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Scrap Silver Calculator

Estimated Melt Value
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Free Silver Melt Value & Purity Calculators

Every silver calculator you need โ€” for scrap, coins, jewelry, bars, and more.

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Silver Melt Value Calculator

Find the pure silver content and melt value of any silver item based on weight and fineness.

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Sterling Silver Calculator

Instantly calculate the value of your 925 sterling silver items by weight.

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Junk Silver Calculator

Find the melt value of pre-1965 US silver coins โ€” dimes, quarters, halves, and dollars.

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Silver Coin Value Calculator

Calculate any silver coin's melt value by entering its weight, purity, and quantity.

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Gold and Silver Calculator

Calculate gold and silver scrap mixed together and view the live ratio.

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Silver Bar Value Calculator

Find the current value of silver bars in 1oz, 5oz, 10oz, 100oz, and 1kg sizes.

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Silver Jewelry Value Calculator

Calculate the melt value of silver rings, chains, necklaces, and bracelets.

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Silverware Value Calculator

Find the silver value of spoons, forks, trays, knives, cups, and plates.

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Silver Price Per Gram Calculator

Current silver price per gram with converter for all common weight units.

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Silver Price Per Ounce Calculator

Live silver spot price per troy ounce updated in real time from global markets.

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Sona Chandi Calculator

Calculate Sona (Gold) and Chandi (Silver) values in Tola and Grams using Tunch.

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Pennyweight Calculator

Calculate silver items weighed in pennyweight (dwt), a traditional jeweler's standard.

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๐Ÿ“‹ Simple Process

How It Works โ€” 3 Simple Steps

Get an accurate silver valuation in seconds.

1

Weigh Your Silver

Use a kitchen scale to weigh your silver item in grams, troy ounces, or any unit.

2

Select Silver Purity

Choose the purity โ€” 925 for sterling, 999 for fine silver, 900 for coin silver, or others.

3

Get Instant Melt Value

See the melt value based on live silver spot prices โ€” updated in real time from global markets.

What Is a Scrap Silver Calculator โ€” and When Should You Use One?

At its core, a scrap silver calculator determines the intrinsic melt value of a silver item โ€” not its retail price, not its sentimental value, and not any collector's premium. It answers one specific question: if you melted this item down to pure silver today, what would that metal be worth? To do that, it uses three pieces of information: the item's weight, its silver fineness (purity), and the current spot price of silver as traded on the global commodities market.

You should use it any time you're about to sell scrap silver โ€” whether that's a broken bracelet, a set of old flatware, a coin collection, or a bag of sterling offcuts. Knowing the melt value beforehand is the single most effective way to avoid being underpaid by a dealer or refinery. You can check the live silver price per troy ounce or the silver price per gram at any time to see how the market is moving before you commit to a sale.

How Silver Melt Value Is Actually Calculated

The formula is simple but the units matter enormously. Silver is always priced internationally in troy ounces โ€” not the standard avoirdupois ounces you'd use on a kitchen scale. A troy ounce is 31.1035 grams, compared to 28.35 grams in a standard ounce. This distinction alone is one of the most common reasons people miscalculate their silver's worth.

Melt Value = Weight (in troy oz) × Purity (decimal) × Spot Price (per troy oz)

For example: a 50-gram sterling silver chain (purity 0.925) with silver at $30/oz gives you (50 ÷ 31.1035) × 0.925 × 30 = approximately $44.75. Our silver melt value calculator does all of this automatically. If your item is measured in a different unit, our silver weight converter handles the conversion between grams, troy ounces, pennyweights, tolas, and kilograms so you always input the right number.

Understanding Silver Purity Marks and Hallmarks

Every piece of silver carries a story in its stamp marks, known as hallmarks. These tiny engravings tell you the silver's fineness โ€” the proportion of pure silver in the alloy. Learning to read them is essential for accurate valuation.

The most common purities you'll encounter are:

  • 999 (Fine Silver) โ€” 99.9% pure silver. Typically found in bullion bars and coins like the American Silver Eagle. Use our 999 silver calculator for these items.
  • 958 (Britannia Silver) โ€” 95.8% pure, used in some British silverware. Our 958 silver calculator handles this fineness precisely.
  • 925 (Sterling Silver) โ€” The most recognised standard worldwide. 92.5% silver, 7.5% copper alloy. Most jewelry and flatware sold today is sterling. The dedicated sterling silver calculator or 925 silver calculator are both useful here.
  • 900 (Coin Silver) โ€” Used in older US coins minted before 1965. Our 900 silver calculator is built for these items.
  • 835 & 800 (European Silver) โ€” Common in Continental European hollowware and cutlery. Use the 835 silver calculator or 800 silver calculator respectively.

If you see a stamp that says "STERLING," "925," or "925/1000," you're almost certainly looking at sterling silver. If there's no marking at all, a jeweler or pawn shop can run an acid test or XRF analysis to confirm. Our 925 sterling silver price per gram page gives you a live baseline reference for the most common purity.

Valuing Silver Jewelry, Flatware, and Hollow Items

The intrinsic value of silver jewelry comes entirely from its silver content โ€” not the design, the craftsmanship, or the brand name. A heavy plain silver bangle is worth far more as scrap than a lightweight designer ring. Weight is the dominant factor, so always weigh items before assuming their value.

For specific jewelry types, use the purpose-built tools: the silver ring calculator, silver chain calculator, silver necklace calculator, and silver bracelet calculator all let you enter exact weights and get instant scrap values. For any wearable piece broadly, the silver jewelry value calculator is the best starting point.

Silverware and flatware โ€” spoons, forks, knives, trays, cups, and plates โ€” are priced the same way. A full set of sterling flatware can represent significant silver weight. Start with the silverware value calculator, or go straight to the individual pages for silver spoons, silver forks, silver knives, silver trays, silver cups, and silver plates.

One important caveat: silver-plated items have only a microscopic coating of silver over a base metal. They have essentially zero melt value as silver scrap and should not be entered here.

Silver Coins โ€” Melt Value versus Numismatic Value

This is one of the most misunderstood areas in the silver market. A coin's melt value โ€” the value of its silver content alone โ€” is always the floor. But many coins carry an additional numismatic premium because of their rarity, age, condition, or collector demand. Selling a pristine 1881 Morgan Dollar for scrap silver price would be a costly mistake.

For common circulated coins in large quantities โ€” the kind typically called junk silver โ€” melt value is essentially all you'll get. Pre-1965 US dimes, quarters, half-dollars, and dollar coins are 90% silver. Our junk silver calculator is tailored specifically for these, and the face value silver calculator lets you simply enter the total face value of your coin bag (e.g., $10 FV) to get an instant estimate.

For individual coins, use the silver coin value calculator, the silver dollar calculator, the silver quarter calculator, the silver dime calculator, or the Canadian silver coin calculator.

For silver bars, the silver bar value calculator supports common sizes from 1oz to 100oz and 1kg. Dedicated pages exist for 1oz, 2oz, 5oz, 10oz, 100oz, and 1kg bars. If you have a large mixed collection, the silver batch calculator lets you add unlimited line items and get a combined total you can print or copy to a dealer.

Weighing Silver Correctly: Troy Ounces, Grams, Pennyweight, and Tola

The precious metals trade uses a variety of weight units that don't always match your kitchen scale. Getting this wrong is one of the easiest ways to miscalculate. A troy ounce is 31.1035 g; a standard ounce is only 28.35 g. The pennyweight (dwt) โ€” common in the US jewelry trade โ€” equals 1.555 g, and our pennyweight calculator converts between dwt and spot price automatically. In South Asian markets, the tola (11.664 g) is the standard unit; the tola silver calculator is purpose-built for this.

If you ever need to switch between any of these units, the silver weight converter handles all six units in both directions with a single entry. It also displays the equivalent spot price for each unit so you can instantly cross-check your scale reading.

Gold and Silver Together โ€” and Knowing When to Sell

Many estate sales and dealer lots include both gold and silver items. The gold and silver calculator handles both metals simultaneously and also displays the live gold-to-silver ratio โ€” a key metric investors watch to time their buy and sell decisions. For South Asian markets where gold is measured as Sona and silver as Chandi, the Sona Chandi calculator supports Tola and Gram units with Tunch (purity) built in.

If you're holding silver as an investment, you can run the numbers through the silver profit calculator to see your ROI based on your original purchase price. Not sure whether to sell now or wait? The sell or hold calculator models different future price scenarios so you can make an informed decision. Silver prices are also available in 12 major currencies โ€” including USD, EUR, GBP, INR, PKR, AUD, and CAD โ€” via our silver price in all currencies page.

Silver & Precious Metals Topics

Silver (Ag) Troy Ounce Spot Price COMEX Exchange LBMA Sterling Silver 925 Fine Silver 999 Coin Silver 900 Melt Value Scrap Metal Precious Metals Bullion Hallmark Assay Pennyweight (DWT) Silver Refining Numismatic Value Junk Silver Coins Silver Alloy Tola Silver Purity Testing XRF Analysis Acid Test Morgan Dollar American Silver Eagle

Frequently Asked Questions

Straight answers to the questions people ask most about silver scrap value.

Multiply the item's weight in troy ounces by its purity (as a decimal) and then by the current silver spot price. For example, 10 grams of 925 sterling at $30/oz = (10 ÷ 31.1035) × 0.925 × 30 = approximately $8.95. This silver melt value calculator does the math instantly once you enter weight, purity, and unit.

The spot price is the current market price for one troy ounce of pure (999) silver on the global commodities exchange. The melt value is what your specific item is worth based on its weight and purity โ€” it's always equal to or less than spot price, because most real-world silver items contain copper or other alloys. Check today's live silver spot price to stay updated.

Look for a stamp or hallmark on the item โ€” common ones include 925, 900, 800, 999, or the word STERLING. Items from the UK often have a lion passant hallmark. If there's no marking, a reputable jeweler or pawn shop can do an acid test or XRF analysis. A silver-plated item will usually say "EPNS," "Silver Plate," or "Sheffield Plate" โ€” these have negligible scrap value.

Most scrap silver buyers pay between 70% and 95% of the calculated melt value. The percentage depends on the buyer type (local pawn shop vs. online refinery), the purity confidence, and the volume you're selling. Local pawn shops tend to offer less; specialist online silver refiners often offer 85โ€“95% of melt. Always get multiple offers and use this calculator to verify you're getting a fair deal before you commit.

Not exactly. Junk silver specifically refers to pre-1965 US coins (dimes, quarters, halves, dollars) that are 90% silver and have no collectible premium โ€” they're valued purely for their metal content. Scrap silver is a broader term covering broken jewelry, flatware, dental silver, and any silver item sold for its metal. Use the junk silver calculator for coins and this scrap silver calculator for everything else.

Yes โ€” enter the coin's weight and select its purity (90% for pre-1965 US coins, 99.9% for Silver Eagles). However, for more precision with specific coin types, use the silver coin value calculator or the dedicated silver dollar, silver quarter, and silver dime calculators, which use official coin weights automatically.

Use whatever your scale shows โ€” this calculator converts for you. Grams are the easiest unit for most home scales. Troy ounces are the industry standard and useful when comparing to the spot price directly. The critical mistake to avoid: confusing standard ounces (28.35 g) with troy ounces (31.10 g). This is a very common and costly error. Use our silver weight converter if you need to switch units.

Very little. Silver-plated items have only a thin layer of silver (usually just a few microns) bonded over a base metal like copper or nickel. The actual silver content by weight is a tiny fraction of the total โ€” far too small to recover economically from scrap. Look for stamps like EPNS, EP, or "Silver Plate" to identify plated items. Only solid sterling or fine silver has meaningful scrap value.

The gold-to-silver ratio tells you how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold. Historically it averages around 60โ€“80; when it rises above 80, silver is considered relatively cheap compared to gold, and many investors buy silver. When it falls below 60, silver is relatively expensive and may be a good time to sell. Check the live ratio alongside your melt value with our gold and silver calculator.

Yes. Our silver price in all currencies page shows live silver prices in USD, EUR, GBP, INR, PKR, AUD, CAD, and more. For South Asian markets, the Sona Chandi calculator supports Tola measurements and Tunch (purity) in a format familiar to local markets.