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Platinum Price History (per kilogram)

Explore platinum price history across multiple timeframes, from recent intraday movement to longer-term price trends. Use the charts below to compare short-term volatility with broader historical direction.

Showing charts in USD / kg.

6 Hour Chart

Loaded 360 points

1 Week Chart

Loaded 9814 points

1 Month Chart

Loaded 673 points

1 Year Chart

Loaded 324 points
Platinum Price History Overview

Platinum price history charts help show how the market has changed over time. Shorter timeframes can reveal recent momentum and day-to-day volatility, while longer charts help show whether the metal has been trending upward, downward, or moving sideways over broader periods.

Historical charts are useful for comparing current prices with past highs, lows, and turning points. They can also help identify whether a recent move is part of a larger long-term trend or just short-term noise.

You can also switch between price per ounce, price per gram, and price per kilogram. Changing the unit does not change the market trend or timestamps — it only changes the displayed price scale.

What Affects Platinum Prices?

Platinum prices may be influenced by auto catalyst demand, industrial usage, jewelry demand, currency moves, and supply conditions. Because platinum has both industrial and precious-metal characteristics, its price drivers can be more mixed than gold’s.

Platinum price history can show how industrial demand and supply dynamics interact over time, especially during changes in auto-sector demand or broader commodity cycles.

How To Read Platinum Price History Charts

A short timeframe such as 6 hours or 1 week is useful for spotting recent price swings and short-term trend direction. A longer timeframe such as 1 month or 1 year is better for understanding bigger cycles and comparing today’s price with earlier market conditions.

When reviewing any price history chart, it helps to look at the overall direction, the size of recent pullbacks, and whether price is approaching a previous high or low. Historical charts do not predict future prices, but they do provide useful context for interpreting current market conditions.

If you are comparing product sizes or smaller quantities, viewing the chart in grams or kilograms may be more intuitive. Investors looking at spot-market conventions may prefer the ounce view.

Platinum Price History vs Current Price

A history page is most useful when paired with a live price page. The live view shows where the market is now, while the history view helps explain how the metal reached the current level.

To compare the latest intraday movement with the broader chart trend, visit Platinum price today .

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