Silver bars, rounds, and coins listed at or below the live spot price.








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Spot is the live market price of the metal itself, set by global markets and updated continuously. "Under spot" and "below spot" mean the same thing: an asking price at or below that live spot price for the silver content in the item. Every product on this page has an ask at or below the current spot price of its silver, whether that lands exactly at spot or a step under it.
Silver carries a structurally higher premium over spot than gold, because the per-ounce cost to mint, package, and distribute it is a larger share of a lower metal price. As a result, the silver that lands at or under spot tends to skew toward lower-premium formats.
Two groups show up most often:
Generic rounds and bars. Privately minted rounds and cast or minted bars that carry no government-mint markup.
Constitutional or "junk" 90% silver. Pre-1965 U.S. dimes, quarters, and half dollars sold for their silver content rather than as collectibles.
Government-minted coins like American Silver Eagles carry higher premiums by design, so they land at or under spot far less often. This page surfaces whichever silver listings currently meet the at-or-below-spot filter, across all of these formats.
Pure is an order book marketplace. Sellers set their own asking prices and buyers place bids, the same way an exchange works. Because sellers price their own listings, some asks land at or below spot at a given moment. This page filters the catalog to just those silver listings, and it updates as prices and inventory change.
To buy, accept the lowest ask to purchase at the listed price, or place a bid at the price you are willing to pay. Every item is authenticated at Pure's Los Angeles facility before it ships to you, insured both ways. For the full walkthrough, see How Pure Works.