Key Takeaways
- Industrial silver demand hit 680 Moz in 2025 a record driven by solar PV and EVs.
- Solar panel manufacturing alone consumed 232 Moz in 2025, up 19% year-over-year.
- Silver is trading at $33.80, with a gold-silver ratio of 98:1 historically elevated.
- When the gold-silver ratio compresses toward 70:1 (its 20-year average), silver could reach $47+.
Silver’s dual identity as both a precious and industrial metal is coming into sharp focus in 2026. Industrial demand for silver hit a record 680 million ounces in 2025 nearly double the pace of a decade ago driven by an electrification boom that is consuming silver at an unprecedented rate.
Where the Silver Goes
| End Use | 2025 Demand (Moz) | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|
| Solar PV (photovoltaic cells) | 232 | +19% |
| Electronics & semiconductors | 184 | +8% |
| Electric vehicles | 112 | +34% |
| Brazing & soldering | 68 | +2% |
| Other industrial | 84 | +6% |
| Total Industrial | 680 | +14% |
The Gold-Silver Ratio Argument
The gold-silver ratio how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold currently sits at 98:1. This is historically elevated; the 20-year average is around 70:1 and the ratio briefly touched 125:1 at the height of COVID panic in 2020. Mean reversion to 70:1 with gold at $3,300 would imply silver at $47.10 a 39% gain from current levels.
The bull thesis is straightforward: industrial demand is structurally growing while mining supply is constrained (silver is primarily a byproduct of lead-zinc mining, so supply is not directly responsive to silver prices). The question is timing silver can lag gold for extended periods before its industrial story attracts investment flows.