Scrap Copper Prices in Alice Springs
Scrap copper in Alice Springs currently pays from $3.27 per kilogram for insulated copper wire up to $10.20 for bare bright copper. Alice Springs is a regional centre in Northern Territory, with rates set by transport distance to the nearest capital and smelter network.
Copper grades and payouts in Alice Springs (per kg)
Estimated yard payouts for each grade, based on the current LME spot ($18.16/kg) and Alice Springs's 0.72× regional adjustment. Actual offers vary by yard, load size, and material quality.
| Grade | Payout rate | Est. mid (AUD/kg) | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bare Bright Copper Stripped, uncoated copper wire of 16 gauge or thicker, with no oxidation or tarnish. Pays the highest price of any common scrap. | 78% | $10.20 | $8.67 – $11.73 |
| #1 Copper Clean, unalloyed copper that may have minor oxidation. No solder, paint, or attachments. | 70% | $9.15 | $7.78 – $10.53 |
| #2 Copper Copper with some tarnish, soldered joints, paint, or light contamination. Still valuable but pays less than clean grades. | 58% | $7.59 | $6.45 – $8.72 |
| Insulated Copper Wire Copper wire still wrapped in plastic or rubber insulation. The yard pays based on estimated copper content after stripping. | 25% | $3.27 | $2.78 – $3.76 |
Price history
Local Alice Springs prices track the national copper series — multiply by 0.72 for Alice Springs equivalents. View the full 30-day chart on the national copper page.
Copper in Alice Springs
Alice Springs is the most isolated major scrap market in Australia. Long-haul freight to Adelaide or Darwin makes large yard payouts hard to sustain — most non-ferrous metal accumulates locally until shipment economics work.
As a regional centre, Alice Springs's copper flow comes primarily from residential renovations, local trade work, and rural property clearances. Yards in Alice Springs consolidate volume for shipment to processing facilities in larger centres.
Scrap yards in Alice Springs that buy copper
1 verified scrap yard in the Alice Springs area. Browse all yards in Alice Springs →
Frequently asked questions
What's the current price for scrap copper in Alice Springs? +
Today's estimated payouts in Alice Springs range from $3.27 per kilogram (insulated copper wire) up to $10.20 (bare bright copper). Prices update daily and reflect Alice Springs's 0.72× regional adjustment from the Sydney benchmark. See the grades table above for all payouts.
Where can I sell scrap copper in Alice Springs? +
We're building a verified directory of Alice Springs scrap yards. Until that's live, call 2-3 yards in your area before transport. Most Alice Springs yards accept copper in all common grades, though smaller yards may have minimum weight requirements. For larger loads, also consider yards in Darwin.
Why does Alice Springs pay 28% less than Sydney for copper? +
Transport cost. Copper sold in Alice Springs eventually travels to a smelter or export port — typically via Darwin — and yards price the freight cost into their offer. The 0.72× regional adjustment models this transport drag based on observed yard rates and distance to processing facilities.
How is copper graded at Alice Springs yards? +
Alice Springs yards use the same grading system as the rest of Australia: Bare Bright Copper, #1 Copper, #2 Copper, Insulated Copper Wire. The grade depends on cleanliness, alloy purity, and contamination. See our complete <a href="/metals/copper/">Copper grading guide</a> for what each grade means, examples, and how to identify it.
Do I need ID to sell copper at a Alice Springs yard? +
Yes for any non-trivial copper or brass load. Northern Territory legislation requires yards to record seller ID on regulated transactions to deter metal theft. Bring a driver's licence or other photo ID. Cash payments above certain thresholds may require additional documentation.
Is it worth driving from Alice Springs to a bigger city for higher copper rates? +
Generally no, unless you have a very large load. Fuel costs from Alice Springs to Darwin quickly eat the rate difference, especially for a single residential load. The exception is high-value loads of clean copper or brass — for loads above a few hundred kilograms of clean material, the maths can work out. For everything else, consolidate locally and accept the 0.72× rate.