Identification Guide

Copper vs Brass vs Bronze: How to Tell the Difference

April 7, 2026 8 min read

Copper, brass, and bronze look similar at first glance — they're all reddish or golden metals with decent weight and non-magnetic properties. But knowing how to tell them apart matters because they have vastly different scrap values: copper pays $3.50-4.50 per pound, brass pays $2.00-3.00, and bronze pays $1.50-2.50.

Misidentifying these metals can cost you money at the scrap yard or cause you to toss valuable material in the wrong pile. This visual identification guide teaches you simple, reliable methods to distinguish copper from brass from bronze using color, weight, sound, and basic testing.

Why Proper Identification Matters

Beyond scrap value, proper metal identification helps with:

Here's the price difference in real terms:

Metal Price per Pound (2026) Value of 50 lbs
Copper $3.50 – $4.50 $175 – $225
Brass $2.00 – $3.00 $100 – $150
Bronze $1.50 – $2.50 $75 – $125

Bottom line: A 50-pound pile of clean copper wire is worth $175-225. If you mistakenly bring it as "mixed brass and copper," you might get paid brass rates and lose $75-100.

Quick Visual Identification Guide

Here's the fastest way to visually distinguish these three metals:

Metal Color Composition Typical Uses
Copper Reddish-orange (bright)
Greenish patina when aged
Pure copper (99%+ Cu) Electrical wire, plumbing pipe, roofing, HVAC coils
Brass Yellow-gold
Muted gold when tarnished
Copper + zinc alloy Fittings, keys, locks, instruments, decorative hardware
Bronze Reddish-brown to dark brown
Greenish patina when aged
Copper + tin alloy (sometimes with other metals) Statues, bearings, marine hardware, bells

The Magnet Test: Your First Filter

Before you start color analysis, run the magnet test. This eliminates confusion with steel or iron (which can be painted or coated to look like copper/brass).

How to do it:

  1. Grab any common household magnet (fridge magnet works fine)
  2. Hold it against the metal surface
  3. If it sticks strongly, it's ferrous metal (steel or iron) — not copper, brass, or bronze
  4. If it doesn't stick at all, proceed with color and other tests

Important note: Copper, brass, and bronze are all non-magnetic. If your magnet sticks, you're dealing with steel, stainless steel (some grades), or cast iron.

Visual Color Inspection: The Most Reliable Method

Color is your best field identification tool. Clean a small section of the metal with sandpaper or a wire brush to remove oxidation, paint, or dirt — then look at the true color underneath.

Copper Color

Fresh/clean: Bright reddish-orange, almost like a shiny penny (which is copper-plated zinc)

Aged/oxidized: Develops a green patina (verdigris) from exposure to moisture and air. Think Statue of Liberty green.

In-between: Dull reddish-brown when lightly tarnished

Pro tip: If you scratch the surface and see bright orange-red underneath, it's copper. The color is unmistakable once you've seen it a few times.

Brass Color

Fresh/clean: Bright yellow-gold, shinier than bronze, less red than copper

Aged/tarnished: Dull yellowish-gold or brownish-gold, loses its shine

Common descriptor: "Gold-ish but not as orange as copper"

Brass doesn't typically develop a green patina like copper — it tarnishes to a duller gold/brown. Door handles, keys, and plumbing fittings are almost always brass.

Bronze Color

Fresh/clean: Reddish-brown to dark brown with a hint of gold

Aged/oxidized: Can develop greenish patina like copper (but usually darker overall)

Common descriptor: "Looks like old copper but darker and less vibrant"

Bronze is harder to distinguish from copper by color alone. When in doubt, use the hardness test (below) or check the application — statues, sculptures, and marine hardware are usually bronze.

Where You Find Each Metal in Your Home and Projects

Context is a huge clue. Here's where you'll typically find each metal:

Copper Sources

Brass Sources

Bronze Sources

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Advanced Identification: Testing Hardness and Sound

If visual inspection isn't conclusive, try these additional tests:

Hardness Test

Copper: Relatively soft. You can scratch it with a knife or file easily. Bends without breaking.

Brass: Harder than copper but still workable. Scratches with effort. Bends but resists more than copper.

Bronze: Hardest of the three. Difficult to scratch or bend. More brittle than brass.

How to do it: Use a file or knife to try scratching an inconspicuous area. The easier it scratches, the more likely it's copper. If it resists scratching and feels very hard, it's probably bronze.

Sound Test

This is an old-school method but surprisingly effective:

  1. Hold the metal object loosely (don't grip tightly)
  2. Tap it with another piece of metal or a coin
  3. Listen to the ring:

This works best on larger, thicker pieces. Thin sheet metal or wire won't produce a clear tone.

Value Comparison: What You'll Actually Get Paid

Here's what you can expect at a Toronto/GTA scrap yard as of 2026:

Copper (clean, bare bright): $3.50-4.50/lb — the highest payout. This is uncoated, unsoldered, pure copper wire or pipe.

Copper (#1 grade): $3.00-3.80/lb — clean copper pipe, some oxidation okay, no solder or fittings attached.

Copper (#2 grade): $2.50-3.20/lb — painted, soldered, or with fittings still attached.

Insulated copper wire: $1.00-2.00/lb — depends on insulation thickness. Stripping the insulation bumps you to bare bright rates.

Brass (yellow brass): $2.00-3.00/lb — clean fittings, fixtures, keys. Higher end for clean, sorted brass.

Brass (red brass): $2.20-3.20/lb — slightly higher copper content, often in valves and plumbing parts.

Bronze: $1.50-2.50/lb — varies widely based on tin content and cleanliness.

Key takeaway: Always ask your scrap yard about grading before you drop off. Different yards have different standards, and knowing the grading system helps you argue for better rates if your material is clean.

When to DIY Sort vs. When to Call for Pickup

DIY sorting makes sense if:

Calling for pickup makes sense if:

Our Premium Plus service offers same-day pickup, difficult access removal, and professional handling — perfect for larger jobs where convenience outweighs the scrap value.

Conclusion

Telling copper from brass from bronze comes down to color, context, and a few simple tests. Copper is bright reddish-orange, brass is yellow-gold, and bronze is reddish-brown. The magnet test eliminates steel, and the scratch test confirms hardness.

For scrappers and DIYers, proper identification can mean the difference between $75 and $225 for the same pile of metal. For homeowners just clearing clutter, understanding what you have helps you decide whether to sort for cash or simply book a free pickup and move on with your day.

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