Not all scrap metal is created equal. While steel and cast iron might earn you pennies per pound, copper, brass, and aluminum can pay significantly more — sometimes 20-40x as much. Understanding which metals are worth scrapping and how to identify them can turn your garage cleanout into actual cash, or at minimum help you understand what's worth the effort to separate and haul.
This complete 2026 value guide breaks down current scrap metal prices in the Toronto and GTA market, teaches you how to identify each metal type, and shows you where to find the most valuable scrap around your home or job site.
The Metal Value Hierarchy: What Pays the Most?
Here's the current pricing landscape for scrap metal in the Toronto/GTA market as of 2026. Prices fluctuate based on global commodity markets, but these ranges represent typical payouts at local scrap yards:
| Metal Type | Value per Pound (CAD) | Common Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Copper | $3.50 – $4.50 | Wire, pipe, motors, HVAC coils |
| Brass | $2.00 – $3.00 | Fittings, valves, keys, shells |
| Aluminum | $0.50 – $1.00 | Siding, cans, rims, window frames |
| Stainless Steel | $0.40 – $0.80 | Sinks, appliances, restaurant equipment |
| Steel (Ferrous) | $0.10 – $0.25 | Beams, car bodies, appliances |
| Cast Iron | $0.10 – $0.20 | Radiators, engine blocks, cookware |
Key takeaway: Copper is the king of scrap metal. A 100-pound pile of clean copper wire could net you $350-450, while the same weight in steel might only pay $10-25. That's why professional scrappers prioritize copper whenever possible.
How to Identify Each Metal Type
Proper identification is everything. Scrap yards pay different rates for different grades, and mixing metals together often means you'll get paid the lowest rate in the pile. Here's how to tell them apart:
Copper
Color: Bright reddish-orange when clean, greenish patina when weathered
Weight: Heavy for its size
Magnet test: Non-magnetic
Common forms: Electrical wire, plumbing pipe, HVAC coils, motors, roofing
Copper comes in different grades. Bright copper (clean, uncoated wire) pays the most. Insulated copper wire pays less because of the plastic coating. Copper pipe is mid-grade. Always strip insulation off wire if you have time — it significantly increases value.
Brass
Color: Yellow-gold, sometimes with a reddish tint
Weight: Heavy (denser than aluminum, lighter than copper)
Magnet test: Non-magnetic
Common forms: Door handles, faucets, plumbing fittings, keys, ammunition shells
Brass is an alloy of copper and zinc. It's easier to identify by color than copper — if it's gold-ish and non-magnetic, it's likely brass. Plumbing fixtures are a goldmine (literally).
Aluminum
Color: Silver-white, doesn't rust
Weight: Very light for its size
Magnet test: Non-magnetic
Common forms: Beverage cans, siding, window frames, car rims, gutters
Aluminum is easy to spot because it's so light. If it's silver, lightweight, and non-magnetic, it's aluminum. Watch out for steel that's been painted silver — the magnet test will catch it.
Stainless Steel
Color: Silver-gray, shiny, doesn't rust easily
Weight: Heavy
Magnet test: Usually non-magnetic (some grades are slightly magnetic)
Common forms: Kitchen sinks, restaurant equipment, appliances, medical tools
Stainless is tricky because it looks like regular steel but is worth 3-5x more. The magnet test isn't foolproof here — some stainless grades are slightly magnetic. When in doubt, look for stamping like "304" or "316" (common stainless grades).
Steel (Ferrous)
Color: Gray, prone to rust
Weight: Heavy
Magnet test: Strongly magnetic
Common forms: I-beams, car bodies, appliances, rebar, sheet metal
Steel is everywhere and pays the least. If a magnet sticks to it strongly, it's steel. Still worth scrapping in bulk, but don't expect big payouts per pound.
Cast Iron
Color: Dark gray to black
Weight: Very heavy, brittle
Magnet test: Magnetic
Common forms: Radiators, engine blocks, cookware, old pipes
Cast iron is recognizable by its weight and brittleness — it'll crack or shatter if dropped, while steel bends. Old radiators and engine blocks are classic examples.
Best Places to Find Valuable Scrap Metal
You don't need to be a contractor to find valuable scrap. Here's where to look:
- Your own home: Old appliances, water heaters, HVAC units, copper pipe from renovations, aluminum siding, stainless steel sinks
- Renovation projects: Copper wire pulled from walls, brass fixtures replaced during updates, old radiators, steel beams
- Curbside pickings: People throw out working appliances, water tanks, metal furniture, and more on bulk pickup days
- Construction sites: With permission, you can often haul away scrap steel, copper offcuts, aluminum flashing
- Commercial teardowns: Restaurants and warehouses have stainless steel equipment, HVAC systems, and commercial-grade metal fixtures
- Auto shops and mechanics: Car batteries, aluminum rims, catalytic converters (high value), brake rotors
Have Mixed Scrap? We Take It All for Free
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Book Free Pickup →How to Maximize Your Scrap Metal Value
If you're planning to sell scrap for cash, these tips will significantly increase your payout:
- Separate by type: Don't mix copper with steel. Scrap yards pay by the lowest grade in a mixed pile. Keep high-value metals separate.
- Strip insulation from copper wire: Bare bright copper pays 2-3x more than insulated wire. A wire stripper tool pays for itself in one load.
- Remove non-metal attachments: Cut off plastic handles, rubber gaskets, and wooden parts. The cleaner the metal, the better the price.
- Know your grades: Scrap yards differentiate between clean copper pipe vs. coated copper vs. burnt wire. Ask ahead about grading.
- Bring large quantities: Some yards offer better rates for bulk loads (500+ lbs). If you have a small amount, consider accumulating before hauling.
- Shop around: Scrap prices vary between yards. Call 2-3 local yards to compare rates before driving over.
When Scrapping Doesn't Make Sense (And When It Does)
Scrapping for cash makes sense if:
- You have high-value metals like copper, brass, or aluminum in significant quantities (50+ lbs)
- You already have a truck and time to haul to a scrap yard
- You enjoy the treasure hunt aspect and want to maximize return
Scrapping for cash doesn't make sense if:
- You only have low-grade steel or cast iron in small quantities (you'll earn $5-15 for hours of work)
- You don't have a truck or easy way to transport heavy metal
- Your time is worth more than $15-20/hour (which is what you'll average on most small jobs)
The middle ground: Use a free pickup service like Scrap Metal Men to clear the junk without the hassle. You won't get cash, but you also won't spend 3 hours loading, driving, unloading, and waiting at a scrap yard. For most homeowners, time saved beats the $20-50 they'd earn.
Environmental Impact: Why Every Metal Matters
Even low-value metals like steel are worth recycling for environmental reasons:
- Recycling steel saves 74% of the energy needed to produce new steel from iron ore
- Recycling aluminum saves 95% of the energy compared to mining and refining bauxite ore
- Recycling copper saves 85% of the energy needed for primary production
- Every ton of steel recycled saves 2,500 lbs of iron ore, 1,400 lbs of coal, and 120 lbs of limestone
Metal recycling is one of the most effective forms of resource conservation. Unlike paper or plastic, metal can be recycled infinitely without loss of quality. The steel in a 1960s car could be in a 2026 appliance today — and it'll still be in circulation in 2100.
Conclusion
Understanding scrap metal values helps you make smart decisions about what to keep, what to scrap for cash, and what to simply have hauled away for free. Copper, brass, and aluminum are the money metals — worth separating and hauling yourself if you have the means. Steel and cast iron are volume metals — worth recycling for environmental reasons but rarely worth your time for the cash return.
Whether you're clearing a renovation, cleaning out a garage, or running a contracting business, knowing your metals means you can maximize value while contributing to a circular economy that reduces mining, energy use, and waste.
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