

Box of 100 - 2024 1 oz Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 40th Anniversary Silver Coin (BU)
In Stock
AS LOW AS
$9,661.00

2024 2 oz British Tudor Beasts: Seymour Unicorn Silver - 10 Coin Tube (BU)
In Stock
AS LOW AS
$1,857.20

2023 2 oz Great Britain Tudor Beasts: Bull of Clarence Silver BU - 10 Coin Tube
In Stock
AS LOW AS
$1,937.20

2014 Great Britain Lunar Year of the Horse Silver BU - 100 Pieces in 5 Tube
In Stock
AS LOW AS
$8,841.00Every tube product at BOLD compared side by side. All sovereign mint products listed meet IRS fineness requirements for Precious Metals IRAs. Compare individual coin formats in our full silver coins collection.
| Product | Coins Per Tube | Silver Content | Purity | Premium Tier | IRA Eligible |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| American Silver Eagle (ASE) | 20 coins | 20 oz total | .999 fine | Moderate–High | Yes |
| Canadian Silver Maple Leaf | 25 coins | 25 oz total | .9999 fine | Moderate | Yes |
| Australian Perth Kangaroo | 20 coins | 20 oz total | .9999 fine | Moderate | Yes |
| British Silver Britannia | 10–25 coins | Varies | .999 fine | Moderate | Yes |
| Tudor Beasts Series (2 oz) | 10 coins | 20 oz total | .999 fine | Collector Premium | Yes |
| Sunshine Mint Buffalo Round | 20 coins | 20 oz total | .999 fine | Low–Moderate | Yes |
| Lunar Horse (Perth Mint) | 20 coins | 20 oz total | .9999 fine | Moderate–High | Yes |
Tube quantities may vary by mint year. Current counts and pricing are shown on individual product pages. The teal-highlighted Maple Leaf row shows our recommended value pick — 25% more silver per tube than an ASE tube at typically lower per-ounce premiums.
After years of dealing in volume, these are the two factors that consistently separate buyers who build wealth in this market from those who leave money on the table.
The resale premium on sealed tubes is consistently underestimated
A mint-sealed tube from a sovereign issuer — particularly American Silver Eagle and Maple Leaf — almost always commands better per-ounce buyback pricing than an equivalent quantity of loose, handled coins. The seal functions as condition verification. It tells the next buyer that those coins have never been touched, sorted, or cherry-picked. Keep your tubes sealed. The moment you break the seal for any reason other than grading or immediate sale, you've changed the asset's market profile.
Storage efficiency is ignored in the buying decision — and it shouldn't be
A tube of 25 Canadian Maple Leafs occupies roughly the footprint of a deck of playing cards. Twenty tubes — 500 troy ounces of .9999 fine silver — fits in a standard small safe drawer with room to spare. That's conservatively $15,000+ in physical silver in less than a shoebox of space, with zero packaging waste and immediate countability. Tubes are the most space-efficient, audit-friendly format for serious silver accumulation.
The tube itself matters — original mint packaging changes the asset's implied history
Mint-original plastic tubes — especially the hard-shell tubes used by the U.S. Mint for ASEs — provide meaningful protection against edge damage and environmental exposure. Aftermarket tubes exist, but a coin presented in its original mint tube carries a different implied history than one that's been rehoused. We ship all tube products in their original mint packaging whenever possible.
Overlooked Fact — The Canadian Maple Leaf Tube Advantage
Most buyers default to American Silver Eagles for tube purchases because they're the most widely recognized U.S. coin. But Canadian Silver Maple Leafs in tubes of 25 offer a meaningful structural advantage: each tube holds 25 oz of .9999 fine silver versus 20 oz of .999 for ASEs — 25% more silver per transaction at typically lower premiums. Both are globally recognized. Both are IRA-eligible. The Maple Leaf just delivers more silver per tube at a lower per-ounce cost in most market conditions.
Four clear picks based on buyer strategy — every tube serves a different goal.
Low-premium .999 fine silver in tubes of 20 with strong secondary market demand. The right choice for buyers who want maximum silver weight for their dollar without paying sovereign-mint premiums or chasing collector upside.
Tubes of 25 coins, .9999 purity, global recognition, IRA-eligible — at a premium that typically sits below ASE levels. 25% more silver per tube than an ASE tube. My default recommendation for new stackers who want sovereign credibility without overpaying for it.
The most recognized, most liquid silver coin in the domestic market. Dealers, pawn shops, and private buyers know them on sight — tubes of 20 from the U.S. Mint. If ease of resale in any domestic market condition is your priority, ASE tubes are the benchmark.
Limited-issue series from the Royal Mint that close out permanently. Once a design is retired, secondary market premiums reflect that scarcity. Not purely a bullion play — they carry a collector premium — but buyers who accumulated early in closed series have historically seen meaningful appreciation beyond melt value.
It depends on the product and issuing mint. American Silver Eagles come in tubes of 20. Canadian Silver Maple Leafs come in tubes of 25. Australian Perth Mint coins (Kangaroo, Lunar series) typically tube at 20. British coins like the Britannia and Tudor Beasts series range from 10 to 25 per tube depending on the coin's weight and diameter. Specific counts are listed on each product page.
In almost every case, yes — when comparing the same product. Tube pricing at BOLD reflects a lower per-coin premium than single-coin pricing on identical products. The savings are typically $0.25 to $0.75 per coin depending on the product and current market conditions. Over a full tube, that's $5 to $18.75 in per-unit savings before you factor in shipping consolidation.
Yes — provided the coins meet IRS fineness requirements (.999 or higher for silver) and are produced by a sovereign government mint or an approved refiner. All sovereign mint products on this page (ASEs, Maple Leafs, Britannias, Perth Mint coins) meet these requirements. Private mint rounds in tubes may also qualify if they meet fineness standards. Contact our IRA team for confirmation on specific products.
Yes. A monster box is a sealed mint case containing a full run of tubes — typically 25 tubes of 20 American Silver Eagles (500 coins, 500 oz total). Monster boxes represent the highest-volume single-purchase format for silver coins and carry sealed-case premiums on the secondary market. Contact our team for current monster box availability and pricing, as stock fluctuates with mint production and demand cycles.
Maple Leaf tubes typically price at a lower per-ounce premium than ASE tubes under normal market conditions, reflecting the higher sovereign demand premium the U.S. Mint commands in the domestic market. The spread has historically ranged from $0.50 to $2.00 per ounce. Because a Maple Leaf tube also holds 25 coins versus 20 for ASEs, the total premium difference per tube purchase can be meaningful for buyers accumulating in volume.
Keep them in their original mint tubes — the hard plastic housing protects against edge contact and environmental exposure. Store tubes vertically in a climate-controlled environment away from humidity and direct sunlight. For serious accumulation, a fire-rated safe is the standard. Twenty tubes of 25 Maple Leafs (500 oz) will fit in a compact safe with space remaining. Do not store silver in direct contact with rubber, which can cause toning over time.
Stack Smarter — Buy Tubes, Not Singles
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