Is the lab-grown diamond fad finally over? Emma Watson and Meghan Markle may have loved these synthetic stones, which even appeared on engagement rings, but natural diamonds are back
- Man-made diamonds became popular thanks to celebrities, but now they’ve gone mainstream with aggressive pushes by retailers like Walmart and Pandora, and prices are projected to fall
- Industry experts forecast that jewellers will be shifting their focus back to natural diamonds, and lab-grown stones will no longer be seen as alternatives to the real thing
The man-made diamond boom is over, and prices for ultra-trendy lab-grown diamonds are set to tumble this year, industry veterans say.
It’s the opposite of what jewellers have been doing since 2018, when the hype for lab-grown diamonds took off.
“Some of the fad is starting to fade a bit,” Zimnisky said, pointing to lower-priced retailers like Walmart and Pandora, who have started to “aggressively” push lab-grown stones. “I think it’s become a lot more mainstream.”
Prices for lab-grown diamonds will continue to fall over the next year, he said. Zimnisky didn’t have a price target, but said he believed loose lab-grown diamonds could see nearly the same price decline as they did in 2023, which the jewellery analytics firm Tenoris estimated to be about 20 per cent in the 12 months leading up to November.
Cormac Kinney, the CEO of the commodities trading firm Diamond Standard, believes the plunge could be even steeper as the hype over lab-grown gems fades. Man-made diamond prices could ultimately drop another 50 to 80 per cent, he estimated.
“It’s a manufactured version of one of humans’ most valuable natural resources,” Zimnisky said of lab-grown stones. “It allows consumers to buy a diamond at really affordable prices, especially very large diamonds that would cost tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars if they were natural diamonds.”