India, the world's largest silver consumer, expanded import restrictions to include grain and powder forms, tightening supply channels for a metal already undergoing a global physical market restructuring.
India added silver grain and powder to its restricted import list and mandated prior authorisation, tightening the world's top consumer's grip on shipments to ease pressure on the rupee.
The move follows the May 16 reclassification of silver bars containing 99.9% or more silver by weight from "Free" to "Restricted," according to a government notification. Importers must now secure prior approval before bringing in any of the three restricted forms.
The restrictions target silver grain — granules, flakes and spangles — and silver powder, in addition to the bars covered in May. India imported roughly 4,500 tonnes of silver in 2025, according to trade data, making it the world's largest buyer of the metal. China, the second-largest consumer, imported a record 836 tonnes in March alone, up 78% from February and 173% above the 10-year seasonal average, data from The Kobeissi Letter show.
The tighter rules could redirect global silver flows and push up premiums on deliverable metal, particularly as physical stockpiles shift from the United States toward Asian markets. For Indian industrial users — including solar manufacturers, electronics producers and jewellers — the restrictions risk raising input costs at a time when the rupee remains under pressure against the dollar.
The policy escalation comes as silver's dual role as both a monetary and industrial metal complicates the supply picture. About half of global silver demand comes from industrial applications, including solar panels, semiconductors, batteries and military hardware, according to the Silver Institute. India's restrictions could squeeze access for manufacturers who rely on imported grain and powder for specialised production processes.
The last time India imposed broad restrictions on precious metal imports was in 2022, when gold import duties were raised to 15% from 10.75%, curbing inbound shipments by roughly 25% over the following six months. Silver imports fell 18% in the two months after the May 16 bar restrictions took effect, according to preliminary customs data, though the full impact remains unclear as traders explore alternative routing channels.
Global supply chain under pressure
The restrictions add to a broader restructuring of the physical bullion market. Silver is flowing out of the United States toward tighter overseas markets, with LBMA good-delivery material recently commanding a premium of 20 to 40 cents above normal levels, Josh Phair, CEO of Scottsdale Mint, said in a May 27 interview. Raw material supply in the U.S. remains adequate, Phair said, but the bottleneck is in certified, deliverable metal that can move quickly into global hubs.
China's surging imports highlight the demand pressure. The country's silver purchases have accelerated as manufacturers secure supply for solar panel production and advanced electronics, Phair said. "I think they're trying to secure their manufacturing base," he said.
Rupee relief and market implications
For India, the restrictions serve a dual purpose: curbing import outflows to support the rupee and ensuring domestic supply adequacy. The rupee has weakened 4.2% against the dollar over the past 12 months, making dollar-denominated imports more expensive. Reducing silver purchases — which totalled roughly $4 billion in 2025 — could provide modest relief to the current account deficit.
Globally, the tighter Indian import regime could support silver prices by constricting supply to the largest consumer. Spot silver traded near $32.50 an ounce on June 2, down about 3% on the day, but remains up 22% year to date. Analysts at Heraeus Precious Metals have said Indian demand accounts for roughly 15% of global silver consumption, meaning any sustained reduction in buying could have price implications, though the direction depends on how effectively metal is rerouted.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.