Six consecutive years of structural deficits. 820+ million ounces consumed from above-ground stocks. Record industrial demand from solar panels, EVs, and AI infrastructure. Here's what the data says — and what it means if you're buying physical silver.The Silver Supply Crisis Explained
The silver market entered a structural deficit in 2021 and hasn't left. A structural deficit means total global demand for silver exceeds every ounce of new supply — mine production plus recycling — in a given year. The gap is filled by drawing down above-ground stockpiles that have been accumulating for decades. Here's the supply-demand balance from 2019 through 2026, using data from the Silver Institute's World Silver Survey 2025 and Metals Focus: Sources: Silver Institute World Silver Survey 2025; Metals Focus. Supply includes mine production + recycling + hedging. 2025–2026 figures are estimates/forecasts as of April 2026. The 2022 deficit of 264 million ounces was the largest structural shortfall ever recorded. Even as deficits moderated in 2023 and 2024 (demand responded to higher prices through industrial thrifting), the market never returned to balance. The cumulative shortfall from 2021 through 2025 reached approximately 820 million ounces — roughly equivalent to one full year of global mine production, gone from above-ground stocks. The single most important structural fact about silver supply: 70–75% of silver is produced as a byproduct of other mining operations — primarily lead/zinc (roughly 30–40% of total output), copper (~25%), and gold (~10%). Only about 30% comes from primary silver mines where silver is the main product. This creates a fundamental supply inelasticity. When silver prices hit record highs — as they did in 2025, surpassing $60/oz for the first time — miners cannot simply "turn on the silver tap." They can only increase silver output if they expand copper, lead, or zinc production for other economic reasons. The silver market is essentially a passenger in the base-metals economy. As the Silver Mining Supply Constraints report noted: "The byproduct nature of silver production means that even significant price increases may not quickly stimulate new supply if the economics of the primary metals don't support expanded production." Across the major producing nations, ore grades at established mines are declining. Miners must process larger volumes of material to extract the same amount of silver. This increases per-ounce production costs, reduces operational margins at marginal mines, and requires capital-intensive grade-sequencing operations that take years to optimize. Contemporary silver discoveries also average substantially lower grades than the historical deposits they're replacing. Every new major mine brought online is, on average, a lower-quality deposit than the one it's compensating for. New silver mines take 7–10 years from discovery to first production. This means even if every discovered deposit were immediately fast-tracked (it isn't — permitting alone averages 3–5 years in major jurisdictions), the silver available in 2026 was determined by exploration decisions made in the mid-2010s. The pipeline for new primary silver supply is structurally thin. Global silver mine production in 2024 was 819.7 million ounces — an increase of just 0.9% over 2023, according to the Silver Institute. This anemic growth occurred despite silver's 2024 price average of $28.30/oz and record industrial demand. Mexico, the world's largest silver producer, actually saw output fall 4% year-over-year in 2024 due to lower zinc grades — illustrating the byproduct dependency at scale. Industrial demand hit a new all-time high of 680.5 million ounces in 2024 — the fourth consecutive year of record industrial consumption. This is the engine of the silver supply crisis: demand that is structurally embedded in global infrastructure buildout, not cyclical or discretionary. Source: Silver Institute World Silver Survey 2025 / Metals Focus. Figures approximate. Solar photovoltaics have gone from a minor silver use case to the dominant industrial driver in a decade. In 2014, PV applications accounted for just 5% of silver's industrial demand. By 2024, that share reached 29% — 197.6 million ounces consumed by solar panel manufacturing alone. The growth is structural, not cyclical. Each solar panel contains 15–25 grams of silver, primarily used in conductive paste that allows photovoltaic cells to efficiently convert sunlight to electricity. Silver's electrical conductivity is unmatched — no cheaper metal performs comparably at the required efficiency thresholds. The shift to next-generation TOPCon (Tunnel Oxide Passivated Contact) panels is accelerating this demand further. TOPCon cells require approximately 50% more silver per panel than the older PERC technology. Global solar capacity additions are projected to average 540 GW annually through 2035 — each gigawatt consuming millions of ounces of silver. The average internal combustion vehicle uses approximately 15–28 grams of silver. A battery electric vehicle (BEV) uses 25–50 grams — nearly double — due to the far greater number of electrical contacts, switches, and control systems required. Silver is used in EV charging infrastructure as well, with each fast-charger unit consuming meaningful amounts. Automotive silver demand is forecast to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 3.4% between 2025 and 2031, according to the Silver Institute's December 2025 technology demand report. Each 5G base station requires 3–5× more silver than 4G equipment. With China, the US, and Europe collectively planning millions of new base station installations, this represents a sustained demand stream that barely existed before 2020. AI infrastructure is also an emerging demand driver. Total global IT power capacity grew approximately 53× between 2000 and 2025 (from 0.93 GW to nearly 50 GW), according to the Silver Institute's December 2025 forecast. Silver is embedded throughout the hardware that powers this expansion — in connectors, switches, memory contacts, and cooling systems. Silver's antimicrobial properties drive steady demand in medical devices, wound dressings, hospital equipment coatings, and water purification membranes. These applications are relatively price-insensitive — hospitals and medical device manufacturers don't reformulate around a $5 move in silver's price. This creates a sticky demand floor that doesn't respond to price signals. For decades, silver markets ran modest surpluses that gradually accumulated above-ground stocks — silver held in vaults, ETFs, and exchange warehouses that acts as a buffer between supply and demand imbalances. That buffer is being drawn down at an accelerating rate. The London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) vaults represent the world's largest pool of above-ground silver. At the COVID-era peak in April 2020, LBMA vaults held approximately 35,667 tonnes of silver. By July 2025, that figure had fallen to 24,199 tonnes — a decline of nearly 50% in five years. In just the three months from early December 2024 to end of February 2025, London vaults saw 128.5 million ounces withdrawn — a 15.1% drawdown in a single quarter. This kind of velocity suggests not just gradual structural depletion but accelerating demand for physical delivery. COMEX "registered" silver — the metal formally available for delivery against futures contracts — peaked near 400 million ounces in 2021, declined sharply to a low of approximately 30 million ounces in summer 2023 (sparking significant market concern), and partially recovered to around 73 million ounces entering 2025 as metal was reclassified from "eligible" to "registered" status. The recovery in registered stocks was a reclassification, not new supply entering the system. The total silver in COMEX warehouses (registered + eligible) has trended lower, and the divergence between COMEX futures prices and London spot prices in early 2025 — futures trading nearly $1/oz above spot — reflected real-time tightness in physically available metal. Global silver production is heavily concentrated in a handful of nations, creating supply chain exposure that the silver market has historically underpriced: Sources: USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2025; Silver Institute World Silver Survey 2025. The top three producers — Mexico, China, and Peru — account for over 50% of global mine supply. Any meaningful disruption in these countries (labor disputes, regulatory changes, grade deterioration, or in China's case, export controls) would hit a market already in structural deficit from the demand side. China's position is particularly notable. As the world's second-largest producer and simultaneously one of the world's largest industrial consumers of silver (through its solar manufacturing dominance), China has a structural incentive to prioritize domestic supply. Export controls on critical minerals — precedent for which was set with gallium and germanium in 2023 — represent a non-trivial tail risk for global silver markets. Silver recycling reached a 12-year high of 193.9 million ounces in 2024, up 6% year-over-year, driven primarily by industrial scrap recovery from electronics and chemical catalysts. Projections for 2025 pointed to a further jump toward 195 million ounces. This is meaningful supply — about 19% of total demand. But several factors limit recycling's ability to close the deficit: Recycling is a structural support for supply, not a solution to the deficit. It grows over time, but not fast enough to offset the pace of industrial demand expansion. Silver's price history since 2021 directly reflects the supply-demand reality: It's worth noting that price forecasts in precious metals are notoriously unreliable in the short term. Silver's volatility — historically 2–3× gold's — means large swings in both directions are normal even within a structural bull market. What analysts broadly agree on: the fundamental supply-demand picture remains bullish for the foreseeable future. 1. Premiums track physical scarcity. When above-ground inventories tighten, dealers pay more to source physical silver — and that cost flows to buyers as higher premiums over spot. During acute tightness periods (like early 2025), premiums can spike $2–6/oz above their normal range within weeks. Buyers who waited for a "better entry" on spot price sometimes found the total cost (spot + premium) had actually increased. 2. Dollar-cost averaging beats market timing. Six consecutive deficit years means the fundamental thesis hasn't changed in half a decade. Trying to time the bottom within a multi-year bull trend driven by structural supply-demand imbalance is a lower-probability strategy than systematic accumulation. Most experienced physical buyers treat silver like a savings account in metal form — buy regularly, hold long-term. 3. Dealer availability matters. Not all dealers maintain the same inventory depth. During tight market conditions, smaller or less-capitalized dealers may face stockouts or extended delivery times. Sticking with well-capitalized dealers with deep relationships across the refiner network reduces execution risk. 4. Locking in current prices. Given the direction of analyst forecasts and the structural deficit outlook, buyers looking to accumulate physical silver have an interest in not waiting. The supply situation that caused silver to surge in 2025 has not resolved — the sixth consecutive deficit is forecast for 2026. Compare live premiums on our Best 1 oz Silver Bars guide before you buy. The structural deficit is real and documented. The question for buyers is execution — where to buy, what premiums to accept, and how to build a position efficiently.
The Deficit Numbers, Year by Year
Year Total Supply (Moz) Total Demand (Moz) Balance (Moz) Avg. Silver Price 2019 1,008 995 +13 Surplus $16.21/oz 2020 976 896 +80 Surplus $20.55/oz 2021 1,002 1,067 -65 Deficit $25.14/oz 2022 1,034 1,298 -264 Record $21.73/oz 2023 1,012 1,213 -201 Deficit $23.35/oz 2024 1,013 1,162 -149 Deficit $28.30/oz 2025 (est.) 1,050 1,145 -95 Deficit ~$50–65/oz 2026 (fcst.) 1,060 1,127 -67 Forecast $55–70+/oz Why Supply Can't Keep Up
The Byproduct Problem
Declining Ore Grades
The 7–10 Year Development Timeline
2024 Mine Production: Only +0.9%
Industrial Demand: The Structural Driver
Solar Panels: The Fastest-Growing Driver
Electric Vehicles
5G Infrastructure and AI Data Centers
Medical and Water Purification
Above-Ground Stockpile Depletion
LBMA Vault Holdings: -50% Since 2020
COMEX Registered Inventory Swings
Geographic Concentration and Geopolitical Risk
Country 2024 Share of Global Production Key Risk Mexico ~24% Largest producer; output fell 4% in 2024 due to grade decline China ~15% Export control risk; domestic industrial demand growing rapidly Peru ~14% Persistent social conflicts, mine blockades, regulatory uncertainty Chile ~9% Copper-dominated; silver is pure byproduct of copper production Russia ~7% Sanctions, capital flows, infrastructure constraints post-2022 Poland ~6% KGHM mine aging; Europe's largest silver producer concentrated in one company Australia ~5% Lead/zinc byproduct; growing but from a lower base Recycling: Useful, But Not Enough
Price Forecasts and Analyst Views
What This Means for Buyers Right Now
Why the Supply Crisis Matters to Physical Silver Buyers
Timeline of Key Supply Events (2020–2026)
Frequently Asked Questions
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