Uranium Bulk 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.

The Bulk Reference — 10-Day Track

Bulk uranium: the only size the market knows

The bulk reference reads ₹16,570.00 per kilogram today, June 5, 2026 — and in uranium, "bulk" is not a tier above retail; it is the market's entire vocabulary. Mines ship by the hundred-tonne lot, utilities contract by the reactor-decade, and the smallest meaningful spot parcel would fill a modest warehouse bay with drums. This page prices the only scale uranium has ever transacted at.

Uranium bulk price — tonnage economics at the benchmark
Tonnage as the native unit — June 5, 2026

Bulk arithmetic at today's reference:

  • 10 kg: ₹165,700.00
  • 1 tonne: ₹16,570,000.00
  • 100 tonnes (large delivery): ≈ ₹166 crore
  • 20,000 tonnes (Kazakh-scale annual output): ≈ ₹33.1 thousand crore

Even at national-output scale, the figures stay modest by commodity standards — uranium's bulk market is a boutique trade wearing industrial clothing.

Bulk Levels Against Recent Frames

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%).

Bulk Quantities at Today's Reference

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

How bulk moves, prices and concentrates

Physically, bulk uranium is an exercise in density: a year's fuel for a large reactor — some 200 tonnes of natural feed — travels as a few hundred drums, a couple of container-loads of ordinary-looking freight wrapped in extraordinary documentation. The safeguards system tracks each drum's kilograms from mill to conversion; "bulk" in this market never means anonymous.

Bulk uranium in motion — drums, parcels and sovereign cargo
Dense cargo, denser paperwork

Bulk pricing's real levers

With no list price to discount, bulk negotiation works the structural levers: term length (years of committed offtake win pricing certainty both ways), formula design (fixed-base-plus-escalation versus market-linked with collars), origin and routing (the post-2022 premium structure), and optionality (flex volumes, deferral rights). A utility's skill at these levers — exercised during soft markets — shows up as decades of fuel-cost advantage. The 2016–20 trough's term signings remain legendary on fuel desks for exactly this reason.

Concentration defines the bulk landscape's politics: four-fifths of bulk supply originates in a handful of countries, and Kazakhstan alone ships roughly two-fifths. Every bulk buyer — sovereign India included — therefore runs diversification as core strategy: multiple origins, multiple routes, domestic capacity as the unsanctionable floor. Bulk uranium procurement is foreign policy with drums.

India's bulk ledger

India's bulk participation is wholly sovereign: UCIL's domestic tonnage flowing to the unsafeguarded fleet, imported tonnage under five-plus national agreements feeding the safeguarded one, all priced in confidential benchmark-shadowing formulas. The 100 GW programme multiplies the future ledger severalfold — bulk procurement being among the quieter capabilities the Nuclear Energy Mission will stretch.

Bulk Reference — Daily Values

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

The bulk lens for everyday readers

Bulk thinking converts uranium headlines into checkable scale. A mine guidance cut of 2,000 tonnes? Roughly ₹3,314 crore of annual supply, several percent of world output — real news. A fund raising to buy "millions of pounds"? Divide by 2,204 for tonnes, multiply by the reference: the bid's true weight emerges. Seizure stories claiming bulk quantities? The arithmetic embarrasses them within a sentence.

For investors, bulk literacy reads producer disclosures fluently: guidance tonnages, contract-book volumes, inventory days — all denominate in the units this page prices. The benchmark above × the tonnes disclosed = the revenue reality behind every uranium equity's quarter.

Tomorrow's bulk reference loads at the usual time. The drums keep moving either way — and this page keeps their price.

Uranium Bulk Price — Tonnage FAQ

Bulk is uranium's native state: ₹16,570.00 per kg (June 5, 2026) at benchmark, with real transactions running parcels of tens of tonnes. A tonne references ₹1.66 crore.

Not as volume discounts. Large term commitments win contract structure — price floors and ceilings, escalators, delivery flexibility — rather than percentage cuts. The benchmark already prices at bulk scale; there is no list price above it to discount from.

Producers shipping mine output (Kazatomprom's tens of thousands of tonnes yearly), utilities taking contracted deliveries, traders repositioning parcels, and India's DAE importing sovereign tonnage. The bulk club is the whole market.

Compactly. Yellowcake's density packs a tonne into a few standard drums; whole reactor-years of fuel travel as ordinary-looking container freight under extraordinary paperwork — safeguards documentation tracking every kilogram across borders.

No purpose qualifies. The Atomic Energy Act, 1962 admits no industrial-use exception — shielding, ballast, research alike route through DAE authorisation or not at all. Bulk uranium in India is sovereign cargo exclusively.