Rising Silver Prices Spur Surge of Impure Bars in Indian Market
Rising Silver Prices Spur Surge of Impure Bars in India

The surge in silver prices is not only driving investment demand but also opening the door to a flood of impure silver bars and coins in the Indian market. This trend has raised serious concerns among industry stakeholders about widespread counterfeiting and lapses in quality standards. Precious metal refiners are now intensifying their calls for the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) to enforce mandatory hallmarking across all silver products, arguing that stronger safeguards are essential to protect consumers.

Demand for Compulsory Licensing

Alongside hallmarking, refiners have also demanded compulsory licensing for silver refiners to improve oversight, tighten quality control, and bring greater transparency to the sector, as reported by ET. Although hallmarking for silver is set to become mandatory from September 2025, industry executives say compliance remains weak, with a large segment of jewellers yet to adopt the requirement.

Purity Concerns in Retail Markets

According to James Jose, President of the Precious Metals Refineries Forum, a significant portion of silver bars and coins sold in retail markets fail to meet required purity standards. “Field-level studies have indicated that a majority of the silver articles available in the market contain prohibited elements such as nickel, cadmium, and lead,” he said. “At present, much of the new silver jewellery is manufactured from scrap silver without adequate refining. A certain quantity of purified silver bullion is mixed with the scrap merely to achieve the required fineness level.”

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Key Production Hubs and Consumption

Industry hubs such as Jaipur, Agra, Salem, Rajkot, Kolhapur, and Cuttack continue to play a central role in India’s silver jewellery and artefact production. India’s annual silver consumption stands at nearly 7,000 tonnes, yet the infrastructure for quality testing remains limited, with only 286 assaying and hallmarking centres for silver. This contrasts sharply with gold, which has 1,595 centres despite lower annual consumption of around 800–850 tonnes. Stakeholders argue that this gap in testing infrastructure, combined with the use of scrap silver in manufacturing, has allowed the entry of unsafe elements like lead and cadmium into jewellery and artefacts.

Scale of the Problem

More than 50% of silver sold in India is in the form of items such as worship products, lamps, and utensils, further widening the scale of concern regarding purity standards. The Precious Metals Refineries Forum has also highlighted that silver offerings made in temples are frequently found to be below acceptable quality levels. It has suggested that a wider availability of hallmarked silver bars from certified refineries could help address these issues and strengthen trust in the market.

Exchange Initiatives

At the same time, commodity exchanges including MCX, BSE, and NSE are preparing to introduce quality-certified silver bars through their trading platforms, aiming to standardise supply. “India needs world-class silver refineries to supply asset-class silver bars to the commodity exchanges,” said Jose. He added that several BIS-licensed gold refineries are already involved in silver refining and are awaiting a formal BIS licensing framework dedicated specifically to silver.

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