Average Wheel Weights (Hard Lead) Price

180-day market: price lists from 4 yards. As of 2/17/2026.
$0.05/ lb -$0.45 (10.8%)
GT = Gross Ton (2240 lbs)
Avg: $0.05
Lowest price $0.05
Highest price$0.05Who pays the most? ⟶
How to read a yard's offer
  • Low (up to $0.05): Floor price, typically for small loads.
  • Mid ($0.05): A fair deal for standard quantities.
  • High ($0.05+): Top-dollar rate. Offered for large commercial loads or by the most competitive buyers.
52-week price range
Over the past year, prices ranged from $0.05 to $0.47.
Mar '25Jun '25Sep '25Dec '25Today
Market response to LME pricing
Spread vs. exchange (180-day avg): ~94.2% (-$0.81/lb). Typical spread for this grade: 39%–58%
⚠️ Local prices haven’t caught up with the exchange yet
Market snapshot
Stable market. Prices have held steady over the past 6 months.
Pricing verified from 4 live board rates today.

Top Scrap Yards Buying Wheel Weights West Virginia

Don't let your heavy buckets of wheel weights get downgraded because of hidden steel or zinc. Compare the payouts from these local buyers in West Virginia, ensure your load is sorted, and always call ahead to confirm their current hard lead rates.

💼 Scrap yard owners: Post your buy prices and get more customers
By price
By date
Updated 32 days ago

Charleston Area Metal Recycling

Listed as: Lead Wheel Weights
610 48th St SE, Charleston, WV 25304 Get Directions
$0.05 / lb
Updated 32 days ago

Elkins Metal Recycling

Listed as: Wheel Weights
1401 15th St Get Directions
$0.05 / lb
Updated 32 days ago

Three Rivers Iron Metal

Listed as: Lead Wheel Weights
500 Virginia Ave Get Directions
$0.05 / lb
Updated 172 days ago

Taylor Iron & Metal

Listed as: Lead Wheel Weights
10 3rd Ave Get Directions
$0.05 / lb

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Wheel Weights vs. Other Lead Grades

The #1 rule at scrap yards: if you mix grades, they’ll weigh everything at the lowest rate. See the price gap below — if you have higher-value metal, always sort and weigh each grade separately to avoid leaving money on the table.

Sort separately
Soft Lead (Clean) Based on 3 scrap yards
Avg price:$0.37 / lb How to sort?
Mix it with Wheel Weights (Hard Lead)?They’ll pay $0.05 for all of it
Loss if not sorted:-$0.32 per lb
Trend (30d): 0.0%
Price analytics
Dirty & Scrap Lead Estimated U.S. prices
Avg price:$0.11 / lb
Trend (30d): 0.0%
Price analytics

Wheel Weights (Hard Lead) Historical Price Trends

This chart shows where the market is headed. If the line is climbing, prices are rising — you might get a better deal in a few days. If it’s dropping, don’t wait: sell today before yards lower their buy prices further.

Wheel Weights (Hard Lead): Scrap Yard Price vs. World Market (LME)

Avg scrap yard price

$0.05
Scrap metal dealers
Spread: -$0.81/lb
vs. exchange

World market price (LME)

$0.8556
✓ For 99.9% pure refined metal
💡 Why is the scrap yard price lower than the exchange? The LME price is the global benchmark for 99.99% pure refined metal traded in large institutional contracts. The gap between LME and what you pocket is the yard’s margin — it covers sorting, cleaning, transport to the mill, and protects them against sudden price drops.

Wheel Weights (Hard Lead): Spread vs. Exchange — Monthly History

Analyst take: This month’s average spread between scrap yard prices and the world market for Wheel Weights (Hard Lead) is 94.2%. That’s in line with the typical range for this grade (91%–97%). Local yards are offering fair market rates. Check offers in your area ↑
PeriodWorld price (per lb)Scrap yard price (per lb)Spread vs. exchange
March 2026 (current)$0.878181$0.37-$0.51 (57.7%)
February 2026$0.892971$0.40-$0.50 (55.6%)
January 2026$0.92151$0.55-$0.37 (39.9%)
December 2025$0.901455$0.54-$0.36 (40%)
November 2025$0.918033$0.55-$0.37 (40%)
October 2025$0.907758$0.55-$0.36 (39.9%)
September 2025$0.906913$0.41-$0.50 (54.6%)
August 2025$0.906455$0.54-$0.36 (40%)
July 2025$0.925719$0.56-$0.37 (40%)
June 2025$0.91682$0.55-$0.37 (39.8%)
May 2025$0.907029$0.55-$0.36 (39.9%)
April 2025$0.88155$0.53-$0.35 (40.1%)
March 2025$0.926848$0.56-$0.37 (40%)
February 2025$0.896882$0.54-$0.36 (40%)
January 2025$0.88191$0.53-$0.35 (40.1%)
December 2024$0.914952$0.55-$0.36 (39.9%)
November 2024$0.91361$0.55-$0.37 (40%)
October 2024$0.938668$0.56-$0.38 (40.1%)
September 2024$0.926587$0.56-$0.37 (39.9%)
August 2024$0.920674$0.55-$0.37 (39.9%)
July 2024$0.971394$0.58-$0.39 (40.1%)
June 2024$1.000473$0.60-$0.40 (40%)
May 2024$1.020332$0.61-$0.41 (40%)
April 2024$0.979673$0.59-$0.39 (40%)
March 2024$0.939158$0.56-$0.38 (40%)
February 2024$0.946955$0.57-$0.38 (40%)
January 2024$0.962006$0.58-$0.38 (39.9%)
December 2023$0.937619$0.56-$0.38 (40.1%)
November 2023$0.998843$0.60-$0.40 (40%)
October 2023$0.954132$0.57-$0.38 (40.1%)
September 2023$1.00769$0.60-$0.40 (40%)
August 2023$0.975368$0.59-$0.39 (39.9%)
July 2023$0.959526$0.58-$0.38 (39.9%)
June 2023$0.94668$0.57-$0.38 (40.1%)
May 2023$0.948729$0.57-$0.38 (40%)
April 2023$0.96532$0.58-$0.39 (40.1%)
March 2023$0.9667$0.46-$0.51 (52.7%)

Wheel Weights (Hard Lead) Scrap Price History — Daily Data

A day-by-day market snapshot in exact numbers. Every day we aggregate buy prices from local scrap yards, recording the average, low, and high. Use this table to track real price movement over recent days.

DateAvg price (per lb)ChangeRange (Low/High)
2/17/2026$0.05 / lb— no change$0.05 - $0.05
9/30/2025$0.05 / lb-$0.05$0.05 - $0.05

Cash In on the Tire Shop Floor: Scrapping Wheel Weights

If you're cleaning out a tire shop or auto garage in West Virginia, those heavy five-gallon buckets of wheel weights add up fast. But here is the catch: not all wheel weights are made of lead anymore. True Wheel Weights (Hard Lead) are alloyed with antimony and tin to make them rigid, which is why yards price them differently than pure, soft plumbing lead. Right now, our data shows national payouts ranging from $0.10 for mixed, unsorted buckets up to $0.26 for clean, verified lead weights, with the average hovering around $0.13 per pound.

Yard Pro Tip: The biggest mistake scrappers make with wheel weights is assuming they are all lead. You absolutely must carry a pair of side-cutters (dikes) and a magnet. Lead weights will easily dent and notch when squeezed with the cutters. Zinc weights look almost identical but are much harder and will barely scratch. Steel weights will stick to your magnet. If a yard finds zinc or steel mixed into your lead bucket, they will drop your entire load to dirty scrap steel prices.

The Teardown: Don't Lose Money at the Scale

Scrap yards hate contamination, and with wheel weights, contamination is everywhere. The steel clips attached to the lead weights are generally accepted, but the newer solid steel and zinc weights are dealbreakers for lead buyers. If you toss premium Soft Lead (Clean) (like roofing lead or pure pipe) into your bucket of hard lead wheel weights, the scale master will grade the whole thing as hard lead. That lazy sorting mistake will cost you roughly $0.33 per pound in lost profit.

  • Clean Hard Lead: Verified lead wheel weights (steel clips attached are usually okay, but ask your yard).
  • Soft Lead: Pure, bendable lead like roofing sheets or pipe. Keep this separate!
  • The Rejects: Zinc and solid steel weights. Sort these out with a magnet and cutters.

If you have a mixed bucket of various lead scrap that isn't cleanly sorted into hard or soft grades, buyers will likely classify it as Dirty & Scrap Lead, which commands a lower rate. If you are sweeping up an indoor gun range, keep that material separated as Range Lead, which currently trades around $0.20 to $0.40/lb.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do yards pay less for wheel weights than soft lead?

Wheel weights are considered "hard lead" because they are alloyed with antimony to hold their shape on a spinning rim. Refineries have to separate these alloys to get back to pure lead, which increases processing costs. Plus, the steel clips add non-lead weight that the buyer has to account for.

How do buyers determine the price for hard lead?

Your local yard bases their payouts on the broader metals market traded on the LME. Typically, buyers will offer about 94.2% below the spot price to cover their freight, processing labor, and the eventual melting process at the refinery.

What happens if I leave zinc weights in my bucket?

Zinc completely ruins the melting process for lead smelters. If a yard buyer spots zinc weights mixed into your hard lead, they will either reject the bucket entirely or heavily downgrade the price per pound to the $0.10 mark to cover the cost of their labor sorting it out.