its price behavior is more closely tied to industrial activity, supply interruptions, and logistics than to safe-haven demand.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2021184,676.90-
May 2021207,372.0012.29%
Jun 2021208,812.300.69%
Jul 2021220,270.805.49%
Aug 2021226,819.902.97%
Sep 2021225,239.20-0.70%
Oct 2021241,855.007.38%
Nov 2021250,226.803.46%
Dec 2021251,009.700.31%
Jan 2022265,626.005.82%
Feb 2022278,914.805.00%
Mar 2022278,855.90-0.02%
Apr 2022276,584.20-0.81%
May 2022240,279.10-13.13%
Jun 2022211,294.40-12.06%
Jul 2022171,049.80-19.05%
Aug 2022167,656.50-1.98%
Sep 2022148,506.70-11.42%
Oct 2022139,946.70-5.76%
Nov 2022152,588.809.03%
Dec 2022168,794.0010.62%
Jan 2023191,401.1013.39%
Feb 2023183,621.50-4.06%
Mar 2023165,523.90-9.86%
Apr 2023177,682.107.35%
May 2023178,595.100.51%
Jun 2023194,938.809.15%
Jul 2023206,527.805.94%
Aug 2023189,118.00-8.43%
Sep 2023186,675.90-1.29%
Oct 2023179,395.80-3.90%
Nov 2023174,791.80-2.57%
Dec 2023175,881.400.62%
Jan 2024180,001.602.34%
Feb 2024187,771.104.32%
Mar 2024197,709.305.29%
Apr 2024230,031.5016.35%
May 2024238,523.003.69%
Jun 2024232,420.50-2.56%
Jul 2024231,391.70-0.44%
Aug 2024225,248.20-2.66%
Sep 2024222,671.30-1.14%
Oct 2024227,379.102.11%
Nov 2024213,653.70-6.04%
Dec 2024210,041.50-1.69%
Jan 2025216,439.503.05%
Feb 2025231,708.407.05%
Mar 2025246,895.706.55%
Apr 2025237,782.70-3.69%
May 2025230,556.00-3.04%
Jun 2025233,698.001.36%
Jul 2025241,080.403.16%
Aug 2025242,746.600.69%
Sep 2025245,680.101.21%
Oct 2025256,389.104.36%
Nov 2025262,867.402.53%
Dec 2025290,339.6010.45%
Jan 2026345,553.3019.02%
Feb 2026336,413.50-2.64%
Mar 2026326,296.80-3.01%

Top Companies

Yunnan Tin Co
Website: http://en.ytc.cn/
Location: Yunnan, China
Estimated Production: 20000 tonnes per year

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