A diamond is rarely just a purchase. It marks an engagement, an anniversary, a milestone meant to be remembered — which is exactly why the fear of choosing the wrong thing can feel so heavy. How do you know a diamond is genuine? What separates a truly brilliant stone from a beautiful imitation? The reassuring answer is that you do not need a gemologist’s loupe to shop with confidence. You need a simple framework: a clear idea of what “real” means, an understanding of how quality is measured, and the proof to insist on. This guide walks you through all three.
Before you can spot a “fake,” it helps to know what you are comparing. Not everything that isn’t a mined diamond is an imitation — and this is where most buyers get confused.
| Natural diamond | Lab-grown diamond | Simulant (CZ / moissanite) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it is | Formed in the earth over billions of years | Grown in a lab — same carbon crystal | A look-alike made of a different material |
| A real diamond? | Yes | Yes — chemically & optically identical | No |
| Hardness (Mohs) | 10 | 10 | CZ ~8 · Moissanite ~9.25 |
| Sparkle | Balanced white & coloured light | Same as natural | Moissanite shows extra rainbow fire; CZ dulls over time |
| Price | Highest | Lower than natural | Lowest |
The key takeaway: a lab-grown diamond is a real diamond — same hardness, same brilliance — simply created in a controlled environment. A simulant such as cubic zirconia (CZ) or moissanite only imitates the look. When someone worries about a “fake,” they usually mean a simulant being passed off as the real thing. Certification, covered below, removes all doubt.
A few home tests are widely shared. They are useful for a first hint, but treat them as indicators, not verdicts — a good simulant can pass several of them.
An honest caveat: these tests cannot assess quality, and they are unreliable on stones already set in jewellery. For a purchase of this value, the only real proof is a certified grading report — which is exactly what the 4Cs and certification provide.
Every diamond’s quality — and its price — comes down to four characteristics. Understanding them turns you from a nervous buyer into an informed one.
A simple way to hold it in mind: cut for beauty, colour and clarity for purity, carat for presence — balanced to your budget.
This is the single most important step in identifying a real diamond. A grading certificate is an independent, laboratory-verified report of a stone’s authenticity and its 4Cs — your guarantee in writing.
Look for reports from internationally recognised laboratories such as GIA, IGI, SGL or IGL. On the certificate, check:
Red flags: a seller who cannot produce the certificate, a report from an unknown or in-house-only lab, grades that seem too generous for the price, or reluctance to let you verify the report online. A genuine diamond has nothing to hide.
Keep this handy — screenshot it or print it before you shop:
The surest way to identify a real diamond is to buy where authenticity is a promise, not an afterthought. That is the difference three decades of trust make.
From delicate solitaires to statement diamond necklaces, every piece is chosen to be treasured.
Identifying a real diamond comes down to three things: knowing what “real” means, understanding the 4Cs, and insisting on certification. Do that, and your next diamond will be chosen with clarity and total confidence.
Ready to see certified brilliance for yourself? Explore our diamond collection, then bring your questions to us. Book an appointment at our Borivali (W) or Thane (W) showroom, request a call, or schedule a video consultation from wherever you are — and let our experts help you choose a diamond you will treasure for a lifetime.
Yes. A lab-grown diamond has the same chemical, physical and optical properties as a mined diamond — it is real, simply created in a controlled laboratory rather than the earth. It differs from a simulant such as cubic zirconia or moissanite, which only resembles a diamond.
Home checks like the fog test, water test and read-through test can offer a quick hint, but they are not reliable — a good simulant can pass them, and they do not work well on mounted stones. The only dependable proof is a grading certificate from a recognised laboratory.
Look for internationally recognised laboratories such as GIA, IGI, SGL or IGL. What matters most is that the report is independent, verifiable on the lab’s official website, and clearly states the 4Cs and whether the diamond is natural or lab-grown.
A real diamond conducts heat efficiently, so any fog clears almost instantly. If the fog lingers for a few seconds, the stone may be an imitation — though this quick test alone should not be your only check.
For any diamond of meaningful value, a certificate is worth asking for. For very small accent stones, jewellers often certify the finished piece rather than each stone — so ask how your specific jewellery is certified and request it in writing.