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  3. SV1000

* 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

  1. Examine the stamp under a 10× loupe — genuine marks are crisp and evenly struck, not doubled or smeared.
  2. Confirm the mark reads SV1000 or an equivalent such as 1000.
  3. Weigh the piece and estimate its volume — the density should land near 10.5 g/cm³ for this alloy.
  4. Photograph it in the Jewelry Identifier app to read the metal, hallmark, and any gemstones from the image.
  5. 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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