* Silver hallmark
The SV1000 hallmark: meaning, purity & value
SV1000 is Japanese-style fine silver (~99.9%). Melt tracks silver spot closely.
Published May 30, 2026
Quick facts
- Metal
- Silver
- Purity
- 99.9%
- Fineness
- 999/1000
- Common regions
- Japan
- Density
- 10.5 g/cm³
- Standard
- ISO 9202
Stamps that mean the same thing
This purity may be struck into jewelry as any of: SV1000 / 1000 / FINE SILVER. The mark differs by country and era, but the metal content is identical.
What SV1000 tells you
SV1000 is Japanese-style fine silver (~99.9%). Melt tracks silver spot closely.
How to value it
The melt value of a SV1000 piece is silver spot price × 0.999 × weight (g). A buyer typically deducts 5–15% for assay, refining, and margin, so the cash offer lands just under that figure. Stones and complex settings are usually excluded from the metal weight.
Live calculators: silver purity × weight · per-gram hub.
How to check it yourself
- Examine the stamp under a 10× loupe — genuine marks are crisp and evenly struck, not doubled or smeared.
- Confirm the mark reads SV1000 or an equivalent such as 1000.
- Weigh the piece and estimate its volume — the density should land near 10.5 g/cm³ for this alloy.
- Photograph it in the Jewelry Identifier app to read the metal, hallmark, and any gemstones from the image.
- For a binding result, have an assay office or gemological lab run an XRF purity test.
Sources
- ISO 9202
- Trade hallmark references
* Frequently asked
FAQ
- Q. Is SV1000 the same as 1000?
- A. Yes. SV1000, 1000, FINE SILVER all denote the same material — 99.9% silver. Different markets and eras stamp it differently, but the purity is identical.
- Q. How much is SV1000 worth?
- A. Its melt value is the silver spot price × 0.999 × the weight in grams. Buyers then deduct roughly 5–15% for refining and margin, so a quoted buy-back price sits a little below that theoretical figure.
- Q. How do I confirm a SV1000 stamp is genuine?
- A. Look at the mark under 10× magnification for crisp, even strikes, cross-check the weight-to-volume ratio against the expected density (10.5 g/cm³ for this alloy), scan it with the Jewelry Identifier app, and — when it matters — have an XRF test done by an assay office or gemological lab.
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