Uranium Price in Australia — 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 Australian Reference — 10-Day Path

Australia: the price's biggest vault, emptiest grid

Australia meets the benchmark — ₹16.57 per gram in INR terms, June 5, 2026 — from commerce's strangest national position: custodian of the world's largest uranium resources, operator of exactly zero nuclear reactors. The paradox is policy, decades deep, and it shapes how Australian tonnes reach the world market India buys from.

Uranium price in Australia — the resource paradox lens
Vault full, grid empty — June 5, 2026

The Australian profile, priced:

  • Resources: the world\'s largest share — Olympic Dam alone a generational vault
  • Production: thousands of tonnes yearly — ≈ ₹8.3 thousand crore at reference (illustrative 5,000 t)
  • Domestic consumption: zero — every pound exports
  • The India lane: open since 2014, modestly travelled

All vault, all export: Australia is the supply side's long-duration option, priced daily above.

Australia-Lens Levels Across 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%).

The Australian Price by Weight (INR)

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 the paradox prices

Australia's supply reaches the benchmark through two characters. Olympic Dam, BHP's polymetallic giant, produces uranium as copper's by-product — output that flows steadily, costed against copper economics, indifferent to uranium's cycle. The restart-and-developer tier — Honeymoon's ISL revival, the Boss Energy generation — supplies the cycle-sensitive pounds: projects that idle in troughs and rush back at strength, the textbook marginal supply this site's mining pages describe. Between the steady giant and the cyclical tier, Australian tonnage gives the benchmark both ballast and bounce.

Australian uranium — Olympic Dam, exports and the India lane
The giant and the tier — Australia\'s two supply characters

The policy layer, both directions

Australian uranium policy gates the vault: state-level mining permissions have historically opened and closed provinces, making the resource base's convertibility a political variable global models track. The other direction stirs intermittently — the domestic nuclear debate, revived in the 2020s, would convert the world's emptiest nuclear grid into fresh demand if it ever resolves affirmatively. Either policy motion would reprice the benchmark; both are watchable from Indian distance through ordinary news flow.

The India-Australia line carries strategic symbolism beyond tonnage: the 2014 agreement marked India's full normalisation in the uranium trade lattice, and Australian supply remains the diversification option whose expansion headroom is largest — the vault next door to the century's biggest demand growth story.

The investable Australia

ASX hosts uranium equity's developer wing: the restart names and explorers that gear the benchmark hardest, accessible to Indian portfolios via international brokerage under LRS. Australian listings are the sector's high-beta end — the paradox nation supplying, fittingly, the optionality.

Australian Reference — 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

Watching the vault from India

The watch: this page's daily conversion, BHP's by-product disclosures and the developer tier's milestones (quarterly), plus the policy debate's occasional national headlines. Australia's signal arrives slower than Kazakhstan's or America's — vault nations move at vault pace.

The frame's value: Australian developments price India's options — the supply lane's depth, the diversification headroom, the long-duration resource backstop under every bullish scenario. Watching Australia is watching the benchmark's deep reserves account.

The vault holds; the benchmark prints; the rupee read posts here tomorrow. Paradox and price, daily reconciled.

Uranium Price in Australia — Paradox FAQ

The world benchmark, Australia-supplied: ₹16.57 per gram in INR terms (June 5, 2026). Australia exports at it and — uniquely among major uranium nations — burns none of its own product.

The world's largest uranium resources (Olympic Dam the flagship) paired with zero domestic reactors — nuclear power being legislatively prohibited. Australia mines for everyone else's grid, by national choice.

The 2014 India-Australia civil nuclear agreement opened the lane; commercial volumes have followed modestly. Australian supply is among India's diversification options rather than a dominant line.

BHP's Olympic Dam (uranium as copper by-product, the resource giant), with the restart-and-development tier (Honeymoon, Boss Energy and peers) supplying the cycle's marginal-pound stories.

Both directions: state-level mining policy shifts gate new supply, while the recurring domestic nuclear debate — reopened in the 2020s — could someday add Australia to the demand ledger it currently only supplies.