Unlike diamonds — where De Beers, the Kimberley Process, USGS, and Rapaport publish independently verifiable data — the coloured-gemstone industry is structurally opaque. Gemfields is the only major publicly-listed pure-play miner; everything else is private, state-owned, or artisanal. The Kimberley Process does not cover coloured stones. There is no industry-standard price list. Paid market-report estimates for the same year vary by 2–10× depending on whether the analyst measures rough trade, wholesale polished, retail jewellery, or "all gem jewellery ex-diamond" — and these definitions are rarely stated clearly.
Every quantitative claim on this dashboard now carries a confidence rating, indicating how much you can trust the underlying source. Market values are also separated by definition (rough mine-gate · wholesale polished · retail jewellery · auction records · US import & consumption) rather than collapsed into a single "market size" figure, which would be misleading.
The freshest USGS data tells a structurally different story than this dashboard reported in earlier iterations. 2025 saw a dramatic reversal: US gemstone imports fell 44% year-on-year, and apparent consumption fell 47%. The earlier "▲136% 2020–2024" framing for coloured gem imports has been overtaken by the sharp 2025 contraction.30
Note: USGS reports total gemstones (diamond + coloured). Diamond accounted for ~79% of 2025 import value (down from the 2018–22 average of ~89%) — suggesting coloured stones held up relatively better than diamonds, but the overall market still contracted sharply.30
| Year | Imports for consumption ($M) | Apparent consumption ($M) | YoY change (imports) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 24,600 | 23,700 | baseline |
| 2022 | 28,700 | 26,900 | ▲17% |
| 2023 | 24,200 | 21,300 | ▼16% |
| 2024 | 19,600 | 17,600 | ▼19% |
| 2025e | 11,000 | 9,300 | ▼44% |
Coloured gemstones operate on fundamentally different structural foundations than diamonds. There is no equivalent of De Beers, no Kimberley Process, no Rapaport price list. Supply is dominated by artisanal and small-scale mining (~80% of global supply), with fewer than 10 commercially significant producers worldwide.3
Gemfields is the only major publicly-listed pure-play coloured gemstone miner; everything else is private, state-owned, or artisanal. Pricing is opaque — origin (Burmese vs Mozambican ruby), treatment (heated vs unheated), and certification (GIA, Gübelin, SSEF) drive price differentials of 2,000% or more for stones of identical apparent quality.5
This dashboard reports verified figures where available and labels estimates as estimates. Auction data from Sotheby's, Christie's, and Bonhams is the most reliable pricing benchmark; Gemfields filings the most reliable supply data; USGS the most reliable trade-flow data. Paid market-report figures for total market size are unreliable and should be read as order-of-magnitude estimates only.
| Value definition | Estimate | Year | Source | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rough coloured-gem trade (mine-gate, wholesale) | ~$1.9bn | 2025e | Future Market Insights | Med |
| Coloured gem retail jewellery (paid reports — wide range) | $2.0–9.7bn | 2024 | RM, Dataintelo, MarketIntelo | Low |
| "All gemstones" market (incl. diamond) — common confusion | ~$36bn | 2025 | MarketDataForecast | Low |
| US apparent gemstone consumption | $9.3bn | 2025e | USGS MCS 2026 | High |
| Per-carat auction records (e.g. Sunrise Ruby) | $1.27M/ct | 2015 | Sotheby's Geneva | High |
| Stone | Premier origin | Volume leader | Other meaningful sources | Premier premium |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ruby | Mogok, Myanmar | Mozambique (Montepuez) | Madagascar · Tanzania · Thailand · Sri Lanka14 | 2–5× for Mogok unheated9 |
| Sapphire | Kashmir (depleted ~1930s) | Sri Lanka · Madagascar | Myanmar · Australia · Thailand · Montana (US)14 | 5–20× for Kashmir8 |
| Emerald | Muzo & Chivor, Colombia | Zambia (Kagem) | Brazil · Ethiopia · Afghanistan · Russia14 | ~30–60% for Colombian9 |
Unlike diamonds — where Surat dominates ~80%+ of global cutting in a single geographic concentration — the coloured-gem cutting industry is structurally fragmented across four specialised centres, each with deep historical, cultural, and technical specialism.26
Thailand (Bangkok/Chanthaburi) dominates ruby and sapphire treatment, cutting and trading — particularly the heat-treatment of corundum which transformed lower-grade material into premium product from the 1970s onward.26 India (Jaipur) dominates emerald cutting and small-stone calibrated coloured-gem manufacture.27 Sri Lanka (Ratnapura) retains the cutting of large, top-quality sapphires (where Bangkok specialises in smaller stones).28 Idar-Oberstein, Germany survives as the world's premier centre for high-end carving, fantasy cuts, and one-of-a-kind objets d'art — a niche but valuable corner of the trade.29
The midstream is where rough gemstones gain most of their value. A piece of rough corundum worth $100/ct uncut can become a $1,000+/ct heated, cut, certified stone — meaning cutting centres capture more value than mines in many cases.
| Centre | Core specialism | Employment | Position in value chain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bangkok / Chanthaburi | Ruby & sapphire heat treatment + cutting | ~700,000+ | Largest coloured-stone hub by volume26 |
| Jaipur | Emerald cutting · calibrated stones · 300+ varieties | 11,000+ in Sitapura SEZ alone | Largest emerald cutting hub globally27 |
| Ratnapura | Large sapphires · padparadscha · star sapphires | Tens of thousands across ~3,000 units | Premium-quality sapphire finishing28 |
| Idar-Oberstein | High-end carving · fantasy cuts · objets d'art | Small-scale ateliers · highly specialised | Top-end fine-art & collector niche29 |
At the Bangkok Gem and Jewelry Fair (February 2025), India and Thailand signed three Memorandums of Understanding promoting cooperation in the trade of coloured gemstones, silver jewellery, and gemstone standardisation:
These signal continued formal alignment between the world's two largest coloured-gem cutting jurisdictions, opening new bilateral trade corridors and shared standards work.27
For coloured stones, treatment disclosure is the single largest pricing variable after origin. Heat treatment of ruby and sapphire is standard and widely accepted; lead-glass filling of low-grade ruby is widely disclosed but heavily discounted; oiling of emeralds is universally accepted; resin-filled emerald is materially less valuable.
Three labs dominate origin and treatment certification: GIA (Gemological Institute of America — broadest reach), Gübelin Gem Lab (Switzerland — premier reputation for ruby and sapphire origin), and SSEF (Swiss Gemmological Institute — coloured stone specialist). A high-value stone without one of these certificates typically trades at a meaningful discount.10
From January 2026, GIA expanded origin-determination services to include opal, peridot, and demantoid garnet — extending traceability into the wider coloured-stone market.6
Unlike diamonds — where the 4Cs (carat, clarity, colour, cut) drive ~80% of price — coloured gemstone valuation has three independent multipliers stacked on top of each other: origin, treatment status, and certification.
A 5-carat ruby with "Mogok unheated · Gübelin certificate" routinely sells for 5–10× the price of an apparently identical 5-carat ruby with "Mozambique heated · uncertificated." Same colour, same clarity, same cut. The certificate is the asset.9
| Stone | Treatment | Trade status | Price effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ruby | Heat (only) | Industry standard, disclosed | Baseline9 |
| Ruby | Unheated | Premium · highly sought after | 2–5× premium9 |
| Ruby | Lead-glass filled ("composite") | Disclosed but heavily discounted | 10–30% of natural ruby price9 |
| Sapphire | Heat | Industry standard since 1970s | Baseline10 |
| Sapphire | Unheated, Kashmir origin | Highest premium of any gemstone | 5–20× premium8 |
| Sapphire | Beryllium-diffusion | Heavily discounted, disclosed | 25–40% of natural10 |
| Emerald | Cedar oil ("Insignificant" GIA grade) | Premium · most natural-looking | +20–40% over typical11 |
| Emerald | Cedar oil ("Moderate"/"Significant") | Universal & accepted | Baseline (most emeralds)11 |
| Emerald | Resin/epoxy fracture filling | Disclosed, materially discounted | 30–50% of natural-oiled11 |
Bulgari (Bvlgari) pioneered the cabochon cut applied to coloured gemstones, the combination of precious with semi-precious stones, and the modern association of vivid colour with high jewellery. The maison's identity is built on emeralds, rubies, sapphires, tourmalines, and tanzanites — not on diamonds.18
Acquired by LVMH in 2011 for €4.3bn; today part of LVMH's Watches & Jewellery division (€10.58bn / $11.04bn in 2024). The Bulgari association with Elizabeth Taylor — particularly her Bulgari emeralds from Richard Burton during the 1963 filming of Cleopatra — remains a defining commercial asset of the house.19
Member of the Responsible Jewelry Council (RJC) since 2006; coloured gemstones added to RJC's revised Code of Practices.20
| Piece | Key stones | Reported value |
|---|---|---|
| Serpenti Aeterna necklace | Seven pear-shaped diamonds, 140 ct total | €40M19 |
| Tubogas Flower of Time necklace | 31.07 ct oval Zambian emerald | — 19 |
| Sapphire Aeterna Waves | 38.93 ct cushion Sri Lankan sapphire + diamonds | — 19 |
| Magnifica Collection (2021) | Multiple necklaces · ruby, sapphire, emerald centres | Several >$5M each18 |
| Bulgari brooch (Jan 2026 Sotheby's) | Cabochon emerald centre, sapphires, diamonds | €355,60018 |
1 · Generational substitution from diamonds. Younger US consumers — particularly Millennials and Gen Z — increasingly choose coloured stones for engagement rings and self-purchase. Sapphire engagement rings have moved from niche to mainstream over the last decade; ruby and emerald are growing similarly. Med — supported by trade press but no audited consumer-survey data.
2 · Origin certification expansion Hyp. GIA's Jan 2026 expansion to opal, peridot, and demantoid garnet brings scientific provenance to stones previously sold without it. Hypothesis: this could push prices upward for documented top-quality material — though this is the typical pattern observed historically for ruby/sapphire origin certificates, it has not yet been tested for these specific stone categories.6
3 · Blockchain provenance Hyp. Fura Gems publicly champions blockchain-backed mine-to-market traceability — the first coloured-gemstone miner to do so at scale. Hypothesis: if this becomes industry-standard, it may compress the price gap between certificated and uncertificated stones. This is an analyst hypothesis only — not yet observed in market prices. Adoption beyond Fura has been limited; consumer awareness of blockchain provenance in jewellery remains low.16
4 · RJC standards extension. The Responsible Jewelry Council has extended its Code of Practices Standard to explicitly cover rubies, emeralds and sapphires. Luxury houses (Bulgari RJC member since 2006) increasingly require certified-sourcing audits from suppliers. Med — verified policy change; market impact still developing.20
A note on 2025's reversal. Three of the four forecasts above (CAGR projections, rough-trade growth, certification price effects) are hypotheses or paid-report estimates, not observed trends. The 2025 USGS data point — a 44% drop in US gemstone imports — is the freshest hard observation, and it contradicts the smooth-growth narrative that many of these forecasts assume. Readers should weight near-term forecasts accordingly.