Silver (SI=F) September futures opened at $62.92 per ounce on Monday, July 6, 2026, 3% higher than Friday’s closing price of $61.06. The price of silver moved just lower this morning to $62.63 by 8:28 a.m. ET.
The price of silver moved up following Thursday’s June jobs report. Analysts expected the economy to add over 100,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate to remain at 4.3% for the fourth consecutive month. However, only 57,000 new jobs were added in June, and the unemployment rate fell to 4.2%.
Silver took advantage of a weakening dollar last week and had its highest opening price this morning since June 22.
The stronger-than-expected jobs report has many analysts scaling back their expectations for Fed rate increases this year, providing more room for silver prices to rise if that trend continues.
Current price of silver
The opening price of silver futures on Monday was up 3% compared to Friday’s close. Here’s how the opening silver price has changed versus last week, month, and year:
- One week ago: +7.2%
- One month ago: -13.3%
- One year ago: +72.8%
For context, silver’s year-over-year growth was 173.3% on May 14.
How beginners can invest in silver
There are several ways to invest in silver, from buying the metal itself to choosing financial products tied to its price. Here’s how each option works.
Physical silver
The most direct way to invest in silver is to buy it in physical form, either as bullion bars or government-minted coins. This gives you direct ownership of the metal, with no counterparty risk from an exchange or financial institution.
The trade-off is logistics. You’ll need to think about storage, security, and potentially insurance. Dealers also charge a markup above the spot price, which means prices need to rise enough to cover that premium before you’re in profit. Still, for investors who want tangible ownership of their assets, physical silver is a straightforward option.
Silver ETFs
Silver exchange-traded funds (ETFs) trade on stock exchanges the same way individual stocks do. Some ETFs hold physical silver directly, giving shareholders fractional ownership of real metal. Others invest in silver mining companies rather than the commodity itself.
ETFs are generally the most accessible and liquid way to get silver exposure. You can buy and sell them through any standard brokerage account, and there’s no storage or insurance to worry about.
Keep in mind, though, that some silver funds are taxed as collectibles rather than investments, which can mean a higher tax rate. It’s worth confirming the tax treatment with a professional before investing. You’ll also have to keep an eye on expense ratios.
Price of silver chart
Whether you’re tracking the price of silver since last month or last year, the price-of-silver chart below shows the precious metal’s value journey so far this year.
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