Three materials, three price tiers, three different stories
Cubic zirconia (CZ), moissanite, and diamond are the three most common 'brilliant clear stone' options in piercing jewellery. They look similar at a glance small, clear, sparkling stones in metal settings but they're three completely different materials at three completely different price points. Understanding which is which helps you shop with intent and avoid both overpaying for the wrong material and underestimating what good simulants can actually deliver.
This guide covers what each material actually is, how they compare in real-world piercing wear, and how to choose between them for your specific situation. The honest position: each has legitimate uses. The right choice depends on your priorities, budget, and what you want the piece to mean.
What each material actually is
Diamond
Pure crystalline carbon, hardest natural material (Mohs 10), extremely high refractive index, naturally found in earth's mantle or produced in labs. Hardness rivals nothing else; chemical stability is essentially total under normal conditions; optical performance is the original standard against which other stones are measured. Diamonds are the genuine article not a comparison to anything, the thing itself.
Moissanite
Silicon carbide (SiC), originally discovered in a meteorite crater by Henri Moissan in 1893. Naturally occurring moissanite is extremely rare; the moissanite in jewellery is laboratory-produced. Mohs hardness 9.25 (between sapphire at 9 and diamond at 10), with higher refractive index than diamond (more 'fire' coloured light dispersion) but slightly lower brilliance under most lighting. Moissanite is its own material with its own properties, not an attempt to imitate diamond.
Cubic zirconia (CZ)
Zirconium dioxide (ZrO₂) in its cubic crystal form. Discovered in 1937 in metamict zircon; commercial production began in the 1970s. Mohs hardness 8.0–8.5 (close to natural sapphire), with refractive index lower than both moissanite and diamond. Quality CZ particularly 5A grade provides excellent visual approximation of diamond at a fraction of the cost. CZ is the practical workhorse of accessible 'diamond-look' jewellery.
How they compare in real-world terms
| Property | Diamond | Moissanite | CZ (5A grade) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hardness (Mohs) | 10 | 9.25 | 8.0–8.5 |
| Refractive index | 2.42 | 2.65–2.69 | 2.15–2.18 |
| Brilliance vs fire | Balanced | Higher fire, lower brilliance | Balanced but lower than diamond |
| Colour | Truly colourless (D-F) achievable | Slight yellow/green tinge in some lights | Truly colourless |
| Durability over years | Indefinite | Excellent, stable | Good but gradually develops surface scratches |
| Typical piercing-jewellery price | €80–300+ | €40–120 | €20–60 |
| Replacement frequency in heavy daily wear | Never | 5–10+ years | 3–7 years |
The visual differences
In photographs and casual observation, all three materials look essentially identical — small clear sparkling stones. The visual differences emerge in specific conditions:
• Strong direct sunlight: moissanite's higher fire produces visibly more coloured light dispersion (rainbow flashes) than diamond or CZ
• Low-light environments: diamond and moissanite both perform well; CZ's lower refractive index produces less brilliance
• Years of wear: CZ develops gradual surface microscratches that slightly dull its appearance; diamond and moissanite remain visually unchanged
• Side angles: diamond and moissanite show clean light reflection; quality CZ shows similar but slightly less crisp reflection
For piercing-scale stones (1–3mm), these differences are often subtle enough that side-by-side comparison is needed to see them. In normal wear, with the stone seen from several feet away in everyday lighting, the three materials are visually similar enough that most observers cannot distinguish between them.
Which to choose for piercing jewellery
Choose diamond when
• Sentimental significance is important (engagement-equivalent piercing piece, memorial piercing, milestone marker)
• You want a piece that will look identical in 20 years without any visual degradation
• Maximum hardness matters (you have a history of damaging jewellery)
• You're investing in a single statement piece rather than building a varied collection
• Budget allows for diamond pricing without compromising other parts of your wardrobe/lifestyle
Choose moissanite when
• You want premium optical performance at meaningful savings vs diamond
• Higher fire and rainbow dispersion appeals to your aesthetic
• Long-term durability matters but diamond pricing doesn't fit your budget
• You appreciate moissanite as its own material rather than as a diamond alternative
• You're building a collection where one moissanite statement piece pairs well with simpler pieces
Choose CZ when
• You want the diamond look at the lowest accessible price
• You're building a varied collection of multiple gemstone pieces
• You're trying a particular gemstone placement or style before committing to natural stones
• Cost-sensitive replacement matters (you'd rather replace a CZ piece in 5 years than restore a more expensive piece)
• You're choosing pieces for everyday wear rather than special-occasion pieces
Quality grades within each material
Each material has quality variations that significantly affect appearance and value.
Diamond quality
Graded on the 4Cs: cut, colour, clarity, carat. For piercing-scale stones, cut matters most (a poorly cut tiny diamond doesn't sparkle), colour grades compress (the difference between D and F is barely visible at 2mm), and clarity inclusions are typically invisible. Quality piercing diamonds are usually in the G-H colour range (near-colourless) with VS clarity (no eye-visible inclusions).
Moissanite quality
Modern moissanite is typically D-E-F colourless (no tinge) or 'Forever One' brand quality. Older moissanite from earlier production sometimes shows yellow or green tinge under certain lights. For piercing jewellery, look for sellers specifying colourless grade or named brand moissanite.
CZ quality
Graded by letter system: 5A is the highest standard quality, followed by 4A, 3A, AA, A. The grades reflect manufacturing precision, optical clarity, and colour purity. For piercing jewellery, 5A is the standard for quality pieces lower grades develop visible flaws faster and look noticeably less brilliant. Avoid pieces that don't specify grade.
The pricing reality
Quality piercing jewellery pricing tells you what material to expect: pieces under €30 with 'diamond' descriptions are almost certainly CZ regardless of how they're described. Pieces in the €40–80 range are typically CZ or low-quality moissanite. Pieces €80–150 are typically quality moissanite or small natural/lab-grown diamonds. Pieces €150+ have meaningful natural or lab-grown diamond content. Use price as a sanity check against the listing description.
Care differences
• Diamond: essentially indestructible; standard cleaning routines apply
• Moissanite: nearly as durable as diamond; cleaning and care match diamond protocols
• CZ: slightly more vulnerable to surface wear; avoid abrasive cleaning, replace pieces showing cloudiness, expect 3–7 years of optimal appearance
All three handle the same cleaning methods covered in the gemstone care cluster guide. The differences are in longevity rather than care protocol.
Shop the look
• Hoops and clickers with stones
Internal links
• Advanced gemstones in piercing jewellery: complete guide
• Lab-grown vs natural diamonds
• Understanding gem quality in small stones
• Caring for jewellery with gemstones
Frequently Asked Questions
Is moissanite better than CZ for piercing jewellery?
Moissanite is more durable and lasts longer in heavy wear typically 5–10+ years of optimal appearance vs 3–7 years for quality CZ. Moissanite also has higher refractive index and shows more 'fire' (rainbow dispersion) than CZ. The trade-off: moissanite typically costs 2–3x more than CZ for the same size piece. For a piece you'll wear daily for years, moissanite is often the better long-term value. For variety and rotation pieces, CZ provides excellent visual quality at lower cost.
Can people tell the difference between CZ and real diamond in a piercing?
In most everyday wear conditions, no. At piercing scale (1–3mm stones) and at normal viewing distances, quality 5A CZ is visually similar enough to diamond that casual observers cannot distinguish between them. The differences become more visible in strong direct sunlight, under specific lighting, or with side-by-side comparison. For social wear, work, and most daily contexts, CZ pieces pass as diamonds to anyone not specifically inspecting them.
How long does CZ last in piercing jewellery?
Quality 5A CZ in well-maintained piercing jewellery typically maintains optimal appearance for 3–7 years of daily wear. Surface microscratches gradually develop over time, slightly dulling the brilliance, but the stone remains in the setting and looks fine for years. After 5+ years of heavy daily wear, you may notice the CZ has lost some sparkle and consider replacing the piece. Lower-grade CZ (3A or A) degrades faster sometimes within 1–2 years.
Is moissanite the same as diamond?
No. Moissanite is silicon carbide (SiC), a completely different material from diamond (which is crystalline carbon). They look similar because both are clear stones with high refractive indices, but they're chemically distinct. Moissanite has slightly higher fire than diamond, slightly lower brilliance, and Mohs hardness 9.25 vs diamond's 10. Modern colourless moissanite is its own material with its own properties, not a diamond imitation though it's often marketed as a diamond alternative.
Why is CZ so much cheaper than diamond?
CZ production is industrial large quantities of high-quality CZ are produced in factories using established processes at relatively low cost per stone. Diamond production (whether mining or lab-growth) involves substantial resource investment, longer time horizons, and inherently lower production volumes. The 50–100x price difference between CZ and natural diamond reflects these structural cost differences, not a quality or appearance difference proportional to the price gap.
Can I upgrade my CZ piercing piece to a real diamond later?
In principle yes, but it's rarely cost-effective. Replacing the CZ stone in a setting requires professional jeweller work and the cost typically approaches the price of a new diamond piece. The practical approach: treat the CZ piece as its own piece, and when you want a diamond piece, buy a new diamond piece in a different position or design rather than retrofitting the existing piece. Some piercing wearers maintain both — a CZ piece for everyday rotation and a diamond piece for statement wear.
Does moissanite turn yellow over time?
Modern colourless moissanite (Forever One and equivalent grades) is stable and does not turn yellow with wear or age. Earlier-generation moissanite from the late 1990s and early 2000s sometimes showed slight yellow or green tinge under certain lighting, which contributed to some scepticism about the material. Contemporary moissanite has overcome these issues quality colourless moissanite stays colourless indefinitely. Always confirm with the seller that the moissanite is current colourless grade.