India · Delhi · 15 Jul 2026
National rate · applies in Delhi
| Purity | 8 g | 10 g | 100 g |
|---|---|---|---|
Pure (.999) | ₹1,773.67 | ₹2,217.09 | ₹22,170.89 |
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Difference is vs. previous trading day
| Date | 999 |
|---|---|
15 Jul 2026 Wednesday | ₹221.71(+0.91) |
14 Jul 2026 Tuesday | ₹220.80(+0.55) |
13 Jul 2026 Monday | ₹220.25(-2.55) |
12 Jul 2026 Sunday | ₹222.80(+0.00) |
11 Jul 2026 Saturday | ₹222.80(-0.39) |
10 Jul 2026 Friday | ₹223.19(-3.45) |
9 Jul 2026 Thursday | ₹226.64(+1.75) |
999 · INR per gram · always shows latest, independent of selected date
Same national 999 rate
The silver rate in Delhi on 15 Jul 2026 is ₹221.71 per gram for 999 fine silver, which is ₹2,21,708.90 per kilogram. Unlike gold, silver in Delhi is priced at the national rate — there is no separate city premium, so the figure above matches the rate quoted anywhere in India on the same day.
Local jewellers and bullion dealers in Delhi take the same international silver spot price (quoted in USD per troy ounce on the London Bullion Market and COMEX), convert it to INR per gram, and add import duty and their own margin. MCX silver futures track the same underlying market, so day-to-day moves in Delhi mirror the national trend exactly.
Dariba Kalan in Old Delhi is one of North India's oldest silver markets. The silver rate itself is national, but Delhi remains a major centre for silver ornaments, payals and utensils.
North Indian silver buying centres on payals (anklets), bichhua, utensils and gifting, with a pronounced Dhanteras spike when households buy at least a small silver coin or utensil for luck. Delhi's large wedding market also drives steady demand for silver gift sets and pooja thalis.
Beyond Dariba Kalan, the wholesale silver and bullion trade runs through Kucha Mahajani in Chandni Chowk, while retail silver articles, payals and gift items are sold across Karol Bagh and South Delhi showrooms.
Wherever you buy in Delhi, ask for the purity stamp — 999 for fine silver bullion or 925 for sterling jewellery — and a proper invoice. Use the jewellery bill calculator to check making charges and GST against the metal value, and see the gold rate in Delhi if you are comparing metals.
999 fine silver (99.9% pure) is the bullion standard used for coins, bars and digital silver. It is too soft for daily-wear jewellery and tarnishes easily.
925 sterling silver (92.5% silver, 7.5% copper or other metals) is the global jewellery standard used by jewellers in Delhi for chains, rings and bangles. The rate on this page is for 999; sterling pieces are priced at roughly 92.5% of the 999 value, plus making charges and GST.
Buying gold too? See the gold rate in Delhi — unlike silver, gold carries a small city-level premium.
Today's 999 silver rate in India is ₹221.71 per gram, which works out to ₹2,21,708.90 per kilogram.
1 kg of 999 silver costs ₹2,21,708.90 today in India. The kilogram is the standard unit for Indian retail silver — bullion bars, utensils and payals are all quoted per kg, while the per-gram rate is handier for comparing against gold.
At today's 999 rate of ₹221.71 per gram, the metal value of 925 silver is about ₹205.08 per gram (92.5% of the fine-silver rate). Sterling jewellery is billed above its metal value once making charges and GST are added, and resale quotes are based on the metal value alone.
At today's rate, 10 g of silver costs about ₹2,217.09, 50 g about ₹11,085.45, and 100 g about ₹22,170.89. A troy ounce — the international trading unit — is about 31.1 g. These figures are metal value only; finished silverware adds making charges and GST.
Multiply weight in grams × purity fraction × today's per-gram rate. Purity is 0.999 for fine silver, 0.925 for sterling, and lower for older ornaments (often 0.80–0.90). For example, a 100 g 925-sterling item is worth about 100 × 0.925 × ₹221.71 ≈ ₹20,508.07 in metal value. For a full retail bill including making charges and GST, use the jewellery calculator on this site.
No. 925 (sterling) silver is 92.5% silver alloyed with 7.5% copper for hardness — pure silver is too soft for jewellery and utensils. 999 fine silver is the bullion standard used for bars and coins.
999 silver (also called fine silver) is 99.9% pure. It is the international standard for bullion bars and coins. Most silver jewellery is sold as 925 (92.5%, "sterling silver") because pure silver is too soft for daily wear.
Silver tracks international spot prices, the USD/INR rate, and industrial demand. Unlike gold, silver has heavy industrial use (electronics, solar panels, batteries) so its price reacts to manufacturing cycles as well as investment flows.
In India, retail silver is most often quoted per kilogram because the per-gram value is small. This page shows both: per gram for direct comparison with gold, and per kilogram for bullion-scale buying.
Silver has historically tracked gold but with much higher volatility. It is cheaper per unit, which makes accumulation easier, but the spread between buy and sell prices is wider than for gold. Most Indian investors use silver as a satellite holding alongside gold rather than a core one.
Silver is treated as a national price in India — there is no significant city-level premium the way there is for gold. The rate on this page is the national reference.
They behave differently. Silver — sometimes called the "poor man's gold" — is far cheaper per gram, which makes accumulation easier, but it is more volatile, carries a wider buy–sell spread, and its price leans on industrial demand cycles. Gold is the deeper, more liquid market with stronger resale infrastructure in India. Most Indian investors treat silver as a satellite holding alongside gold rather than a replacement for it.
No one can reliably forecast silver prices, and this site publishes data, not predictions. Silver's price depends on industrial demand (electronics, solar, EVs), investment flows, the gold–silver ratio and the USD–INR rate. Use the long-range chart on this page to study the trend yourself rather than relying on specific price targets.
Dariba Kalan and Kucha Mahajani in Old Delhi's Chandni Chowk are the historic silver and bullion hubs, with retail silver articles also sold across Karol Bagh and South Delhi. Silver is priced at the national rate everywhere in the city.
The rate itself follows the national market, but demand — and therefore making charges and premiums on coins and utensils — rises around Dhanteras and Diwali, when buying silver is considered auspicious across North India. The underlying per-gram rate on this page is unaffected by the festival.