Same diamond. Different origin.An honest comparison.
A lab grown diamond is a real diamond — chemically, physically, and optically identical to one mined from the earth. The only meaningful difference is where it came from, and what that means for the price. Here is the full picture, told straight.
If they're identical, what's actually different?
This is the question almost everyone arrives with, so let us answer it plainly. A lab grown diamond and a mined diamond are the same material — pure carbon, crystallised in the identical structure. They have the same hardness, the same brilliance, the same fire. Neither you nor a jeweller can tell them apart by eye.
There are only three real differences, and only two of them matter to most buyers: how the diamond was formed, what it costs, and how it behaves on the resale market years later. Everything else — how it looks, how it wears, how it is graded — is the same.
"A lab grown diamond is not an imitation of a diamond. It is a diamond — simply one whose origin is a laboratory rather than a mine."
The rest of this page walks through each of those differences honestly, so you can decide which makes sense for you. We sell lab grown diamonds — but our job is to help you choose well, not to oversell.
What separates the two, and what doesn't.
A mined diamond formed over a billion years deep in the earth. A lab grown diamond forms in a few weeks in a controlled facility. Same result, vastly different timeline.
For the same specifications, a lab grown diamond costs dramatically less — often around 70–85% less. This is the difference most buyers feel the most.
Mined diamonds currently hold more of their value on resale than lab grown. We cover this honestly further down — it matters, but less than most people assume.
Lab grown and mined, compared honestly.
Every factor that matters, laid out plainly — including the ones where mined diamonds hold an advantage. We would rather you trust the comparison than win every row.
| Factor | Lab Grown Diamond | Natural (Mined) Diamond |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical Composition | Pure crystallised carbon | Pure crystallised carbon — Identical |
| Hardness | 10 on the Mohs scale | 10 on the Mohs scale — Identical |
| Appearance & Sparkle | Full brilliance and fire | Indistinguishable by eye — Identical |
| Origin | Grown in a lab in weeks (CVD or HPHT) | Formed in the earth over ~1–3 billion years |
| Certification | IGI graded on the same 4C standards | IGI / GIA graded on the same 4C standards — Equal |
| Price (same 4Cs) | ~70–85% less | The premium reflects scarcity, not quality |
| Size for Your Budget | Significantly larger | Smaller stone at the same spend |
| Conflict-Free Origin | Fully traceable | Depends on supply chain |
| Environmental Footprint | No mining; energy-intensive to grow | Land disturbance and extraction required |
| Resale Value | Lower (~10–30%) | Higher (~25–60%) |
| Availability | Made to order in your exact spec | Limited by what has been mined and cut |
Identical in every way that you can measure.
"Real diamond" is not a marketing phrase here — it is a scientific fact. A lab grown diamond shares the exact atomic structure of a mined one. Every property a gemologist can measure comes back the same.
This is why the world's grading laboratories assess lab grown diamonds using the identical 4C methodology, and why even a trained jeweller cannot distinguish the two without specialised equipment that reads the stone's growth pattern. The only reliable way to tell them apart is the laser inscription on the girdle and the certificate that comes with it.
Both are pure carbon arranged in the same cubic crystal lattice. There is no chemical difference between them at all.
Both score a perfect 10 on the Mohs scale, the hardest of any material. Both resist scratching and last for generations.
Identical refractive index, so light bends and returns exactly the same way. The sparkle is not similar — it is the same.
Cut, colour, clarity, and carat are assessed by IGI using the exact same standards applied to mined diamonds.
Two methods. One real diamond.
A lab grown diamond is created by recreating — and accelerating — the same conditions that form a diamond in the earth. There are two established methods, and both produce genuine diamonds of equal quality.
A thin diamond seed is placed in a sealed chamber filled with carbon-rich gas. The gas is heated until carbon atoms separate and settle onto the seed, layer by layer, growing a diamond crystal over several weeks. CVD is the method behind most high-quality colourless lab grown diamonds today, prized for its purity and consistency.
This method mimics the earth's own process directly. A carbon source is placed under immense pressure and extreme heat — conditions matching those deep underground — causing it to crystallise into diamond around a seed. HPHT recreates, in a machine, what the planet takes a billion years to do.
Both methods are noted on your IGI certificate, so you always know exactly how your stone was created. Neither is "better" — both yield a true diamond, graded to the same standard. The growth method is a point of transparency, not a measure of quality.
The same diamond, for a fraction of the price.
Because a lab grown diamond is produced in weeks rather than mined through a century-old global supply chain, it costs dramatically less to bring to you — without any compromise in quality. For an equivalent cut, colour, clarity, and carat, you can expect to pay around 70–85% less.
That gap is not a discount on a lesser product. It is the same diamond, priced by manufacturing efficiency instead of scarcity. The question stops being "natural or lab grown?" and becomes "what does the saving let me choose?"
Illustrative comparison for the same specifications. Actual prices vary by stone, size, and grade.
The same budget that buys a modest mined diamond can buy a noticeably larger lab grown one — which is why average lab grown centre stones are now roughly twice the size of mined ones.
Or keep the size and step up the colour and clarity — reaching grades that would be well beyond reach in a mined stone at the same price.
Or put the saving where it shows every day — a finer setting, a better metal, a matching band — rather than into the stone's origin alone.
A diamond you can trace with confidence.
For many buyers, origin is not only about price — it is about peace of mind. A lab grown diamond has a known, traceable source. It is created in a facility, not extracted from the ground, which removes the supply-chain uncertainty that can sit behind a mined stone.
We want to be measured here rather than overstate the case. Growing diamonds uses energy, so "lab grown" is not the same as "zero impact." But it does avoid the land disturbance of mining entirely, and it gives you a stone whose journey from creation to your hand is fully accounted for and conflict-free.
What you give up by choosing lab grown.
You give up no brilliance, no sparkle, no presence. By eye, your diamond is indistinguishable from a mined one of the same grade.
It is exactly as hard and as hard-wearing. It will not cloud, dull, or change over a lifetime of daily wear.
This is the honest trade-off, and the one place mined diamonds lead. It deserves its own section — which is next.
A mined diamond carries the narrative of being formed over a billion years. If that origin story matters to you personally, it is a real and valid reason to prefer one.
Let's talk about resale value.
You will read that lab grown diamonds have "no resale value." That is an exaggeration — but the underlying point is fair, and we would rather you hear it from us. Mined diamonds currently hold more of their value on the second-hand market, typically recovering somewhere around 25–60% of their price. Lab grown diamonds tend to recover less, often in the region of 10–30%.
Here is the context that usually gets left out. Because the lab grown stone cost a fraction of the mined one to begin with, the actual money at stake is far smaller. Recovering a lower percentage of a much lower price often means losing fewer rupees overall.
"Resale matters most if you intend to sell. For a ring you plan to keep and wear, it is one of the least relevant numbers in the whole comparison."
How to weigh it sensibly.
Fine jewellery is, for almost everyone, a purchase to wear and keep — not an investment. Neither lab grown nor mined diamonds are a reliable way to grow money, and treating either as one usually leads to disappointment.
So the question we suggest is not "which holds its value better?" but "which gives me the piece I want, at a price that lets me live comfortably?" If you may want to resell or trade up, factor resale in. If you are buying something to keep, let it weigh lightly.
The questions buyers ask before deciding.
These are the questions we hear most when someone is weighing lab grown against mined. If yours isn't here, ask us — we will answer it as directly as the ones below.
Chat with us on WhatsApp and we typically respond within a few minutes.
Chat on WhatsAppEither way, we'll help you choose well.
Explore our IGI certified lab grown diamonds, or tell us what matters most to you and we'll guide you to the right stone — honestly, and with no pressure to spend more than you should.
