Uranium Cost Today — 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.

Today's Cost in 10-Day Context

Uranium's cost today, with its receipts

Uranium costs ₹16.57 per gram today, June 5, 2026 — up 3.50% on the session. The cost word attracts the practical reader, so the practical answer leads: this is the benchmark figure the licensed world transacts around, converted to rupees, with no hidden layers an outsider could add or subtract. What uranium costs is, unusually among commodities, exactly what this page says.

Uranium cost today with daily change and unit breakdown
Today's cost, receipts attached — June 5, 2026

The day's cost sheet:

  • 1 gram: ₹16.57
  • 10 grams: ₹165.70
  • 1 kg: ₹16,570.00
  • 1 pound: ₹7,516.02
  • 1 tonne: ₹16,570,000.00

One omission from every line, by law rather than oversight: a buyer. India's Atomic Energy Act, 1962 keeps today's cost informational for every private reader — the standing footnote to this page family.

Cost Today vs Week, Month and Year

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%).

What Uranium Costs Today, by Weight

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 today's cost was assembled

Reconstruct the figure and two inputs surface, as always. Input one, the dollar benchmark: whatever the licensed market's week is doing — assessment positioning, a producer's headline, a fund's quiet accumulation — distilled into U3O8's $/lb reference. Input two, the rupee: today's USD/INR session, with its own drivers entirely. Multiply, scale, publish. The assembly line never varies; only the inputs breathe.

What today's uranium cost digested from its two inputs
Benchmark × rupee — today's assembly

Today's cost against the working anchors

Day figures earn meaning from anchors. Against the cost curve: today's level versus the marginal mine's operating cost decides whether supply is being paid to exist — the long-run gravity every uranium cost obeys. Against the cycle: the year frame above locates today inside the regime (post-2021 repricing, by the structural reading). Against history's extremes: the 2007 and 2016 landmarks bound the imaginable. One day, three anchors, full context.

The cost vocabulary also deserves its daily note: in uranium, "cost today" and "price today" converge because the market has no retail spread to wedge them apart. Searchers split the words; the benchmark does not. This page and its price twin therefore share a number and divide a readership — the site's small concession to how humans search.

Whose ledger took today's cost

Somewhere today, the figure above entered real books: a utility's delivery priced off a contract formula, a trader's inventory marked, Sprott's NAV recomputed, and — formula-shrouded — India's import schedule accruing at benchmark-shadowing rates. The public reference is the visible tip of those ledgers, refreshed daily for everyone who keeps none.

Daily Cost Record — Last 10 Entries

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 daily cost habit, kept honest

Today's cost is a datum; the habit is the asset. The table below accumulates the dailies into the only thing daily numbers are good for — trend, regime, and the occasional genuine surprise standing out against both. Thirty seconds here with the morning's markets, percentage thinking always, decomposition (currency first) whenever a move asks for interpretation.

For the deeper cost questions, the family stands ready: production costs (the mining page), the fuel-cycle stack (enriched and reactor-grade pages), India's two-stream structure (the cost-in-India page). Today's figure is each page's opening fact; the explanations compound from there.

₹16.57 per gram today. Tomorrow re-runs the assembly with fresh inputs — and this page will have the receipts again.

Uranium Cost Today — The Day's FAQ

Today, June 5, 2026: ₹16.57 per gram — ₹16,570.00 per kg, ₹7,516.02 per pound. The day's change: +3.50%.

The two usual suspects: drift in the dollar benchmark (assessment-cycle positioning, licensed-market flows) and the day's USD/INR move. Sub-percent changes are typically currency; larger ones usually trace to identifiable benchmark news.

The year comparison above answers fastest. For deeper anchors: the dollar benchmark's landmarks are ~$136/lb (2007), ~$18/lb (2016) and $100+ (2024) — today's cost sits inside that arc where the frames show.

Utilities taking contracted deliveries, traders carrying inventory, funds adding pounds — the licensed world. In India, the state alone: UCIL's operations and DAE's import schedule run today as every day, at costs the public reference brackets.

For this market, barely — with no retail layer, no taxes and no spreads for outsiders, cost and price collapse into the same benchmark figure. The site keeps both page families because searchers use both words; the number is one.