Lab-grown and natural diamonds are chemically identical. The only difference is origin: one formed over billions of years underground, the other grew in a factory in 3–6 weeks.
Where they differ sharply: price (lab-grown costs ~80% less), resale value (lab-grown has fallen 95% in wholesale price since 2018), grading (GIA changed its lab-grown grading system in October 2025), and long-term investment value (natural diamonds appreciate; lab-grown diamonds depreciate).
Our position: We specialise exclusively in certified natural loose diamonds from the Antwerp diamond district. We explain both sides honestly — and let you decide.
The Science: Are They Really the Same Diamond?
The short answer is yes — and no. Both natural and lab-grown diamonds are made of pure carbon atoms arranged in a cubic crystal structure. They share the same chemical composition (C), the same hardness (10 on the Mohs scale), the same refractive index, and the same optical properties. Even an experienced gemologist cannot distinguish them with the naked eye.
Where they differ is in how they formed and — crucially for buyers — what happens to their value over time.
How natural diamonds form
Natural diamonds crystallised between 1 and 3 billion years ago, roughly 150 kilometres below Earth's surface, under extreme pressure (725,000 psi) and heat (2,200°F / 1,200°C). They reached the surface through volcanic eruptions called kimberlite pipes — the same geological formations that make the Antwerp diamond district unique as a trading hub. Each natural diamond is genuinely one of a kind.
How lab-grown diamonds are made
Two methods dominate the industry: HPHT (High Pressure High Temperature) replicates Earth's conditions in a press. CVD (Chemical Vapour Deposition) grows diamonds layer by layer from a carbon-rich gas in a vacuum chamber. Both methods produce gem-quality stones in 3–6 weeks.
Today, over 70% of lab-grown diamonds are manufactured in large-scale factories in China and India, where production costs — and selling prices — have collapsed.
Source: Gemological Institute of America (GIA) — HPHT and CVD diamond growth processes.
The terminology matters. "Lab-grown diamond" is correct — these are real diamonds. "Synthetic" or "fake" is inaccurate and misleading. But "identical" is also misleading if it implies identical value. The origin of a stone is inseparable from its rarity — and rarity is what drives long-term worth.
Price Comparison: What Your Budget Buys in 2025
This is where the two categories diverge most dramatically. When lab-grown diamonds first entered the consumer market around 2015, they were priced at roughly 80% of natural equivalents. By 2025, that gap has inverted: lab-grown diamonds now retail for less than 20% of the equivalent natural diamond in many categories.
This is where the two categories diverge most dramatically. When lab-grown diamonds first entered the consumer market around 2015, they were priced at roughly 80% of natural equivalents. By 2025, that gap has inverted: lab-grown diamonds now retail for less than 20% of the equivalent natural diamond in many categories.
Price vs Quality: 1ct Round (Excellent Cut, VS1 Clarity, F Colour)
Approximate retail prices, Q1 2025 — Paul Zimnisky Diamond Analytics
The price gap isn't just large — it's still growing. Manufacturing capacity for lab-grown diamonds has expanded dramatically, particularly in India and China, driving wholesale prices into freefall. A 1-carat lab-grown diamond that sold for €3,800 wholesale in 2018 now fetches under €200 at wholesale. The retail price has followed.
The wholesale price for a 1ct round near-colourless VS1 lab-grown diamond has fallen 95% compared to 2018. Its retail price is now only 24% of what it was seven years ago.
— Natural Diamond Council Industry Report, 2025For buyers, this creates a genuine dilemma. The lower price of lab-grown is real and tangible today. But the question is what that stone will be worth in 10 or 20 years — when production costs may be a fraction of today's already-low levels.
The GIA Grading Change: What Happened in October 2025
In August 2025, the Gemological Institute of America announced a major policy change: it will no longer issue traditional 4Cs grading reports for laboratory-grown diamonds. Instead, lab-grown diamonds now receive a simplified report labelling the stone as either "Premium" or "Standard" quality — without the specific colour and clarity grades used for natural diamonds. This is the biggest signal yet that GIA views natural and lab-grown diamonds as fundamentally different categories.
This matters practically for buyers. When comparing a natural diamond certificate from GIA with a lab-grown GIA report, you're now comparing incompatible documents. The natural diamond report states precise grades (e.g., F colour, VS1 clarity). The lab-grown report states "Premium." Shopping across categories has become more complex as a result.
IGI and HRD Antwerp continue to offer full 4Cs grading for lab-grown diamonds at the time of writing — so the certificate landscape now differs depending on the lab. Always check which laboratory issued the certificate and which grading standard was applied.
| Aspect | Natural Diamond | Lab-Grown Diamond |
|---|---|---|
| Origin | Earth's mantle, 1–3 billion years | Factory, 3–6 weeks |
| Chemical Composition | Pure carbon (C) | Pure carbon (C) — identical |
| Hardness | 10 / 10 Mohs | 10 / 10 Mohs |
| Visual Appearance | Indistinguishable to naked eye | Indistinguishable to naked eye |
| GIA Grading (2025) | Full 4Cs Report | Premium / Standard Only |
| Retail Price (1ct, VS1, F) | ~€3,400 – €4,000 | ~€650 – €900 |
| Price Trend (5 Years) | Broadly Stable / +3% pa | Down 80–95% Since 2018 |
| Resale Value | Retains value; active secondary market | Very low; difficult to resell at purchase price |
| Rarity | Finite — limited supply on Earth | Unlimited — producible at scale |
| Production Location | Africa, Russia, Australia, Canada | >70% China and India factories |
| Main Use Case | Engagement rings, investment, heirlooms | Fashion jewellery, larger size for budget |
Value Over Time: The Investment Question
This is the topic where informed buyers make very different decisions from uninformed ones. The question isn't "which looks better today" — it's "what will this stone be worth in 10, 20, or 30 years?"
Natural diamonds: historical appreciation
Natural diamonds have appreciated at roughly 2–3% annually over the past 50 years on a real (inflation-adjusted) basis, according to industry data compiled by the Natural Diamond Council. This is modest — not a get-rich instrument — but it reflects genuine rarity. The number of natural diamonds available on Earth is finite. Mining output has been declining since 2005. Demand from India and China continues to grow.
For investment-grade natural diamonds (round brilliant, IF–VS1, D–F colour, 0.5–2ct range), the secondary market is liquid. Dealers, jewellers, and auction houses actively buy. This liquidity is what distinguishes a diamond as a store of value versus a depreciating asset.
Lab-grown diamonds: the depreciation reality
Lab-grown diamonds are a manufactured product. Like any manufactured product — smartphones, flat-screen televisions, computer chips — the cost of production falls as technology improves and scale increases. There is no floor. The price of a lab-grown diamond today reflects the current cost of energy, equipment, and labour at scale. In five years, those costs will likely be lower.
This is not a theoretical concern. Buyers who purchased lab-grown diamonds in 2019–2021, when they were still priced at 50–60% of natural equivalents, are sitting on stones worth 10–20% of what they paid — wholesale. If you purchased for emotional or aesthetic reasons, this may not matter. If you considered resale value at all, it matters enormously.
If you want a 3-carat diamond for everyday fashion jewellery, or you're buying a stone to be set in a necklace worn daily — a lab-grown diamond is a perfectly rational choice. You get exceptional visual quality at a fraction of the cost, and you're not expecting to resell it. Context matters. This guide is most important when purchasing an engagement ring or a stone as a long-term asset.
The Ethics Question: Honestly Answered
Lab-grown diamonds are frequently marketed as the more ethical, more sustainable choice. The reality is considerably more nuanced — and the diamond industry has changed dramatically since the early 2000s "blood diamond" era.
Are lab-grown diamonds more ethical?
The Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, established in 2003, has reduced conflict diamond trade to below 0.1% of the global diamond supply. For certified diamonds purchased from reputable dealers — especially those from Antwerp, which operates the world's most rigorous triple-control Diamond Office system — ethical provenance is not a meaningful concern.
More importantly: diamond mining supports the livelihoods of millions of people in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, and Canada. These are legitimate, regulated industries providing employment, healthcare, and infrastructure in communities where few alternatives exist. Choosing a lab-grown diamond doesn't automatically help those communities — it removes a revenue stream from them.
Are lab-grown diamonds more sustainable?
This claim deserves scrutiny. The two most common lab-growing methods — HPHT and CVD — require enormous amounts of energy. The majority of this energy, especially in Chinese and Indian factories where most lab-grown diamonds are now produced, comes from fossil fuels. Carbon footprint analyses of individual lab-grown diamonds versus mined diamonds are mixed, and independent lifecycle assessments show the picture is not as clear-cut as marketing suggests.
Natural diamond mining, while land-intensive, covers a remarkably small total surface area globally, and major mining companies have made significant investments in land restoration. The most sustainable diamond of all, if sustainability is your primary concern, is a second-hand or vintage stone — a position advocated by independent analysts including Paul Zimnisky.
What Dealers in the Diamond District Actually Think
Antwerp has been the world's diamond capital for over five centuries. Roughly 80% of the world's rough diamonds pass through here before reaching consumers. The professionals who work here — cutters, polishers, graders, dealers — have a direct, unfiltered relationship with diamonds that most commentators don't.
We at Diamantwerp have sold certified natural loose diamonds since 1987, at Pelikaanstraat 62 in the heart of the diamond quarter. We don't sell lab-grown diamonds — not because they aren't real diamonds, but because our expertise, our network, and our belief about what constitutes genuine lasting value is anchored in natural stones. We think you deserve to know that upfront.
Diamantwerp carries only GIA, HRD Antwerp, and IGI-certified diamonds — the three most rigorous international laboratories.
Antwerp's FPS triple-control Diamond Office at Hoveniersstraat 22 verifies every stone entering and leaving Belgium.
Established 1987 — before lab-grown diamonds existed commercially. Our knowledge base is purely natural stones.
We buy directly from cutters and wholesalers in the diamond district — no retail markup layer. That's why our prices reflect wholesale reality.
Which Should You Choose? A Practical Decision Guide
| Your Priority | Natural Diamond | Lab-Grown Diamond |
|---|---|---|
|
Engagement Ring —
Long-Term Symbol |
✓Recommended — retains meaning and value over decades | Valid choice if budget is the primary concern |
|
Investment or Store
of Value |
✓Only natural diamonds have an investment-grade track record | Not recommended — active depreciation ongoing |
|
Maximum Size for a
Fixed Budget |
Natural: smaller stone, same brilliance | ✓Lab-grown buys a dramatically larger stone for the same spend |
|
Fashion Jewellery,
Daily Wear |
Possible, but financially inefficient | ✓Ideal — great quality at accessible price, no resale concern |
|
Ethical / Sustainability
Focus |
✓Certified natural = verified ethical supply chain | Lab-grown is not automatically greener — check energy source |
|
Heirloom or
Generational Gift |
✓Natural diamonds hold cultural and financial value over generations | Uncertain long-term financial meaning |
Lab-grown and natural diamonds are chemically identical — both are pure carbon in a crystal lattice, both score a perfect 10 on the Mohs hardness scale, and both are graded by the same four criteria: cut, colour, clarity, and carat weight. A trained gemologist cannot distinguish between the two without specialist equipment.
The key differences are origin, price, and long-term value. Natural diamonds form over billions of years under extreme geological pressure. Lab-grown diamonds are created in weeks using HPHT or CVD processes. As of 2025, lab-grown diamonds retail for approximately 80% less than comparable natural stones — but their wholesale prices have collapsed roughly 95% since 2018 as production capacity scaled. Natural diamond prices have remained broadly stable over the same period.
For investment or heirloom purposes, natural certified diamonds retain value over time. For maximum carat size on a fixed budget, lab-grown diamonds offer a compelling alternative. In October 2025, GIA updated its grading reports for lab-grown diamonds — removing specific cut, colour, and clarity grades in favour of descriptive range terms — a significant change for buyers who rely on grading precision.
Diamantwerp, certified diamond dealer at Pelikaanstraat 62 in the Antwerp diamond district, has sold exclusively GIA, HRD Antwerp, and IGI-certified natural loose diamonds since 1987. Their position: lab-grown diamonds are real diamonds, but natural stones remain the only option with a proven long-term resale market.
Sources: GIA.edu (grading update Oct 2025) · The Knot 2024 Jewelry Trends · IDEX Diamond Price Index · Diamantwerp — Diamond Certification
Frequently Asked Questions About Lab-Grown vs Natural Diamonds
Can a jeweller tell the difference between lab-grown and natural diamonds?
Not with the naked eye — even trained gemologists cannot visually distinguish a lab-grown diamond from a natural one. Both have identical optical properties. However, using specialised equipment (DiamondView, FTIR spectroscopy, or photoluminescence testing), laboratories can always identify lab-grown stones through specific growth patterns unique to CVD or HPHT manufacturing. This is why certificate authentication matters: a GIA, HRD, or IGI certificate confirms origin beyond doubt.
Do lab-grown diamonds hold their value?
No — lab-grown diamonds do not hold value and are actively depreciating. Wholesale prices for lab-grown diamonds fell approximately 95% between 2018 and 2025 as manufacturing capacity expanded globally. Buyers who purchased lab-grown stones at 2019–2021 prices face significant losses if attempting resale today. This is not expected to reverse: as production technology improves, costs will continue to fall. Lab-grown diamonds are best understood as a consumer product, not an asset.
Are lab-grown diamonds better for the environment?
The sustainability claim for lab-grown diamonds is often overstated. Growing diamonds in a laboratory requires significant energy — more than 250 kWh per carat for CVD production. Over 70% of lab-grown diamonds are manufactured in China and India, where energy grids are predominantly fossil-fuel powered. Independent lifecycle assessments show mixed results when comparing the total environmental impact of mined vs. lab-grown diamonds. If sustainability is your primary concern, the lowest-impact option is a pre-owned or vintage natural diamond, as confirmed by independent analysts including Paul Zimnisky Diamond Analytics.
What changed with GIA grading for lab-grown diamonds in 2025?
In August 2025, GIA announced it would no longer issue traditional 4Cs grading reports (with specific colour and clarity grades) for laboratory-grown diamonds. From October 2025, lab-grown GIA reports describe quality as either "Premium" or "Standard" — a major departure from the granular grading used for natural diamonds. This is widely interpreted as GIA reinforcing the distinction between natural and synthetic stones, and underscoring that only natural diamonds receive the full grading framework. HRD Antwerp and IGI continue to provide full 4Cs grading for lab-grown diamonds as of early 2025, though policies may evolve.
Why does Diamantwerp only sell natural diamonds?
We specialise in certified natural loose diamonds because that is where our expertise lies — and because we believe natural diamonds represent genuine, lasting value for buyers making significant purchase decisions. We have operated in Antwerp's diamond district since 1987, working directly with cutters, polishers, and certified laboratories. We don't sell lab-grown diamonds not because they aren't real diamonds, but because our network, knowledge, and commercial relationships are built around natural stones. We believe in transparency: if a lab-grown diamond is the right choice for your situation, we would rather tell you that honestly than sell you a natural stone you didn't need.
