Live Jordan copper rate in JOD, by weight.
The international copper spot price is quoted in US dollars and is the global benchmark from which every local rate is derived. Prices exclude dealer premiums, making charges, and local taxes.
Range and changes are for the international copper price in US dollars. Record high reflects our available price history.
| Weight | Copper Value (JOD) |
|---|---|
| Per Pound | د.ا 4.47 |
| Per Kilo | د.ا 9.86 |
| Per Tonne | د.ا 9,856.91 |
Chart values are in US dollars. Per gram, tola and ounce figures above are USD. Today’s local-currency price uses the live exchange rate; historical values stay in USD because reliable historical exchange-rate data isn’t available. Candles are reconstructed from real high, low and average data.
Turn the international USD spot price into a local per-gram, per-tola and per-ounce rate in a few simple steps.
| Common purity | High-grade cathode ~99.9% |
| Typical forms | Cathode, wire, tube, industrial |
| Pricing unit | Pound |
| Hallmark / grade | Exchange-grade (COMEX) |
This page shows the live copper price in Jordan, quoted in JOD. Because copper trades globally in US dollars per pound, the local price reflects both the international copper price and the USD/JOD exchange rate.
Copper is the world’s most important industrial base metal, so central to the global economy that it is nicknamed “Dr. Copper” for its ability to signal economic health.
It is quoted in US dollars and used everywhere from construction wiring to power grids and electric vehicles, making its price a real-time read on industrial demand.
Copper demand rises and falls with construction and manufacturing, making it a barometer of the economic cycle.
EVs, renewable power, and grid upgrades all use large amounts of copper, supporting long-term demand.
Strikes, grades, and new projects at major mines shift the supply side and the price.
Copper is priced nationally, so the Jordan rate shown above applies across all major cities — including:
The live copper price in Jordan is shown above in JOD, per pound and by other weights, refreshed through the trading day.
It is the international copper spot price (US dollars per pound) converted into JOD at the live exchange rate, then scaled to each weight.
Two forces move it: the global copper price and the JOD exchange rate, so a weaker JOD raises the local price even when the dollar price is flat.
Its broad industrial use means copper demand reflects overall economic activity, so traders treat its price as a diagnostic of global growth.
Copper is quoted in US dollars and is more sensitive to industrial demand than the precious metals.
Electric vehicles, renewable energy, and grid expansion are copper-intensive, adding a structural source of demand.