
The silver price is at $80 per ounce in 2026. That sounds like a massive move from the old $15-$30 days. But according to one of the biggest voices on X, the real floor for silver is much higher than most people realize.
Wall Street Mav, the popular analyst with over 1.7 million followers on X, just dropped a thread breaking down the actual cost math behind silver production. His numbers tell a story that changes how you look at the current price.
Here’s the thing most traders miss. It currently costs about $35 per ounce to get silver out of the ground and ready for market. That’s not just digging costs. That’s yearly production expenses plus the capital required to build infrastructure for new mines.
Money doesn’t move into dirt unless the numbers work. Mining companies aren’t charities. They need returns.
Wall Street Mav makes a simple point: realistically, silver prices have to stay above $50 for new mines to get built. Not to grow production. Just to replace the mines that are running out.
Forget about growing supply. The industry is struggling just to maintain current production levels.
What you'll learn 👉
The Production vs. Demand Gap
Look at the numbers Wall Street Mav laid out.
All the mines on Earth combined produce about 820 million ounces of silver per year. Recycling adds another 190 million ounces. That brings total annual supply to roughly 1 billion ounces.
Demand runs between 1.15 and 1.2 billion ounces per year.
That gap isn’t small. It’s 150-200 million ounces that have to come from somewhere. Inventories. Stockpiles. Above-ground supply. And those sources aren’t infinite.
The new floor for silver is about $50 per oz.
— Wall Street Mav (@WallStreetMav) March 15, 2026
It currently costs about $35 per oz, once you include yearly production costs plus the capital required to build infrastructure for new mines. Meaning, realistically silver prices have to stay above $50+ for new mines to get built… pic.twitter.com/9BtliyLhge
Production Has Been Dropping for a Decade
Here’s the kicker. Global annual silver production peaked back in 2015-2016 at around 900 million ounces from mines alone.
Since then? Production has trended down every single year.
And this happened while prices climbed. Silver went from $15 to $30 per ounce in 2021. That should have sparked a mining boom. It didn’t. Production kept falling.
Now silver prices are at $80+ in 2026. Still, new mines aren’t magically appearing.
Why? Because building a mine takes years and costs hundreds of millions before you pull the first ounce out. And if prices might drop back below $50, the math doesn’t work.
Read also: Silver Price Just Lost 46% in Weeks, But 33 Million Ounces Vanished From COMEX – Here’s the Truth
The $50 Floor
Wall Street Mav’s conclusion is simple. The new floor for silver is about $50 per ounce.
Below that, you can’t justify building the new mines needed to replace the old ones that are depleting. Production keeps falling. The supply gap keeps growing.
At $80, silver feels expensive compared to history. But measured against replacement cost and industry economics? It’s exactly where it needs to be to keep the lights on.
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