Gold: $4487.22  Silver: $75.20  Platinum: $1931.38  90% Junk $1 FV: $53.77  Gold/Silver Ratio: 59.67

Silver Coins Categories

1 oz Silver Coins

1 oz Silver Coins

43 products
From $75.03
10 oz Silver Coins

10 oz Silver Coins

5 products
From $837.94
2 oz Silver Coins

2 oz Silver Coins

9 products
From $116.11
5 oz Silver Coins

5 oz Silver Coins

8 products
From $385.65
America The Beautiful (ATB)

America The Beautiful (ATB)

32 products
From $385.65
American Silver Eagles

American Silver Eagles

31 products
From $75.97
Austria Silver Philharmonics

Austria Silver Philharmonics

8 products
From $77.10
Canada Silver Maple Leaf Coins

Canada Silver Maple Leaf Coins

14 products
From $75.03
Fractional Silver Coins

Fractional Silver Coins

10 products
From $11.59
Junk Silver Coins

Junk Silver Coins

63 products
From $21.09
Kilo Silver Coins

Kilo Silver Coins

8 products
From $2,536.82
Monster Boxes

Monster Boxes

19 products
From $9,306.00
Perth Mint Coins

Perth Mint Coins

50 products
From $63.01
Random Year Government Silver

Random Year Government Silver

15 products
From $75.49
Silver Coin Tubes and Rolls

Silver Coin Tubes and Rolls

10 products
From $1,589.60

Compare Silver Coins Prices

Silver Coins - Compare Live Prices, Premiums & Specs

Silver coins are the gateway into physical precious metals: affordable, liquid, and widely recognized. Whether you’re stacking for wealth preservation or curating a collection, it pays to comparison shop since premiums on the same coin can vary substantially between dealers. Use FindBullionPrices.com to surface in-stock offers and the lowest delivered prices before you buy.

Why investors and collectors love silver coins

  • Low barrier to entry: Far cheaper per unit than gold, so you can dollar-cost average and stay flexible.
  • Highly liquid: Sovereign mint coinage is recognized worldwide and easy to resell.
  • Dual demand: Silver is both a monetary metal and an industrial input—long-term, that underpins value.
  • Design & culture: From Britannia to the Panda, coins carry national icons that collectors gravitate toward.

Popular silver coins at a glance (designs, denominations & specs)

Specs can vary slightly by year/minting update. Figures below reflect typical bullion issues.

Coin (Country/Mint) Design highlights Denomination Purity Weight Dimensions (Ø × T)
American Silver Eagle (USA, U.S. Mint) Obv: Walking Liberty; Rev: Type 2 eagle landing $1 USD .999 1 troy oz (31.103 g) 40.6 mm × ~2.98 mm
Canadian Silver Maple Leaf (Canada, RCM) Obv: QEII/King portrait by year; Rev: Maple leaf, radial lines $5 CAD .9999 1 troy oz 38.0 mm × ~3.15 mm
Austrian Silver Philharmonic (Austria, Münze Österreich) Obv: Musikverein organ; Rev: orchestra instruments €1.50 .999 1 troy oz 37.0 mm × ~3.2 mm
British Silver Britannia (UK, Royal Mint) Obv: Monarch portrait; Rev: Britannia with security features £2 .999/.9999* 1 troy oz 38.61 mm × ~3.0 mm
Australian Silver Kangaroo (Australia, Perth Mint) Obv: Monarch; Rev: red kangaroo & micro-text $1 AUD .9999 1 troy oz 40.6 mm × ~2.98 mm
South African Silver Krugerrand (South Africa, SA Mint) Obv: Paul Kruger; Rev: Springbok antelope 1 Rand .999 1 troy oz 38.725 mm × ~2.84 mm
Chinese Silver Panda (30 g) (China, People’s Bank/Shanghai–Shenyang) Annual panda motif (changing reverse) 10 Yuan .999 30 g ~40 mm × ~2.98 mm
Mexican Silver Libertad (Mexico, Casa de Moneda) Winged Victory; Popocatépetl & Iztaccíhuatl No face value (legal tender) .999 1 troy oz ~40 mm × ~3.0 mm
Somalia Silver Elephant (Bavarian State Mint for Somalia) Changing elephant theme 100 Shillings .9999 1 troy oz ~39 mm × ~3.0 mm
ATB 5 oz “America the Beautiful” (USA, U.S. Mint, 2010–21) National parks/monuments; incuse edge lettering 25¢ USD .999 5 troy oz 76.2 mm × 4.06 mm


How to use this page to pay less

  • Pick the exact coin & year (or “random year”) you want.
  • Compare premiums over spot across multiple dealers in our listings.
  • Consider secondary-market options for additional savings (same silver, often lower price).
  • Check shipping/insurance policies since delivered cost matters more than the headline price.

Storage & resale tips

  • Keep coins in mint tubes/capsules to avoid friction marks; handle by the edge.
  • Government issues (ASE, Maple, Britannia, etc.) generally enjoy strongest buyback demand.
  • When premiums spike (tight supply), consider switching to low-premium alternatives (Philharmonic, Kangaroo, or secondary-market coins).

FAQ — Silver Coins

Are silver coins good for beginners?

Yes. They’re affordable, easy to verify, and widely recognized. Silver coins are ideal for building a precious metals position over time.

What’s the difference between coins, rounds, and bars?

Coins are legal tender from a sovereign mint and usually command higher liquidity. Rounds are private-minted (no face value) and often carry the lowest premiums. Bars can be cheapest per ounce in larger sizes.

Which silver coin is the most liquid in the U.S.?

The American Silver Eagle typically leads dealer buybacks, with Maples, Britannias, and Philharmonics close behind.

Are modern bullion coins collectible?

Some are. Changing designs (e.g., Panda, Elephant) and low-mintage special issues can carry numismatic premiums. Most standard bullion is valued primarily for silver content plus a modest brand/liquidity premium.

What impacts the premium I pay?

Mint brand, current demand/supply, dealer inventory costs, and shipping/insurance. Compare delivered prices—that’s the true apples-to-apples.

Is this investment advice?

No. Educational only. Precious-metals markets can be volatile; do your own research and consider your risk tolerance.