Free Gemstone Identifier by Photo —
What Gemstone Is This?
Upload a photo of your gemstone and our AI gemstone identifier tells you what it is — instantly. Works for faceted stones, cabochons, beads, rough crystals, and jewellery settings. Educational screening only; not a lab certificate.
How to Identify a Gemstone in 3 Steps
No gemology degree required — our AI gemstone identifier analyses colour, cut, clarity, and setting details for you.
Upload Your Gemstone Photo
Take clear, well-lit photos in natural daylight. Upload up to 3 images — table (top) view, side or pavilion view, and a close-up of colour and inclusions give the best results.
Add Optional Details
Tell us where you got it, approximate size, hardness, magnetism, and anything you’ve noticed — setting metal, claimed species, or suspected treatment. More context means better accuracy.
Get Your Identification
Our AI analyses colour, cut style, transparency, luster, inclusions, and setting to give you a likely species identification with treatment notes and collector tips.
Upload Your Gemstone Photo
Drag & drop up to 3 photos below, or click to browse. Faceted, cabochon, rough, or in a setting — all work.
Colour & cut
Depth & facets
Inclusions & setting
JPG, PNG & WEBP accepted · Max 3 images · Faceted, cabochon, beads & rough
Gemstone Identifier
Upload photos of faceted stones, cabochons, beads, rough, or crystals โ get an AI identification with likely species, treatments to consider, and collector notes.
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 gemstones
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 Gemstone Photo for Identification
A clear photo is the single biggest factor in accurate gemstone identification. Follow these tips for a more precise result.
✓ Do This
✗ Avoid This
Pro Tip — Show the Cut Style
Cut style is a strong identification clue. Brilliant cuts (round, oval) maximise sparkle; step cuts (emerald cut) show colour and clarity in parallel facets; cabochons are smooth domes used for opal, turquoise, and star stones. A side photo showing pavilion facets or cabochon dome shape helps the AI narrow the species significantly.
Add Physical Observations
In the notes field, mention: claimed species from seller, suspected treatment (heat, oil, dye), whether it scratches glass, double images through the stone (optic doubling), colour change in different light, or if it’s in a vintage or costume jewellery setting.
What Type of Gemstone Do You Have?
Our free gemstone identifier works across precious, semi-precious, and ornamental stones in any cut or form.
Precious Gems
The classic “big four” — diamond, ruby, sapphire, and emerald. High value, often treated or synthetic. Use our specialist tools for targeted screening.
Semi-Precious Gems
Popular collector and jewellery stones with distinctive colour and optical properties. Often confused with each other or with glass simulants.
Cabochon Gems
Smooth-domed cuts without facets. Used for opaque, translucent, or phenomenon stones showing stars, cat’s eyes, or play of colour.
Organic Gems
Gem materials from living organisms rather than minerals. Have unique structures and identification challenges distinct from crystalline gems.
Rough & Crystal Specimens
Uncut natural crystals and rough material. Identification focuses on crystal habit, colour zoning, and matrix rather than cut quality.
Simulants & Glass
Man-made or common materials sold as gemstones. Glass, cubic zirconia, and synthetic spinel are the most frequent imitations in costume jewellery.
Why Use This Free Gemstone Identifier?
Built for jewellery owners, collectors, buyers, and anyone who wants to know what stone they have before paying for a lab report.
Photo-Based Identification
Our AI analyses colour, cut style, transparency, luster, inclusions, and setting details from your photo — the same properties a gemologist uses for initial screening.
Powered by Claude AI
Powered by Anthropic’s Claude with FGA-level gemology prompts — trained across thousands of gemstone specimens for expert-level identification with detailed reasoning.
Detailed Identification Report
Every result includes likely species, confidence level, key visual features, possible treatments to consider, similar gemstones, and collector care notes.
Works on Any Gem Form
Faceted stones, cabochons, beads, rough crystals, and stones in ring or pendant settings — upload whatever you have and get a screening result.
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
Already suspect a specific gem? Use our specialist tools — from opal identifier to jade identifier — each with tailored AI prompts.
How to Identify Gemstones — What the AI Looks For
When you upload a photo to our free gemstone identifier, the AI analyses the same visual properties a gemologist would examine. Understanding these properties helps you take better photos and interpret your results more confidently.
Colour
Colour is often the first clue but rarely definitive on its own — many gems share similar hues. The AI assesses hue, tone, and saturation, and looks for colour zoning (uneven colour distribution) which can indicate natural origin or treatment. Some gems show pleochroism (different colours from different angles) — mention this in your notes if observed.
Cut Style
Brilliant cuts (round, oval, pear) have triangular and kite-shaped facets designed to maximise sparkle — common for diamond, sapphire, and topaz. Step cuts (emerald cut, baguette) have parallel rectangular facets that showcase colour and clarity — classic for emerald and aquamarine. Cabochons are smooth domes without facets — used for opal, turquoise, moonstone, and cat’s eye stones. Cut style narrows the possibilities considerably.
Transparency and Clarity
Gemstones range from transparent (light passes clearly) to translucent to opaque. Inclusions visible in photos — needles, feathers, crystals, colour bands — help identify species and assess natural vs synthetic origin. Glass simulants often show round bubbles; natural gems show angular mineral inclusions.
Luster and Surface
Luster describes how light reflects from the surface: adamantine (diamond-like brilliance), vitreous (glassy), pearly, silky, or waxy. Surface wear, scratches, and chip patterns on older jewellery stones provide context about age and hardness. A vitreous luster with surface scratches suggests a softer gem like opal or turquoise.
This Is Not a Lab Certificate
AI gemstone identification from photos is useful for initial screening but cannot replace professional gemological testing. Definitive identification of species, treatment status, and origin requires examination by a certified gemologist with refractometer, spectroscope, and microscopy. For insurance, sale, or high-value purchases, always get a GIA, IGI, or AGL report.
Gemstone Identification Tests You Can Do at Home
While our AI works from photos alone, these simple tests improve accuracy when you add results in the notes field.
The Scratch Test (Mohs Hardness)
Your fingernail is Mohs 2.5, a copper coin is Mohs 3.5, a steel knife is Mohs 5.5, and glass is Mohs 5.5–6. Diamond is Mohs 10; sapphire and ruby Mohs 9; emerald Mohs 7.5–8; opal Mohs 5.5–6.5. Knowing whether your stone scratches glass immediately eliminates many possibilities.
The Magnet Test
Most gemstones are non-magnetic. Strong magnetic attraction suggests iron-bearing minerals or imitations, not precious gems. Garnet (almandine) can show weak attraction. Magnetic response rules out diamond, sapphire, ruby, and emerald.
UV Fluorescence
Many gems fluoresce under UV light. Diamond often fluoresces blue; ruby red; opal white or green; some sapphires red or orange. Fluorescence patterns help distinguish natural from synthetic stones but require a UV torch to observe. Mention any UV response in your notes.
Common Gemstone Confusions
These are the mix-ups we see most often. Understanding them helps you interpret your result:
- Blue sapphire vs blue topaz — topaz is lighter, often brighter blue; sapphire is deeper with silk inclusions. Use our aquamarine vs blue topaz and sapphire tools.
- Emerald vs green glass — glass has round bubbles and uniform colour; emerald shows natural inclusions (jardin). Use our emerald identifier.
- Ruby vs red spinel vs garnet — ruby is deep red with silk; spinel is often cleaner; garnet shows different inclusions. Use our ruby identifier and garnet identifier.
- Citrine vs heated amethyst — most commercial citrine is heat-treated amethyst. Natural citrine is rare. Use our citrine identifier.
- Opal vs synthetic opal — synthetic opal shows uniform columnar colour pattern; natural opal has irregular play of colour. Use our opal identifier.
- Diamond vs cubic zirconia — CZ shows excessive fire and rounded facet edges. Use our diamond identifier.
Understanding Gemstone Treatments
Most gemstones on the market have been treated to improve appearance. Our AI flags likely treatments when visual clues are visible, but cannot confirm treatment status from photos alone. Common treatments include:
- Heat treatment — improves colour in ruby, sapphire, aquamarine, tanzanite, and citrine (from amethyst)
- Oiling / resin filling — conceals fractures in emerald, ruby, and turquoise
- Irradiation — produces blue topaz and some coloured diamonds
- Dyeing — enhances colour in jade, turquoise, chalcedony, and howlite
- Diffusion — adds colour to sapphire surface layers
- Fracture filling — glass or lead-glass filling in diamond and ruby
Using Our Specialist Identifier Tools
The general gemstone identifier works for any stone. If you already suspect what you have, our specialist tools give more targeted results: diamond, ruby, sapphire, emerald, opal, jade, turquoise, and 20+ more. For rough mineral specimens, try our crystal identifier or mineral identifier.
Frequently Asked Questions — Gemstone Identification
Answers to the most common questions about identifying gemstones online for free.
Ready to Identify Your Gemstone?
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