Finding someone to buy your silver items can take some time, so you need to make sure that you look around and find the best silver dealers Oral has to offer. This way, you can make sure that you get the best price possible for all of your valuables.

A good buyer will carefully assess all of your things to give you an accurate understanding of how much they are worth. You can then use this information to decide what to do. Selling your silver can earn you quite a bit from the right dealer.

Black Hills Stained Glass & Metalworks

po box 208, hermosa, SD 57744

(605) 877-0917

Flora's

601 Mount Rushmore Rd, Custer, SD 57730

(605) 673-4754

The Artcrafters

436 Mount Rushmore Rd, Custer, SD 57730

(605) 673-4121

Gold Diggers Retail Store

127 Winter St, Keystone, SD 57751

(605) 666-5952

Hallowed Rock

116 Mears Street, Chadron, NE 69337

(308) 432-4908

Ahrens Jewelry

130 W 3rd St, Chadron, NE 69337

(308) 432-2725

Things That Rock

156 Main St, Hill City, SD 57745

(605) 574-9096

Gold Diggers

241 Main St, Hill City, SD 57745

(605) 574-3332

Rapid Precious Metals

3290 Lien St, Rapid City, SD 57702

(605) 343-1533

Dakota Coin + Precious Metals

615 E Saint Joseph St, Rapid City, SD 57701

(605) 646-0678

Dakota Coin & Precious Metals

615 Saint Joseph St, Rapid City, SD 57701

(605) 415-4325

Silver Mountain Coins

1026 E Ohio St, Rapid City, SD 57701

(605) 348-1776

Dakota Coin + Precious Metals

615 E Saint Joseph St, Rapid City, SD 57701

(605) 646-0678

Zales

2200 N Maple Ave Unit 106, Rapid City, SD 57701

(605) 348-5302

Tactics That Successful Silver Dealers Use

Silver is a commodity. That means that any single ounce of silver is worth the same as any other ounce of silver at the same purity level. It's been used as money in a variety of cultures and silver dealers use tactics to buy and sell silver and make a profit. Here is how they do it.

Wholesale Markup

Silver dealers are in business to make money and they often do it by buying silver coins or bullion at wholesale prices. Perhaps they were able to buy a silver coin for the rock bottom price of $15. When these coins become scarce in the market, the dealer may choose to offer them to a collector. Collectors pay a higher price and remove the coins from circulation. The dealer makes a profit on the markup over the wholesale price that he paid.

Replacement Cost Price

A dealer should never sell anything for less than the cost of what it would take to replace it. That's the philosophy of most successful dealers in metals. They take the long view and buy silver when it reaches a low. Let's use the same number we used above. Say they bought an ounce for $15.

That's a good buy because the price of silver typically goes for more than that. To gain a profit, the dealer will have to hold onto the bullion until the price rises. At that point, he must sell it at a price no lower than what it would cost him to replace it. If silver has risen to $30 an ounce, he's made a tidy profit when he sells.

The first tactic requires finding the right kind of buyer in order to make a profit. The second one requires patience while waiting for the market to change. Both can be very lucrative.