Silver nanoparticle (AgNP) is an attractive component for hollow MNPs due to its superior electrical conductivity as well as cost effectiveness. [17][18][19][20] The hollow interior will endow with further material economy, high dispersity, increased active surface area, and low density to reduce the sedimentation problem. Significant contribution has been made in the development of hollow Ag functional nanomaterials. Submicrometer-sized hollow Ag spheres were prepared using poly(ethylene oxide)block-poly(methacrylic acid)-sodium dodecylsulfate utilizing strong interaction between the polymer and the surfactant forming complex structure in aqueous solution. [21] Phase-transformable emulsions composed of natural beeswax were also employed for templated synthesis of hollow Ag spheres. [22] Hollow AgNP cages were built with building blocks of AgNPs by layer-by-layer assembly. [23] These methods contain several advantages such as, one-pot methodology [21] and easily removable soft template. [22] However, any specific applications were not explored. To the best of our knowledge, there are no reports on hollow AgNP/polymer nanosphere conductive inks and transparent materials in a facile one-pot procedure.The major challenge for AgNP inks faced is removal of stabilizers before or during sintering process, either by bulk heating or selective welding, [24][25][26] in order to reduce the resistance at the junction. As a consequence, these inks are required to have complicated modifications [27][28][29] or compositions. [30,31] Polymer stabilizers are especially problematic in removal in spite of their good stabilization abilities. In addition, the annealing process often makes the structure denser and therefore leads to decrease in the optical transmittance. A highly conductive material in our earlier study, poly(NVKco-MAH)-g-(NH-(PPO 31 -co-PEO 19 )@Pd hollow nanospheres, implies a solution for this challenge. [32] The ink of the polymer@Pd nanospheres could be inkjet-printed in patterns. The printed patterns of the polymer@Pd nanospheres exhibited excellent conductivity as well as the remarkable catalytic ability even without removal of the organic parts owing to the presence of Pd outside the sphere. However, the potential applications of the Pd-based conductive patterns are limited to plating catalysts, [33][34][35][36] due to the higher cost factor of Pd toward the conductivity. Substituting the Pd shell with the Ag analog will realize printable materials with excellent conductivity without annealing in a better cost factor if the same strategy is available. Here, we report a facile fabrication method for highly conductive hollow polymer@Ag ink. The Development of printable conductive inks for applications in printable electronics by facile methods is important. Here, this study demonstrates a robust and facile one-pot approach for printable polymer@Ag nanospheres with well-defined hollow morphology. The polymer@Ag nanospheres are fabricated through metal-complexation induced phase separation assisted by a functionali...