Zinc Price History: Monthly Global Price Since 1992

Zinc price history in US dollars per metric ton (LME) — IMF Primary Commodity Prices via FRED, monthly since 1992. Covers the 2006-2007 record and the 2022 energy-crisis spike. CSV and Excel, free.

Zinc’s primary use is galvanising steel to prevent corrosion, which ties its demand closely to construction and infrastructure. It is frequently co-mined with lead. This dataset tracks the IMF Primary Commodity Prices benchmark, the LME zinc cash price, published monthly in US dollars per metric ton and distributed via FRED under the code PZINCUSDM, with continuous coverage since 1992. China is the largest producer.

Dataset: Zinc Price (1992–2026) · Updated 2026-03-01

Latest Value
3,182.26
USD/metric ton · Mar 1, 2026
Historical Percentile
91th
Historically high
Historical Average
1,909.68
USD/metric ton · 411 observations
Historical Range
HIGH Dec 1, 2006
4,381.45
LOW Aug 1, 2002
748.81
USD/metric ton

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Loading FRED data…

Source: IMF Primary Commodity Prices · International Monetary Fund (via FRED)


Macro Takeaway

As a galvanising metal, zinc is a construction-cycle play, but its supply side is unusually concentrated in energy-intensive smelting, which links it to the same power-cost dynamics that drive aluminium. It is often produced jointly with lead, so the two move together.

Zinc spiked to a record near $4,600 per ton in 2006-2007 on a supply deficit, then crashed in the financial crisis. Europe’s 2021-2022 energy crisis forced smelter shutdowns and drove zinc back to a multi-year high near $4,500 per ton in 2022, before restarting supply and weak Chinese construction pulled prices lower.


Dataset Overview

IndicatorGlobal Price of Zinc (1992–2026)
GeographyChina (largest producer), Peru, Australia, India
FrequencyMonthly
Period1992–2026
VariablesDate, zinc price (US dollars per metric ton)
FormatCSV, Excel (XLSX)
SourcesInternational Monetary Fund — Primary Commodity Prices (FRED series PZINCUSDM)
Last updated

Dataset Variables

The CSV and Excel files contain the following columns. Each row represents one calendar month.

ColumnTypeDescription
dateDate (YYYY-MM-DD)Observation month (first day of month)
zinc_priceFloatGlobal price of zinc, US dollars per metric ton

Column names match the CSV headers exactly.


Download the Complete Dataset

The full dataset is available in CSV and Excel formats — monthly observations covering more than three decades.

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FRED Direct CSV Access

The underlying data is published in the Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) database under the series code PZINCUSDM, sourced from the IMF Primary Commodity Prices dataset:

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph.csv?id=PZINCUSDM

The Eco3min dataset mirrors the same monthly series, packaged in a stable, versionable CSV with consistent column names — designed for direct ingestion in Python, R, or any data pipeline. The URL never changes, making it suitable for automated scripts.

Direct CSV Access — Eco3min Structured Dataset

https://eco3min.fr/dataset/zinc-price.csv

This URL returns the complete dataset in CSV format. It can be used directly in pandas, R, curl, or any data tool.


Using the Dataset in Python

import pandas as pd

url = "https://eco3min.fr/dataset/zinc-price.csv"
df = pd.read_csv(url, parse_dates=["date"])

print(df.head())
print(df["zinc_price"].describe())

df.plot(x="date", y="zinc_price", title="Zinc Price", legend=False)

Using the Dataset in R

library(readr)

url <- "https://eco3min.fr/dataset/zinc-price.csv"
df <- read_csv(url)

head(df)
summary(df$zinc_price)

Both examples load the dataset directly from the URL — no download or API key required.


Methodology

The IMF reports the zinc price in US dollars per metric ton, based on the London Metal Exchange (LME) cash price for high-grade (98% pure) zinc.

Values are monthly averages, which smooth the intra-month swings visible in daily futures and physical quotes. The series begins in 1992.

This dataset is updated monthly via an automated pull from the FRED API (series PZINCUSDM) by an Eco3min pipeline running on GitHub Actions, which regenerates the cleaned CSV and Excel files and refreshes the page metadata.


Data Quality & Provider Notes

The IMF/benchmark price is a widely cited physical-market reference. A few provider-specific points matter when using this series.

  • Release latency. The IMF publishes Primary Commodity Prices monthly, typically in the first week of the following month. FRED ingests the update shortly after, and Eco3min mirrors it with a monthly pull. The series is not a real-time price.
  • Monthly average vs futures spot. This series is a monthly average. It will differ from any single exchange settlement, and a monthly average necessarily understates intra-month peaks.
  • Revisions. Prices are market-derived and not subject to the vintage revisions of survey-based macro series, though the IMF can restate recent observations.
  • Alternative sources. ICE futures and the originating auction or indicator bodies provide higher-frequency or contract-specific quotes.

Common Pitfalls When Using This Series

  1. Confusing nominal and real prices. This series is nominal. Comparing an early-1990s reading to a recent one without adjusting for cumulative inflation overstates the real change. Deflating by CPI gives the true purchasing-power move.
  2. Reading the monthly average as a market price. Headlines quote exchange futures; this dataset reports the monthly benchmark average. The two diverge most during fast-moving rallies.
  3. Unit confusion. This series is the LME cash price in US dollars per metric ton; SHFE (Shanghai) zinc quotes and regional premiums differ.

Historical Regimes

1992–2005 — Low and cyclical. Adequate supply held zinc in a low range.

2006–2007 — First record. A supply deficit drove zinc to a record near $4,600 per ton.

2008–2020 — Crisis and range. The financial crisis crashed zinc, which then traded in a wide cyclical band.

2021–2022 — Energy-crisis spike. European smelter shutdowns amid the energy crisis drove zinc to a multi-year high near $4,500 per ton in 2022.

2023–2026 — Correction. Restarting supply and weak Chinese construction pulled prices lower.


Related Macroeconomic Datasets


Commodity Price Hub

This dataset is part of the Eco3min commodity price repository — energy, metals, agricultural softs, and grains, all sourced from IMF Primary Commodity Prices via FRED.

Explore the Commodity Price Hub


Sources

  • International Monetary Fund — Primary Commodity Prices, Global Price of Zinc
  • Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis — FRED database, series PZINCUSDM
  • London Metal Exchange (LME) cash settlement — basis underlying the IMF series

Dataset Reference

Last updated — 3 June 2026

Disclaimer – Financial Information: The analyses, commentary, and content published on eco3min.fr are provided for informational and educational purposes only. They do not constitute investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell financial instruments. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investment decisions involve risk and are the sole responsibility of the reader.