Free Crystal Identifier by Photo —
What Is My Crystal?
Upload a photo of your crystal and our AI crystal identifier tells you exactly what it is — instantly. Works for quartz points, amethyst clusters, geodes, raw specimens, tumbled stones, and crystals on matrix. No app or account required.
How to Identify a Crystal in 3 Steps
No gemology degree required — our AI crystal identifier does the hard work for you.
Upload Your Crystal Photo
Take a clear, well-lit photo against a plain background. Upload up to 3 images — a full view, a close-up of crystal faces or terminations, and a side angle give the best results.
Add Optional Details
Tell us where you found it, how big it is, and anything you’ve noticed — transparency, hardness, magnetism, UV glow, or whether it feels unusually heavy. More context means better accuracy.
Get Your Identification
Our AI analyses crystal habit, terminations, colour, luster, transparency, and growth patterns to give you a detailed identification with the key features that confirm the result.
Upload Your Crystal Photo
Drag & drop up to 3 photos below, or click to browse. Add optional details for a more accurate identification result.
Whole specimen
Faces & terminations
Habit & growth
JPG, PNG & WEBP accepted · Max 3 images · Points, clusters, geodes & tumbled stones
Crystal Identifier
Upload photos of points, clusters, raw pieces, tumbled stones, or specimens on matrix โ get an AI identification with habit, crystal system, and collector tips.
Drag & drop photos here
or click to browse
JPG, PNG, WEBP accepted
0 of 3 images added
Add details for better accuracy (optional)
Upload up to 3 angles for the most accurate result
Description
Origin / formation
Hardness (Mohs)
Luster
Rarity
Relative value
Notable localities / regions
Typical colours
Key properties
Similar crystals
Alternative identifications
Drag & drop photos here
or click to browse
JPG, PNG, WEBP accepted
0 of 3 images added
⚙ Add details for better accuracy (optional)
Upload up to 3 angles for the most accurate result
How to Take a Better Crystal Photo for Identification
A clear photo is the single biggest factor in accurate crystal identification. Follow these tips for a more precise result.
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Pro Tip — Show the Terminations
Crystal terminations — the pointed ends of a crystal — are among the most diagnostic features. A hexagonal prism with a six-sided pyramid tip strongly suggests quartz; flat tabular faces suggest barite or calcite. If your specimen has multiple points, photograph the clearest termination in sharp focus.
Add Physical Observations
In the notes field, mention if your crystal: scratches glass (Mohs 5.5+), glows under UV light, feels unusually heavy or light, attracts a magnet, fizzes with vinegar, or shows colour zoning or phantoms inside. These clues confirm or eliminate many crystal types instantly.
What Type of Crystal Do You Have?
Our free crystal identifier works across all major crystal groups and dozens of mineral varieties.
Quartz Family
The most common crystal group on Earth. Hexagonal prisms with pointed terminations. Colours range from clear to purple, pink, yellow, grey, and smoky brown depending on impurities.
Feldspar Group
Common silicate minerals with distinctive optical effects. Often show iridescence, adularescence, or colour play when light hits cleavage surfaces at the right angle.
Fluorescent & Colourful
Crystals prized for vivid colour or UV fluorescence. Often form cubic, octahedral, or tabular habits with glassy luster and high transparency.
Soft & Fibrous
Low-hardness crystals and fibrous varieties that scratch easily. Often translucent to transparent with silky or pearly luster. Handle carefully when photographing.
Prismatic Gem Crystals
Well-formed crystals of gem-quality minerals. Long prismatic habits, strong colour, and high luster. Often found in pegmatites or metamorphic veins.
Clusters & Geodes
Multiple crystals growing together or lining a hollow cavity. Druzy coatings, amethyst geodes, and matrix specimens with crystals embedded in host rock.
Why Use This Free Crystal Identifier?
Built for crystal collectors, metaphysical practitioners, students, rockhounds, and anyone curious about a crystal they found or bought.
Photo-Based Identification
Our AI analyses crystal habit, terminations, colour, transparency, luster, twinning, and growth patterns from your photo — the same properties a mineralogist uses in the field.
Powered by Claude AI
Powered by Anthropic’s Claude — trained across thousands of crystal and mineral specimens for expert-level identification results with detailed reasoning.
Detailed Identification Report
Every result includes primary identification, confidence level, key visual features observed, crystal system, mineral properties, similar crystals, and care advice.
Natural vs Fake Detection
Our AI flags obvious glass, resin, and dyed specimens when visual clues are visible — helping you spot common fakes before you buy or collect.
Works on Any Device
Use directly in your browser on any phone, tablet, or computer. No app download, no account, no payment — completely free every time.
31 Specialist Identifier Tools
Need to identify a specific gem or crystal variety? Use our specialist tools — from amethyst identifier to selenite identifier — each with tailored AI prompts.
How to Identify Crystals — What the AI Looks For
When you upload a photo to our free crystal identifier, the AI analyses the same visual properties a mineralogist would examine. Understanding what these properties are helps you take better photos and interpret your results more confidently.
Crystal Habit and Form
Crystal habit describes the typical shape a mineral grows in. Prismatic crystals are elongated columns (quartz, tourmaline). Tabular crystals are flat and plate-like (barite, wulfenite). Acicular crystals are needle-like (rutile, actinolite). Massive specimens have no visible crystal faces. Botryoidal forms look like bunches of grapes (malachite, goethite). The overall form is often the strongest first clue.
Terminations and Crystal Faces
Terminations are the pointed or flat ends of a crystal where growth stopped. Quartz typically shows six-sided pyramids; calcite shows rhombohedral faces; fluorite shows cubic or octahedral faces. The number, shape, and symmetry of faces reveal the underlying crystal system — and our AI is trained to recognise these patterns from close-up photographs.
Colour, Zoning, and Phantoms
Colour alone is not always reliable — many crystals share similar hues. However, colour zoning (bands or patches of different colour within one crystal) and phantoms (ghost-like outlines of earlier growth stages visible inside) are highly diagnostic. Amethyst often shows colour zoning from pale to deep purple; citrine can be heat-treated amethyst with an orange gradient.
Transparency, Clarity, and Inclusions
Transparency ranges from transparent (light passes through clearly) to translucent (light diffused) to opaque (no light passes). Internal inclusions — bubbles, needles, veils, or other minerals trapped during growth — help distinguish natural crystals from glass and synthetic stones. Glass typically shows round bubbles; natural crystals show angular mineral inclusions.
Luster
Luster describes how light reflects from a crystal surface. Main categories: vitreous or glassy (quartz, fluorite, calcite), adamantine (diamond-like brilliance — zircon, cerussite), pearly (soft iridescent sheen — talc, some feldspars), silky (parallel fibre sheen — selenite, tiger’s eye), metallic (pyrite, galena). Luster is best assessed with the crystal dry and clean in natural light.
When Photos Are Not Enough
AI crystal identification from photos is powerful but has limits. For definitive identification of valuable specimens — rare gem crystals, high-value collector pieces, or stones you plan to sell — always consult a professional gemologist or certified mineralogist who can physically examine the specimen and test refractive index, specific gravity, and optical properties.
Crystal Identification Tests You Can Do at Home
While our AI works from photos alone, providing physical test results in the notes field significantly improves your identification. These simple tests take seconds and require no specialist equipment.
The Scratch Test (Mohs Hardness)
The Mohs scale rates mineral hardness from 1 (talc) to 10 (diamond). Everyday reference points: your fingernail is approximately Mohs 2.5, a copper coin is Mohs 3.5, a steel knife blade is Mohs 5.5, and glass is Mohs 5.5–6. Quartz (Mohs 7) scratches glass easily; selenite (Mohs 2) can be scratched with a fingernail. These two data points immediately narrow down the possibilities considerably.
The UV Fluorescence Test
Many crystals glow under ultraviolet light. Fluorite often fluoresces blue or purple; calcite may glow red, pink, or orange; scheelite glows bright blue-white; hyalite opal shows green. A basic UV torch costs a few pounds and is one of the most useful tools for crystal collectors. Always mention UV response in your notes.
The Acid Test
A drop of white vinegar causes immediate fizzing on carbonate crystals — calcite, aragonite, and malachite all react visibly. Dolomite reacts only when scratched or powdered. This test definitively confirms or eliminates carbonate minerals in 10 seconds. Always test an inconspicuous spot as acid can damage polished surfaces.
The Streak Test
Rubbing a crystal across unglazed porcelain (the unfinished back of a ceramic tile) leaves a coloured powder that is often different from the surface colour. Pyrite leaves a black streak despite its golden appearance; hematite leaves a distinctive red-brown streak. Streak colour is more consistent than surface colour and helps eliminate look-alikes.
Common Crystals and How to Identify Them
These are the crystals people most frequently upload to our identifier. Understanding their key features helps you provide better information and interpret your result.
Clear Quartz
The most common crystal on Earth. Hexagonal prisms with six-sided pyramid terminations. Colourless and transparent when pure. Mohs 7 — scratches glass easily. Conchoidal fracture. No cleavage. Does not react to acid. Often found as points, clusters, or inside geodes.
Amethyst
Purple variety of quartz caused by iron impurities and natural irradiation. Same hexagonal habit as clear quartz. Colour ranges from pale lavender to deep purple, often with colour zoning. Use our dedicated amethyst identifier for the most targeted analysis. Heat-treated amethyst can look like citrine.
Rose Quartz
Pink variety of quartz, usually massive or tumbled rather than well-formed crystals. Colour from trace titanium, iron, or manganese. Translucent to opaque. Mohs 7. Often confused with pink calcite (Mohs 3, reacts to acid) or dyed glass (uniform colour, may show bubbles).
Selenite
Transparent to translucent variety of gypsum. Tabular or bladed crystals with pearly or silky luster. Very soft — Mohs 2, scratched easily with a fingernail. Often forms long wand-like crystals. Use our selenite identifier for fibrous gypsum varieties.
Fluorite
Forms cubic or octahedral crystals in almost every colour — purple, green, blue, yellow, and colourless. Glassy luster, often transparent. Mohs 4 — softer than quartz. Many specimens fluoresce under UV light. Often confused with coloured glass, which shows round bubbles instead of angular crystal faces.
Citrine
Yellow to orange variety of quartz. Natural citrine is rare; most commercial “citrine” is heat-treated amethyst. Look for colour zoning and a reddish tint at the base of natural specimens. Use our citrine identifier to distinguish natural citrine from heated amethyst.
How to Spot Fake Crystals
Fake and mislabelled crystals are common in shops, markets, and online. Here are the most frequent issues our AI checks for:
- Glass sold as crystal — round bubbles, perfectly uniform colour, mould marks, and conchoidal fracture without crystal faces are red flags.
- Dyed specimens — colour concentrated in cracks and surface pits; white or pale areas where dye did not penetrate; unnaturally vivid uniform colour.
- Heat-treated amethyst sold as citrine — orange-yellow colour with reddish zones at the base; crumbly white tips on heated points.
- Resin or plastic — warm to the touch, lightweight, may smell when scratched; no crystal faces or natural inclusions.
- Mislabelled minerals — “green amethyst” (does not exist), “blue obsidian” (usually glass), “smelt quartz” (industrial slag).
- Reconstituted stone — crushed mineral powder bonded with resin; uniform texture, no natural crystal structure, often very cheap for the claimed material.
Using Our Specialist Identifier Tools
The general crystal identifier works for any crystal specimen. But if you already suspect what you have, our specialist tools give more targeted results with AI prompts specifically tuned to that crystal’s identifying features. For faceted gems and jewellery stones, use our gemstone identifier. For rough rocks and matrix specimens, try our rock identifier or mineral identifier. For specific varieties, tools like our amethyst, fluorite, and moonstone identifiers assess treatment, authenticity, and collector value.
Frequently Asked Questions — Crystal Identification
Answers to the most common questions about identifying crystals online for free.
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