Have silver bars you are thinking of selling? We have been buying and reviewing bullion in Canada for more than a decade. We check weight, purity, refinery, packaging, condition, and current silver market value so you understand what you have before deciding. If your silver bar is sealed, loose, vintage, collectible, or part of a larger group, bring it as it is. If you are near Brampton, we can review it clearly and make a fair offer if you choose to sell.
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We base offers on silver content, condition, and current market value.
Your silver bar is reviewed using up-to-date silver pricing.
Sealed bars are checked carefully before anything is opened.
Older or collectible silver bars may be worth more than silver weight alone.
Many silver bars we purchase have been stored away for years kept in home safes, safety deposit boxes, investment portfolios, or inherited through family estates. From 1 oz investment bars to larger bullion holdings, we regularly help local sellers across Brampton, Mississauga, Toronto, and the GTA.
Reviewed by silver content, year, condition, and demand.
Reviewed by weight, purity, brand, and market value
Reviewed by condition, year, and collector interest
Reviewed by silver weight, brand, packaging, and demand
Silver bars are mainly valued by silver weight multiplied by purity, priced against the current silver spot market. But a few additional details can affect how your specific bar is reviewed.
A sealed 10 oz silver bar from a recognized refinery in its original assay sleeve is different from a loose bar with no markings. The refinery name, purity stamp, weight marking, packaging, and condition all matter when determining how a bar is reviewed and offered.
We help you understand what type of silver bar you have and whether any additional factors apply to your piece.
RCM silver bars are recognized across Canada and reviewed by weight, purity, packaging, condition, and current silver value.
Common 1 oz and 10 oz silver bars are reviewed by refinery, purity, weight, sleeve condition, and market demand.
Larger silver bars, including 100 oz bars and above, are reviewed with extra attention to weight, purity, markings, and verification.
Older, collectible, loose, or unbranded silver bars may need a closer review for refinery, design, condition, rarity, and silver content.
Keep the bar in its original sleeve, assay card, or protective packaging. Bring any certificate, receipt, or documentation that came with the bar.
We verify weight, purity markings, refinery name, serial number, and condition. For sealed bars, we review the packaging integrity.
We apply current silver spot pricing to confirmed silver content, and factor in refinery recognition, packaging condition, and any relevant premium.
After the review, you can sell, compare options, or bring in additional bars for review. No pressure.
Gold bars are usually simpler to review than coins, but details still matter. Weight and purity are the starting point, while the refinery name, assay packaging, serial number, condition, and current gold market can all help with identification and review.
This tells us how much silver the bar contains and gives the review a starting point.
Bring the bar as it is, with any weight or purity markings visible.
A recognized name, stamp, logo, or serial number can help identify the bar more clearly.
Keep any sleeve, assay card, receipt, or original packaging with it.
Sealed bars may be easier to verify, while loose bars may need a closer look.
Do not open sealed sleeves or assay cards before visiting us.
Toning, scratches, handling marks, or polishing can matter, especially on vintage bars.
Avoid cleaning, wiping, or polishing the bar before review.
Silver prices move, so the market at the time of review can affect the offer.
We use current silver market factors when reviewing your bar.
This tells us how much silver the bar contains and gives the review a starting point.
Bring the bar as it is, with any weight or purity markings visible.
A recognized name, stamp, logo, or serial number can help identify the bar more clearly.
Keep any sleeve, assay card, receipt, or original packaging with it.
Sealed bars may be easier to verify, while loose bars may need a closer look.
Do not open sealed sleeves or assay cards before visiting us.
Toning, scratches, handling marks, or polishing can matter, especially on vintage bars
Avoid cleaning, wiping, or polishing the bar before review.
Silver prices move, so the market at the time of review can affect the offer.
We use current silver market factors when reviewing your bar.
Bullion, collectible, graded, and commemorative gold coins may be reviewed differently.
Tell us if the coin came from a set, gift box, collection, or family estate.
Gold coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If your group includes Canadian gold coins, world gold coins, Royal Canadian Mint pieces, commemorative coins, or bullion gold coins, we can review them separately from silver coins.
Silver coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If you have Silver Maple Leafs, Canadian silver dollars, older silver coins, 1 oz silver coins, or mixed silver coin groups, we review them separately from gold coins.
If your collection also includes diamond rings, loose diamonds, jewellery with diamonds, certificates, receipts, or inherited diamond pieces, we can review those items separately from coins and bullion.
Gold bars are reviewed differently from gold coins. Weight, purity, brand, assay card, serial number, packaging, and current market factors usually matter most.
Paper money and banknotes have different value factors, including issue year, denomination, condition, serial number, grading, rarity, and collector demand.
Old Canadian bills may carry face value, collector value, or both. If you have older $1, $2, $25, $500, or $1,000 Canadian bills, we help you understand what may affect value before you redeem or sell them.
Gold coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If your group includes Canadian gold coins, world gold coins, Royal Canadian Mint pieces, commemorative coins, or bullion gold coins, we can review them separately from silver coins.
Silver coins may carry both metal value and collector value. If you have Silver Maple Leafs, Canadian silver dollars, older silver coins, 1 oz silver coins, or mixed silver coin groups, we review them separately from gold coins.
If your gold coins are part of a larger album, inherited coin group, Royal Canadian Mint set, estate box, or mixed Canadian and world coin collection, keeping the group together can help us understand the full context.
Diamond rings, loose diamonds, jewellery with diamonds, certificates, receipts, and inherited diamond pieces should be reviewed separately from coins and bullion.
Old Canadian bills may carry face value, collector value, or both. If you have older $1, $2, $25, $500, or $1,000 Canadian bills, this page explains what to check before redeeming or selling them.
Paper money and banknotes have different value factors, including issue year, denomination, condition, serial number, grading, rarity, and collector demand.
We help you understand the value first and if you are ready to sell, we can buy it from you.
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