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What is the Commodity Value of the Paris 2024 Olympic Medals?

Olympic values are priceless, or depending on who you ask, valueless relative to the idea they represent.

That is, unless you sell them. Then they’re worth several thousands of dollars.

But what if, in a totally-unhinged moment, rather than selling a medal whole, you melted it down to its component parts and sold it for scrap?

WHAT MAKES A MEDAL

In spite of the name, an Olympic gold medal is required to be made from at least 92.5% silver and must contain a minimum of 6 grams of gold. All Olympic medals must be at least 60mm in diameter and 3mm thick.

Minting the medals is the responsibility of the Olympic hosts, and since 1972, each Summer Olympic Games has a unique design to their medals.

TOKYO 2020 MEDAL SPECS

While many different medals have been used to make up Olympic medals in the past, iron appears to be a new addition to the list.

The Paris 2024 Olympic medals will include 18 grams of wrought iron in their center. The iron is taken from pieces of the Eiffel Tower that were removed and preserved during renovations.

The iron is cut into a hexagon and polished and surrounded by more metal representing the placement of the athlete.

The medals were designed by Chaumet, a luxury jewelry and watch maker based in Paris.

  • 5,084 medals produced
  • 85mm in diameter
  • 9.2mm thick
  • 18g of iron from the Eiffel Tower
  • 529g: the weight of the gold medal
  • 525g: the weight of the silver medal
  • 455g: the weight of the bronze medal
  • The Sport, discipline and event are written on the edge of the medals in French, the official language of the IOC.

The medals are an identical diameter to the medals from Tokyo; unlike the Tokyo medals, the Paris medals have a consistent 9.2mm thickness throughout. The Tokyo medals were 7.7mm in their thinnest part and 12.1mm in their thickest part.

The Paris gold and silver medals will be slightly lighter than in Tokyo, while the bronze medal will be heavier.

Gold Medal

  • Weight: 529 grams
  • Composition: 6 grams of gold plated on pure silver around wrought iron center
  • Value:
    • 6 grams of gold @$77.20 = $463.20
    • 505 grams of pure silver @$0.94 = $474.40
    • 18 grams of wrought iron = negligible
    • Total Commoditized Value = $937.60
    • Tokyo 2020 Value: $790.34 (+$147.26/18.6%)

Silver Medal

  • Weight: 525 grams
  • Composition: Pure silver around a wrought iron center
  • Value:
    • 507 grams of pure silver @$0.94 = $476.58
    • 18 grams of wrought iron = negligible
    • Total Commoditized Value = $476.58
    • Tokyo 2020 Value: $440 (+$36.58/8.3%)

Bronze Medal

  • Weight: 455 grams
  • Composition: “Red Brass” (95% copper/5% zinc)
  • Value:
    • 415.15 grams copper @$0.0092 = $3.85
    • 21.85 grams zinc @$0.0027 = $0.06
    • 18 grams of wrought iron = negligible
    • Total Commoditized Value = $3.91
    • Tokyo 2020 Value: $4.04 (-$0.13/-3.2%)

For the second-straight Games, the silver medals are made of pure silver. In Rio, they were made of 93% silver and 7% copper, making a significant difference in the price of the medal involved.

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Luis
1 month ago

Extremely educational. Now you know the gold medals are made of silver

Stop the insanity
1 month ago

Those medals are Fugly!

Swimmer
1 month ago

I think swimswam might be a little excited for the Olympics to start and are just churning out random articles to pass the time.

big purple dinosaur
Reply to  Swimmer
1 month ago

Swimming has gotten so acoustic lately where anything even a little bit fun gets weird comments like this.

Stingy
Reply to  big purple dinosaur
1 month ago

I don’t really see OP’s comment as weird/made in a negative tone? It’s not like they are complaining about these articles or anything..

Honest Observer
1 month ago

Interesting article. By the time you arranged to have your medal melted down, the different metals separated, and got the bid side (not the offered side) from a precious metals dealer, it’s doubtful you’d clear the intrinsic value. And, as you point out, you’d have to be unhinged to do this in the first place.

Orange Mandela
1 month ago

TWO QUESTIONS:

-1- What is the IRON supposed to SYMBOLIZE (according to the designers or the organizers)?

-2- What does the REVERSE of the medal look like?

FST
Reply to  Orange Mandela
1 month ago

L’Hexagone (the haxagon) is a nickname for France, because of the shape of the country. So I imagine it’s a reference to that.

The reverse is Nike emerging from the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens. The Acropolis is in the background on the one side and the Eiffel tower on the other side.
In between Nike’s wings are the Olympic rings.

Last edited 1 month ago by FST
run-dmc
Reply to  Orange Mandela
1 month ago

Thanks for asking about Iron.

These four metals- Gold, Silver, Bronze, and Iron- are written about by Daniel in the Bible:

Daniel 2:45 Forasmuch as thou sawest that the stone was cut out of the mountain without hands, and that it brake in pieces the iron, the brass, the clay, the silver, and the gold; the great God hath made known to the king what shall come to pass hereafter: and the dream is certain, and the interpretation thereof sure.

The hexagon represents the number 6. When you see the three medals on the podium at the medal ceremony, it represents the number 666:

Revelation 13:18: Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the… Read more »

FST
Reply to  run-dmc
1 month ago

It must be wonderful to have enough free time in the day to come with this 😀

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  FST
1 month ago

That’s Michael Andrew on the beaches of Costa Rica with plenty of time to spare. It’s God’s will that he failed to qualify for the 2024 Summer Olympics.

Andy
Reply to  run-dmc
1 month ago

I really want to know what are you smoking. Must be good stuff

wardrummer
Reply to  Andy
1 month ago

The man speaks the truth it’s sad to see people like you that can’t hear the truth when it’s spoken to you.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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