Pricing scrap for export markets is not the same as pricing for local yards. Export buyers mills, foundries, refiners, and large recyclers price scrap based on recovery yield, international benchmarks, logistics efficiency, and compliance risk, not convenience. Sellers who rely on domestic pricing logic routinely leave 10–40% value on the table.
This guide explains how export scrap pricing actually works, what buyers look at, and how to structure pricing for maximum returns in international markets.
Why Export Scrap Pricing Is Different
Local scrap prices are driven by:
- Immediate clearance needs
- Limited buyer competition
- Yard-level processing economics
Export scrap prices are driven by:
- Global metal demand and mill consumption
- Consistent bulk supply
- Clean, specification-grade material
- Freight and port efficiency
In export markets, pricing starts at the mill not the yard.
Step 1: Understand Export-Grade Scrap Categories
Not all scrap prices equally in export markets. Buyers strongly prefer:
High-Performing Export Scrap
- HMS 1 & HMS 2 (clean, heavy steel)
- Bundled or baled steel scrap
- Clean copper grades (Millberry, Birch)
- Aluminium grades (Tense, Taint/Tabor)
- Stainless steel and alloy scrap
Poorly Priced for Export
- Mixed or contaminated scrap
- Low-density or light gauge scrap
- Unsegregated industrial waste
Export pricing rewards discipline and segregation.
Step 2: Track Global Benchmarks
Export buyers price scrap against:
- International steel and metal benchmarks
- Regional import prices (CIF basis)
- Demand cycles of mills and smelters
Local yard rates are often lagging indicators and should never be your primary pricing reference for exports.
A structured overview of scrap price behaviour is explained here:
https://scrap.trade/guide-to-scrap-metal-prices-by-scrap-trade/
Step 3: Factor Freight & Incoterms Correctly
Export pricing is always tied to delivery terms:
- FOB (Free On Board): Buyer pays ocean freight
- CFR/CIF: Seller includes freight (and insurance for CIF)
Your net price =
Export sale price – inland transport – port costs – inspection – documentation
Many exporters overprice scrap by ignoring true landed cost.
Step 4: Price by Net Recoverable Metal, Not Gross Weight
Export buyers assess:
- Yield after shredding or melting
- Contamination loss
- Non-metal content
For example:
- Clean HMS = higher yield = higher price
- Mixed demolition scrap = lower yield = discounted price
This is why clean, segregated scrap consistently outperforms mixed scrap, even at the same weight.
Step 5: Use Buyer Competition to Discover Real Prices
Single-buyer export pricing is a mistake.
Professional exporters:
- Offer the same lot to multiple buyers
- Compare net offers (after logistics)
- Choose buyers with consistent settlement history
This is where B2B marketplaces outperform brokers.
Platforms like Scrap Trade allow sellers to list export-ready scrap lots, receive offers from verified international buyers, and compare pricing transparently without commission-driven intermediaries.
How pricing and trading works online:
https://scrap.trade/how-scrap-trade-online-works/
Step 6: Adjust Pricing for Volume & Consistency
Export buyers pay premiums for:
- Large, repeatable volumes
- Consistent monthly supply
- Predictable grades
One-off shipments price lower than contract-style or repeat export lots.
If you export regularly, pricing should improve over time not decline.
Common Export Scrap Pricing Mistakes
- Using domestic yard prices as benchmarks
- Ignoring contamination penalties
- Underestimating freight and port charges
- Accepting the first buyer offer
- Pricing without understanding buyer yield
Export pricing mistakes usually show up after the shipment, when margins disappear.
FAQs – Export Scrap Pricing
Why do export buyers pay more than local buyers?
Because mills recover metal more efficiently and buy in bulk.
Is export pricing always higher than domestic pricing?
Not always but for clean, bulk scrap, it usually is.
Do export prices change frequently?
Yes. Export markets follow global demand cycles, not local supply.
Can small exporters get good export prices?
Yes, if scrap is clean and correctly priced.
Should I negotiate export scrap prices?
Always. Competitive bidding is the strongest pricing tool.
Compliance & Risk Still Affect Pricing
Export buyers price risk into offers. Pricing improves when:
- Documentation is clean
- Scrap is compliant and non-hazardous
- Buyers trust the seller’s consistency
Poor compliance = price discounts or rejected cargo.
Authority, Trust & Platform Legitimacy
Scrap Trade operates as a global scrap trading marketplace owned by:
MOBEIUS TECHNOLOGIES PTY LTD
Australian Registered Company
ABN: 49 693 656 932
ACN: 693 656 932
The platform aligns with:
- Australian Business Registration requirements
- Privacy-compliant data handling
- Secure platform standards
- Global accessibility for exporters and buyers
Learn more about the organization:
https://scrap.trade/about-us/
Conclusion: Export Scrap Pricing Is a Skill, Not a Guess
Export scrap pricing is not about chasing the highest number it’s about maximizing net recovery after logistics, compliance, and yield.
Sellers who price correctly:
- Access stronger global demand
- Avoid margin erosion
- Build long-term buyer relationships
- Scale exports with confidence
Start Pricing Scrap for Export with Verified Buyers
Create your account and access real international scrap pricing here:
https://scraptrade.com.au/register