10 Gram Uranium Price — June 5, 2026

Current Price
16.57/g
10 Gram Rate
165.70/10g
24h Change
+₹0.56
24h % Change
+3.50%

As of June 5, 2026, Uranium is trading at Seventeen Rupees per gram across India. The 10-gram rate stands at One Hundred and Sixty Six Rupees, and 100 grams costs One Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Seven Rupees.

10 Grams of Uranium — 10-Day Price Curve

10 gram uranium price: gold's favourite unit meets the nuclear metal

Ten grams of uranium reference ₹165.70 today, June 5, 2026. The 10-gram lot is pure Indian bullion instinct — it is how the country prices gold, gifts ornaments and reads jeweller boards. Borrowed for uranium, the unit has no market behind it, but it makes one comparison unforgettable: the gap between what India's favourite metal and the world's most consequential one cost.

Ten gram uranium price in rupees — the bullion unit applied
10 grams of uranium — June 5, 2026

The benchmark at familiar weights:

  • 1 gram: ₹16.57
  • 10 grams: ₹165.70
  • 50 grams: ₹828.50
  • 100 grams: ₹1,657.00
  • 1 kg: ₹16,570.00

Ten grams of gold buy a respectable festival gift. Ten grams of uranium would not cover the wrapping paper — yet inside them sits enough fissile material to keep a household's lights on for months, once a reactor does the unlocking. Markets price what can be owned and traded; consequence runs on a different ledger.

The 10-Gram Lot vs Its Recent History

Today vs previous periods (₹ per gram)

Yesterday
₹16.01
+₹0.56 (+3.50%)
1 Week Ago
₹16.01
+₹0.56 (+3.50%)
1 Month Ago
₹16.50
+₹0.07 (+0.42%)
1 Year Ago
₹12.32
+₹4.25 (+34.50%)

Uranium is currently priced at Seventeen Rupees per gram. Compared to one year ago, the price has risen by Four Rupees (+34.50%).

10 Grams of Uranium Among Other Units

Today's Uranium rate is Seventeen Rupees per gram. At this rate, 10 grams of Uranium costs One Hundred and Sixty Six Rupees.

Unit Weight Price (INR) Price in Words
1 Gram 1.0000 g ₹16.57 Seventeen Rupees
8 Grams 8.0000 g ₹132.56 One Hundred and Thirty Three Rupees
10 Grams 10.0000 g ₹165.70 One Hundred and Sixty Six Rupees
100 Grams 100.0000 g ₹1,657.00 One Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Seven Rupees
1 Kilogram 1,000.0000 g ₹16,570.00 Sixteen Thousand Five Hundred and Seventy Rupees
1 Ounce (oz) 28.3495 g ₹469.75 Four Hundred and Seventy Rupees
1 Troy Ounce 31.1035 g ₹515.38 Five Hundred and Fifteen Rupees
1 Metric Ton 1,000,000.0000 g ₹16,570,000.00 One Crore Sixty Five Lakh Seventy Thousand Rupees

What the 10-gram comparison actually teaches

Set three 10-gram lots side by side at today's prices: gold in the tens of thousands of rupees, silver in the four figures, uranium at ₹165.70. The ranking inverts every intuition about importance — and that inversion is the most instructive fact in commodity pricing. Gold's price stores millennia of monetary trust. Silver's blends ornament with industry. Uranium's prices only one thing: feedstock for a closed industrial loop that the public never touches.

Ten grams of uranium versus ten grams of gold and silver
Three metals, one unit — the 10-gram comparison

No premiums, no making charges, no GST

A 10-gram gold price in India arrives loaded: import duty, GST, jeweller margin, city premium, making charges if ornament-bound. The uranium figure above carries none of that — it is the raw global benchmark, converted. Not because uranium is tax-free, but because there is no Indian transaction to tax. The Atomic Energy Act, 1962 removed the commercial layer entirely; what remains is the cleanest price signal in the metals world, unburdened by retail.

That cleanliness has analytical value. When the uranium 10-gram figure moves, exactly two things happened: the dollar benchmark moved, or the rupee did. Gold-watchers must untangle five forces; uranium-watchers, two. For a reader learning how global commodity pricing transmits into rupees, uranium is the ideal teaching metal — all signal, no noise.

The unit's one real user: the curious Indian

Globally, nobody prices uranium in 10-gram lots — the trade thinks in pounds and tonnes. The unit exists for Indian readers crossing over from bullion habits, and this page honours the habit while being honest about it. Use the 10-gram figure for intuition; switch to kilograms and tonnes when the analysis turns serious. The linked pages handle both directions.

10 Gram Uranium Price — Daily Record

The most recent Uranium price on record (2026-06-04) is Seventeen Rupees per gram. This is up by One Rupees from the previous day's rate of ₹16.01.

Date Price (₹/g) Change
2026-06-04 ₹16.57 +0.56
2026-06-03 ₹16.01 +0.08
2026-06-02 ₹15.93 +0.05
2026-06-01 ₹15.88 -0.03
2026-05-31 ₹15.91 0.00
2026-05-30 ₹15.91 -0.10
2026-05-29 ₹16.01 -0.07
2026-05-28 ₹16.08 -0.29
2026-05-27 ₹16.37 +0.06
2026-05-26 ₹16.31

Following the 10-gram figure over time

Because the 10-gram price is the benchmark times a constant, its history is the market's history in miniature. The 2021–2024 bull run roughly tripled it; the post-Fukushima decade had earlier crushed it. Today's level — checked against the year comparison above — tells you instantly which side of the cycle the market currently believes in.

For gold-habituated readers, one transferable discipline: judge trends in percentages, not rupees. A ₹10 move in uranium's 10-gram price is enormous (several percent); the same move in gold's is rounding error. The unit makes the metals comparable; percentage thinking keeps the comparison honest. The comparison cards above do the arithmetic for you across four time frames.

The 10-gram lot of uranium will never sit in a locker or pass at a wedding. It lives only on pages like this one — a borrowed unit doing honest work, translating the strangest market in metals into the measure every Indian already knows. The daily update continues above.

10 Gram Uranium Price — The Gold-Habit FAQ

Ten grams of uranium reference ₹165.70 on June 5, 2026 — simply the global benchmark per gram (₹16.57) multiplied by ten. There is no actual 10-gram uranium market anywhere.

Habit transfer. Indians price gold in 10-gram lots, so the unit feels natural for any metal. Applied to uranium it serves one purpose well: instant cross-metal comparison. Ten grams of gold cost lakhs; ten grams of uranium cost less than a restaurant dinner.

Through a conventional reactor cycle, the fissile content of 10 grams of natural uranium eventually yields roughly 400–500 kWh — a few months of a typical Indian household's electricity. The catch: extracting it requires a reactor, not a basement.

No. The Atomic Energy Act, 1962 has no de-minimis exemption for private possession. Ten grams or ten tonnes, uranium belongs exclusively to the state's fuel cycle.

It mirrors the benchmark exactly — global U3O8 assessment moves plus USD/INR drift, multiplied by ten. The chart above shows the last ten sessions; the comparison cards add week, month and year context.