What Does 925 Mean on Silver?
925 sterling silver is 92.5% pure silver. Learn what every hallmark means — from 999 fine silver to 800 coin silver — how to spot authentic pieces, and why silver tarnishes.
Volume visualization — silver vs. copper
Each droplet = same volume. Silver (10.5 g/cm³) is slightly denser than copper (8.96 g/cm³), so copper takes a little more space for the same weight.
999 Fine | 99.9 wt%
999 Fine
958 Britannia | 95.8 wt%
958 Britannia
925 Sterling | 92.5 wt%
925 Sterling
900 Coin | 90.0 wt%
900 Coin
830 Nordic | 83.0 wt%
830 Nordic
Silver purity at a glance
Each bar shows how much is pure silver (bright) vs. other metals (dark)
Every silver grade explained
Used for: Bullion coins, electroplating, industrial
Global standard
Used for: UK silverware, antique pieces
Mainly UK
Used for: Rings, chains, earrings, cutlery
Global — the world standard
Used for: Historical coins, US antiques
USA (historical)
Used for: Older Scandinavian silverware
Scandinavia (historical)
Why does sterling silver turn black?
It's the copper
Pure silver (999) barely tarnishes. But the 7.5% copper in sterling silver reacts with sulfur compounds in the air and on skin — forming silver sulfide, which is the black coating you see.
What accelerates it
Humidity, perfume, chlorine (pools), sweat, rubber bands, and wool all speed up tarnishing. Storing silver in airtight bags slows it significantly.
How to remove it
Baking soda + aluminum foil + hot water (electrochemical reaction), silver polishing cloth, or commercial silver polish all work well. The tarnish is surface-only — the silver underneath is fine.
925 vs 958 — direct comparison
Bottom line: 925 sterling is the global standard for a reason — it's the sweet spot between purity and durability. 958 is purer but too soft for most jewelry.
Volume visualization — silver vs. copper
Each droplet = same volume. Silver (10.5 g/cm³) is slightly denser than copper (8.96 g/cm³), so copper takes a little more space for the same weight.
999 Fine | 99.9 wt%
999 Fine
958 Britannia | 95.8 wt%
958 Britannia
925 Sterling | 92.5 wt%
925 Sterling
900 Coin | 90.0 wt%
900 Coin
830 Nordic | 83.0 wt%
830 Nordic