Investing

Gold vs Silver — Which Precious Metal Should You Invest In?

The Gold Price · · 7 min read

Gold and silver are both precious metals that have served as stores of value for thousands of years. But they behave very differently as investments. Understanding these differences is key to making the right choice for your portfolio.

Gold vs Silver at a Glance

Factor Gold (Au) Silver (Ag)
Primary role Store of value Industrial metal + store of value
Volatility Lower Higher (1.5–2x gold)
Industrial demand ~10% of supply ~50% of supply
Storage cost per $ Low (compact) High (bulky)
Central bank reserves Yes (35,000+ tonnes) No
Entry price High (~$3,000+/oz) Low (~$30+/oz)
Liquidity Very high High
Tax treatment Collectible (28% US) Collectible (28% US)

The Gold-Silver Ratio

The gold-silver ratio tells you how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold. It's one of the oldest trading metrics in precious metals.

Current Gold-Silver Ratio

64.33

1 oz gold = 64.33 oz silver

Ratio Range Interpretation Action
Below 50Silver is expensive relative to goldConsider favoring gold
50–70Historical average rangeBalanced allocation
Above 80Silver is cheap relative to goldConsider favoring silver

Historical average: ~60. In March 2020, the ratio hit 125 — the highest ever recorded.

Historical Performance

Period Gold Return Silver Return
2000–2011 (Bull market) +560% +830%
2011–2015 (Bear market) -37% -68%
2015–2020 (Recovery) +80% +52%
2020–2024 (Post-pandemic) +60% +45%

Key insight: Silver amplifies gold's moves — it rises faster in bull markets but falls harder in bear markets. This makes silver higher risk, higher reward.

Pros and Cons

Au

Gold

Pros

  • Ultimate safe-haven asset
  • Central bank backing
  • Low volatility vs. silver
  • Easy to store (high value density)

Cons

  • High entry price per ounce
  • Lower upside in bull markets
  • No yield or dividends
Ag

Silver

Pros

  • Affordable entry point
  • Higher upside potential
  • Strong industrial demand (solar, electronics)
  • Dual role: industrial + monetary

Cons

  • Higher volatility
  • Bulky to store
  • Industrial downturns hurt price

Industrial Demand

This is the biggest fundamental difference. Silver has massive industrial use — roughly 50% of annual silver supply goes to industry, compared to just ~10% for gold.

Solar panels

Silver paste for photovoltaic cells — growing 15%+ annually

Electronics

Best electrical conductor of all metals

Medical

Antibacterial properties in wound care and devices

5G & EVs

Essential in circuit boards, batteries, and connectors

This industrial demand creates a supply deficit in silver when both investment and industrial demand are high — which can drive explosive price moves.

Portfolio Allocation

Most financial advisors suggest allocating 5–15% of a portfolio to precious metals. Within that allocation:

1

Conservative: 80% gold / 20% silver

Focus on wealth preservation. Lower volatility.

2

Balanced: 60% gold / 40% silver

Mix of safety and growth potential.

3

Aggressive: 40% gold / 60% silver

Betting on silver outperformance. Higher risk.

Which Should You Buy?

If you want... Choose
Wealth preservation in a crisisGold
Maximum upside in a bull marketSilver
Low storage costsGold
Affordable entry (small budget)Silver
Hedge against inflationGold
Exposure to green energy demandSilver

The best answer for most investors? Both. Gold for stability, silver for growth. Track both prices on our live gold prices page, and use the Gold Calculator to compare current values.