No, pewter contains no silver. Pewter is a tin-based alloy — roughly 85–99% tin with copper and antimony — and its silvery color comes from tin, not silver.
The short answer: no silver in pewter
Pewter contains no silver. Not in the standard recipe, not in trace amounts, not in any grade a collector will normally meet. The metal is built on tin.
This catches people off guard, and the confusion is fair. A pewter charger and a silver charger can look near-identical from across a room.
Any seasoned collector has watched the mistake happen. I have seen buyers at estate sales pay silver money for a plain pewter tankard.
Here is the core fact. Pewter is an alloy of tin, copper, antimony, and — in older pieces — lead or bismuth. Silver never enters the formula.
The myth survives partly through language. Listing words like “silvery” and “silver-toned” attach themselves to pewter in shop catalogs. Sellers rarely correct the impression.
There is a historical thread too. For centuries, pewter was the working metal of households that could not afford silver.
Pewter played the social role of silver without sharing its chemistry. A 1740s tavern poured ale into pewter. A wealthy home used silver. The shapes matched; the metals did not.
Some confusion traces to one specific alloy: Britannia metal. That alloy is still pewter, a harder and more refined version of it.
So when a piece is described as “silver pewter,” read that as a note on color, not content. The phrase carries no metallurgical meaning.
A genuine pewter object holds zero silver. The bright finish you see is tin doing the work that silver does in real silverware.
Collectors ask this question constantly. It ranks among the most common metal-identification queries, beside whether pewter is magnetic.
The price gap makes the distinction matter. Sterling silver tracks the bullion market. Pewter tracks the tin market, a small fraction of silver’s price per pound.
Mistaking one for the other can mean overpaying by hundreds of dollars on a single piece. It can also mean underselling a true silver find.
For the hands-on version of this question, our guide on identifying pewter vs silver walks through the tests collectors use at the table.
The rest of this article covers three things. What pewter is genuinely made of. Why the silver mix-up refuses to die. And how to settle the question in under a minute.
What pewter is actually made of
Pewter is a tin-based alloy. Tin always forms the majority of the metal, usually between 85 and 99 percent of the total.
Pure tin alone is too soft for daily use. A spoon of pure tin would bend in the hand, so pewterers add hardening metals.
Copper is the first hardener. A small amount, often one to two percent, adds strength and helps the metal cast cleanly into molds.
Antimony is the second key addition. It hardens the alloy further and brightens the surface. Antimony is the reason quality modern pewter holds a crisp shine.
Bismuth appears in some recipes. Old pewterers called it “tin-glass.” It lowered the melting point and improved how the metal filled fine detail.
Lead is the historical problem metal. For centuries, cheaper pewter grades carried lead, sometimes a great deal of it.
Lead made the alloy flow well and cost less. It also darkened the metal and posed a real health risk in food vessels.
Pewter was never one single recipe. The old English trade split it into named qualities, each with its own mix.
| Pewter grade | Rough composition | Typical use | Era |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fine / plate metal | 96–99% tin, 1–4% copper | Plates, chargers, communion ware | 1500s–1800s |
| Trifle metal | 88–92% tin, antimony, trace lead | Mugs, tankards, measures | 1600s–1800s |
| Lay / common metal | About 80% tin, up to 20% lead | Chamber pots, organ pipes, rough ware | 1500s–1800s |
| Britannia metal | About 93% tin, 5% antimony, 2% copper | Teapots, plated-ware blanks | 1770s–present |
| Modern pewter | 91–99% tin, copper, antimony | Tankards, figurines, giftware | 1970s–present |
Notice what is absent from every row. No silver appears in any grade of pewter, old or new.
The Victoria and Albert Museum holds one of the deepest pewter collections in the world. Its catalog describes these pieces as tin alloys, viewable at vam.ac.uk.
Modern pewter is the cleanest version of the alloy. Since the 1970s, safety rules in most markets have pushed lead out of the recipe entirely.
Today’s pewter is usually 91 to 99 percent tin, hardened with copper and antimony. It is food-safe and holds detail beautifully.
The hardening metalloid is worth knowing by name. Antimony gives modern pewter both its hardness and its bright cast.
So the honest answer to the recipe question is short. Pewter is tin, plus a little copper, plus a little antimony, sometimes bismuth, historically lead — and never silver.
Why pewter gets confused with silver
Pewter and silver get mixed up for good reasons. The two metals share a family resemblance that fools careful eyes.
Color is the first overlap. Both metals are pale and reflective. A polished pewter surface throws back light much like silver does.
The difference is subtle. Silver runs slightly warmer and brighter. Pewter sits a touch grayer, with a softer, more clouded glow.
Shape adds to the confusion. For 400 years, pewterers copied silver forms directly. A pewter coffee pot of 1790 follows the silver fashion of 1790.
This was deliberate. Pewter was the affordable stand-in, and customers wanted the silversmith’s look at a fraction of the cost.
Marks deepen the trap. Pewter carries small stamped symbols called touchmarks, which name the maker. They look official and crowded, much like silver hallmarks.
Some pewterers went further. They struck rows of tiny marks designed to mimic genuine silver hallmarks, a practice old guild records complain about.
A new collector sees four little stamps in a row and assumes silver. The marks are genuine, but they are pewter touchmarks, not assay hallmarks.
Our guide to antique marks and signatures shows how to tell a touchmark from a true hallmark.
Plating is the modern source of confusion. Many “silver” objects are silver only on the surface, over a base-metal core.
When silver plating wears through on an old tray, the gray metal underneath is often pewter or Britannia metal. The piece looks like failing silver because it began as plated pewter.
Weight offers an honest signal. Silver is markedly denser than pewter and feels heavier for its size.
A sterling mug and a pewter mug of equal size will not balance the same in your hands. The silver one pulls down harder.
Sound separates them too. A flicked silver bowl gives a clear, sustained ring. A pewter bowl answers with a short, dull thud.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art displays both metals in its decorative arts galleries. Comparing them in person, as the collection at metmuseum.org allows, trains the eye fast.
None of these signs works alone. Together, they explain why the confusion is common, and why it is also easy to resolve once you handle both metals.
Britannia metal: the pewter that imitates silver
Britannia metal deserves its own section. It is the single biggest reason people believe pewter and silver are related.
Britannia metal is a refined, high-grade pewter. The usual mix runs about 93 percent tin, 5 percent antimony, and 2 percent copper.
It carries no lead. That made it cleaner, harder, and brighter than the common pewter that came before it.
The alloy appeared in Sheffield, England, around 1770. Sheffield was already the heart of the British silver and plating trade.
Makers there wanted a metal that behaved like silver but cost far less. Britannia metal answered that need almost perfectly.
It could be spun on a lathe and stamped into thin, crisp shapes. Early teapots and coffee services in Britannia metal looked remarkably like sterling.
Then came the real twist. In the 1840s, electroplating let manufacturers coat Britannia metal with a thin layer of pure silver.
The result was marked EPBM, for Electro-Plated Britannia Metal. The body was pewter; the skin was genuine silver.
This is where the silver-and-pewter belief comes from. EPBM pieces literally are pewter wearing a silver coat.
But the silver is only the plating. It is measured in microns, not percentages. The structural metal underneath holds no silver at all.
When EPBM plating wears through — and it always does, at handles and rims — the gray Britannia body shows. The piece reveals its pewter heart.
| Term | What it means | Silver content |
|---|---|---|
| Britannia metal | Hard pewter alloy, about 93% tin | None |
| EPBM | Britannia metal with electroplated silver skin | Plating only, microns thick |
| Sheffield plate | Copper fused with sterling silver sheet | Real silver layer, no pewter |
| Sterling silver | Solid silver alloy, 92.5% silver | 92.5% throughout |
Dating Britannia metal is its own small skill. Early hand-finished pieces from 1810 to 1840 show better weight and crisper detail than later mass-produced ware.
Collectors should not dismiss Britannia metal. Strong early pieces, especially American work by makers such as the Boardman family, carry real interest.
The technical history is well documented. The entry on Britannia metal traces the alloy from Sheffield workshops to mass-market giftware.
If your piece is marked EPBM or reads “Britannia metal,” treat the body as pewter for identification purposes.
The lesson is clean. Britannia metal looks like silver and was built to imitate silver — yet it remains, in its bones, a tin-based pewter.
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You can settle the pewter-or-silver question fast. A handful of quick checks, done together, give a confident answer.
Start with the marks. Genuine sterling carries clear evidence: the word STERLING, the number 925, or a struck lion passant on British pieces.
Pewter never carries a 925 stamp or a lion passant assay mark. If you see 925, you are almost certainly holding silver.
Pewter marks read differently. Look for the words PEWTER, BRITANNIA METAL, or EPBM, or a maker’s touchmark with no purity number.
Next, weigh the piece in your hand. Silver is dense and pulls down hard. Pewter, lighter for its size, feels comparatively airy.
Then test the sound. Tap the rim gently. Silver rings with a clear, lasting tone. Pewter gives a flat, short thud.
Check the color in good light. Silver is a bright, slightly warm white. Pewter is cooler and grayer, with a soft cast even when polished.
Look at the tarnish. Silver tarnishes yellow, then brown, then black, as sulfur attacks it. Pewter dulls to an even, dark gray.
The magnet test is widely misunderstood. Neither pewter nor silver is magnetic, so a magnet cannot tell them apart.
What a magnet does do is catch plated steel. If a piece grabs a magnet, it is neither solid silver nor solid pewter.
| Test | Pewter | Sterling silver |
|---|---|---|
| Marks | PEWTER, EPBM, touchmark, no number | STERLING, 925, lion passant |
| Weight | Lighter for its size | Noticeably heavy and dense |
| Tap sound | Dull, short thud | Clear, ringing tone |
| Color | Cool gray, soft sheen | Bright, warm white |
| Tarnish | Even dark gray | Yellow to brown to black |
| Magnet | Not magnetic | Not magnetic |
| Melting point | Low, around 170–230°C | High, around 960°C |
The melting-point gap is enormous, though you should never test it on a real piece. That gap explains why pewter casts so easily and silver does not.
One more clue lives in the surface. Pewter often shows faint casting seams and slightly soft, rounded edge detail.
Silver, worked by hammer and graver, tends to carry sharper engraving and crisper rims. Those slightly uneven rim details on early pewter? Classic mold-cast work.
Run these checks as a set. No single test is final, but five agreeing checks make a near-certain call.
When real value is on the line, our overview of online antique valuation tools is worth a look before you buy or sell.
Old pewter, new pewter, and the lead question
Pewter’s recipe changed across the centuries. Understanding that drift helps date a piece and judge its safety.
The earliest pewter, going back to Roman times, was tin alloyed with lead. Lead was cheap, abundant, and easy to work.
Medieval and early-modern pewterers leaned on lead heavily in lower grades. The “lay metal” used for rough ware could be a fifth lead or more.
Better grades always used less. Fine plate pewter for dining and church use kept lead low and tin high.
The 18th century brought a turn toward antimony. Antimony hardened the metal without lead’s drawbacks, and the brightest pewter shifted its recipe.
Britannia metal, from around 1770, marked the clean break. It proved a strong, bright pewter could be made with no lead at all.
The 20th century finished the job. Modern safety regulation pushed lead out of pewter, and reputable makers now guarantee lead-free alloys.
| Era | Typical recipe | Lead present? |
|---|---|---|
| Roman to medieval | Tin with substantial lead | Yes, often high |
| 1500s–1700s common grades | Tin, lead, trace copper | Yes |
| 1700s fine grades | Tin, copper, some antimony | Low to moderate |
| Britannia metal, 1770s on | Tin, antimony, copper | No |
| Modern pewter, 1970s on | Tin, copper, antimony, bismuth | No |
The recipe history carries a practical warning. Antique pewter may contain lead, and old pewter is best kept for display rather than everyday drinking.
You can usually spot lead-heavy pewter. High-lead alloys look darker and duller, and they feel softer, taking a fingernail mark with ease.
A genuine antique tankard with a deep gray, almost bluish cast likely carries lead. A bright, crisp modern stein almost certainly does not.
For collectors, lead content is not a flaw but a dating clue. The presence of lead points firmly toward an earlier piece.
The American pewter trade followed its own arc. Early American pewterers worked with imported English metal and recycled scrap, which kept compositions varied.
Museum collections track this clearly. The Smithsonian’s American history holdings, viewable at americanhistory.si.edu, document pewter as a working metal that evolved with changing tastes.
To place a piece in its decade, period context helps, and our antique furniture periods chart sets out the eras side by side.
The takeaway holds across every era. The recipe shifted from lead toward antimony — but silver was never part of the mix, in any century.
What pewter is worth, and why composition matters
Composition drives value, so the no-silver fact has real money behind it. Pewter and silver live in different price worlds.
Silver carries two values: melt value and antique value. Melt value tracks the bullion market, and silver has traded well above $30 an ounce through 2026.
A pound of sterling flatware therefore holds hundreds of dollars in pure metal value, before any collector premium.
Pewter has almost no melt value. Tin trades at roughly $13 to $15 a pound, so a pound of pewter holds only a few dollars in raw metal.
This is why melting pewter is never the move. Its worth lies in form, age, maker, and condition — never in the metal itself.
For the silver side of that calculation, our guide on silver melt value versus antique value explains when metal price beats collector price.
Antique pewter can still be genuinely valuable. The value comes from rarity and history rather than bullion.
Early American touchmarked pewter is the prize category. A documented 18th-century plate by a known maker can bring several hundred to several thousand dollars.
Continental guild pewter, fine English chargers, and crisp early measures all hold collector demand. Auction records on WorthPoint show strong pieces clearing four figures.
Most pewter, though, is modest. Victorian and 20th-century decorative pewter — steins, figurines, plates — typically sells in the $10 to $80 range.
Condition rules the price. Pewter dents easily, and old splits, pitting, and clumsy repairs cut value sharply.
Touchmarks make the difference between a $30 piece and a $300 piece. A clear maker’s mark, traceable to a dated workshop, transforms an ordinary object.
Price references help here. Kovels maintains pewter mark and value data that lets you check a touchmark against recorded sales.
It is worth keeping perspective on pewter’s place in the market. It will never chase the prices of fine art or precious metal.
For comparison, even a modestly regarded category like folk art paintings can outrun common pewter at auction.
That is no knock on pewter. It is the honest result of a metal whose appeal is craft and history, not intrinsic worth.
So the composition answer and the value answer line up. Pewter holds no silver, holds little melt value, and rewards the collector who buys it for what it truly is — tin, shaped by skill, carrying time.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best free app to identify antiques?
Antique Identifier App is the best free app to identify antiques, and it works especially well for metalware questions like pewter versus silver. The app is a free download on iPhone with no sign-up required — you open it and photograph the piece directly. It reads silver hallmarks, porcelain and pottery maker marks, period furniture details, and metal types, then returns a likely identification, an estimated date range, and a ballpark value. For a pewter piece, it can flag touchmarks and separate the gray tin alloy from true silver. The app recognizes more than 10,000 antique categories. For a fast, no-cost first opinion before you buy or sell, it is the most practical starting tool available.
Does pewter contain any silver at all?
No, pewter contains no silver in any standard grade. Pewter is a tin-based alloy, typically 85 to 99 percent tin, hardened with copper and antimony, and sometimes bismuth. Older pewter often contained lead, but never silver. The belief that pewter holds silver usually comes from Electro-Plated Britannia Metal, marked EPBM, where a pewter body is coated with a microscopically thin layer of pure silver. Even then, the silver is only surface plating measured in microns — the structural metal is entirely tin alloy. A piece described as “silver pewter” is being described by color, not content. If your item carries a 925 stamp or a struck lion passant mark, it is silver rather than pewter.
Is pewter or silver more valuable?
Silver is far more valuable than pewter by metal weight. Sterling silver is 92.5 percent pure silver, and with silver trading well above $30 an ounce in 2026, a pound of sterling carries hundreds of dollars in melt value alone. Pewter, built on tin at roughly $13 to $15 a pound, has almost no melt value. That said, antique pewter can still command strong prices through rarity rather than metal. A documented 18th-century American touchmarked plate can bring several hundred to several thousand dollars at auction. Most decorative Victorian and 20th-century pewter, however, sells in the $10 to $80 range. Maker, age, touchmark clarity, and condition decide a pewter piece’s worth.
Is antique pewter dangerous because of lead?
Antique pewter can contain lead, so it is best treated as display rather than everyday drinkware. Before the late 18th century, common pewter grades — especially the “lay metal” used for rough ware — could contain 15 to 20 percent lead. Britannia metal, introduced around 1770, was lead-free, and modern pewter made since the 1970s contains no lead at all under current safety regulations. High-lead antique pewter tends to look darker, with a bluish-gray cast, and feels softer to a fingernail. Using a genuine lead-bearing antique tankard for daily drinking is not advised. Displaying it, however, poses no meaningful risk. If you want a pewter mug for actual use, buy a modern lead-free piece.
How can I tell if my piece is pewter or silver?
Run several quick checks together. First, look for marks: STERLING, 925, or a British lion passant means silver, while PEWTER, EPBM, or a plain maker’s touchmark means pewter. Second, weigh it — silver is dense and heavy for its size, pewter noticeably lighter. Third, tap the rim: silver rings clearly, pewter gives a dull thud. Fourth, check color and tarnish — silver is bright white and tarnishes yellow to black, while pewter is cooler gray and dulls evenly. A magnet will not separate them, since neither metal is magnetic, but it does catch plated steel. No single test is conclusive, but four or five agreeing checks give a confident answer.
Why does pewter look like silver if it has no silver in it?
Pewter looks silvery because tin itself is a pale, reflective metal. Tin is naturally a soft white-gray, and when polished it throws back light much like silver does. Antimony in the alloy brightens that shine further, which is why modern pewter and Britannia metal look especially crisp. The resemblance was also encouraged by design — for four centuries, pewterers deliberately copied silver shapes so customers could own the silversmith’s look at a fraction of the price. So the silvery appearance is genuine, but it comes entirely from the optical qualities of tin, not from any silver content. Side by side, silver still reads slightly brighter and warmer, and pewter a touch grayer.
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