Same material, different origin
The single most important fact about lab-grown vs natural diamonds for piercing jewellery and for fine jewellery is that they are the same material. A lab-grown diamond is not a 'fake diamond' or a 'diamond imitation'. It is diamond. The carbon atoms are arranged identically, the optical properties are identical, the hardness is identical (Mohs 10), and the chemical structure is identical. The only difference is where the diamond formed: a natural diamond formed in the earth's mantle over billions of years; a lab-grown diamond formed in a controlled environment over weeks to months.
Once you internalise this that lab-grown diamonds are real diamonds the choice between them becomes much simpler. The decision isn't between 'real' and 'fake'. It's between two real diamonds with different origins, prices, and provenance stories.
How lab-grown diamonds are made
Two main production methods, both legitimate:
HPHT (High Pressure, High Temperature)
Mimics the natural diamond formation process. A small diamond seed is placed in a press that subjects it to extreme pressure (5+ gigapascals) and temperature (1,300–1,600°C) in the presence of a carbon source. Over days to weeks, carbon atoms add to the seed crystal, growing a larger diamond. HPHT diamonds tend to have slightly different inclusion patterns than CVD diamonds and are more common in coloured lab-grown diamonds.
CVD (Chemical Vapour Deposition)
A more recent technology. A diamond seed is placed in a chamber filled with carbon-rich gas (typically methane). The gas is ionised into plasma, releasing carbon atoms that deposit onto the seed crystal layer by layer, like 3D printing at the atomic scale. CVD growth happens over weeks. Most lab-grown diamonds in modern jewellery — including most piercing pieces — are CVD diamonds.
Both methods produce real diamonds. The choice between them affects details like inclusion patterns and growth speed but doesn't change the fundamental material. From a buyer perspective, the distinction is usually irrelevant unless you're an enthusiast or shopping for highly specific gemological properties.
The differences that matter
| Property | Natural diamond | Lab-grown diamond |
|---|---|---|
| Material | Crystalline carbon (Mohs 10) | Crystalline carbon (Mohs 10) |
| Visual appearance | Identical to lab-grown | Identical to natural |
| Hardness & durability | Same | Same |
| Price | 100% (baseline) | 30–60% of natural at equivalent quality |
| Environmental impact | Mining footprint | Energy-intensive production |
| Geological provenance | Billions of years old | Weeks to months old |
| Inclusion patterns | Natural growth patterns | Lab growth patterns (different but visible only at high magnification) |
| Resale value | Significant secondhand market | Limited secondhand market currently |
The price difference in real numbers
For piercing jewellery specifically, here are realistic price ranges in 2025 for equivalent stone sizes in implant-grade titanium pieces:
• 1.5mm round brilliant cut — Natural: €80–140 | Lab-grown: €40–80
• 2mm round brilliant cut — Natural: €120–220 | Lab-grown: €60–120
• 3mm round brilliant cut — Natural: €200–400 | Lab-grown: €100–200
• Three-stone clusters (1.5mm each) — Natural: €200–400 | Lab-grown: €100–200
The lab-grown discount holds across sizes and styles. For a buyer indifferent to provenance, lab-grown diamonds provide essentially the same product at significantly lower cost. For a buyer who values natural provenance specifically, the premium for natural diamonds is real and well-understood.
When to choose lab-grown
• Value-focused: you want the diamond look and durability without the price premium
• Environmental considerations: lab-grown diamonds avoid mining impacts (though they have energy footprints; this isn't a perfect comparison)
• Ethical considerations: lab-grown diamonds have clear, traceable origins and are conflict-free by definition
• Larger pieces at piercing-jewellery budget: lab-grown lets you afford 2–3mm stones where natural would be 1–1.5mm
• First-time gemstone piercing pieces: testing whether you'll wear and enjoy a diamond-set piece before committing to a natural diamond purchase
When to choose natural
• Sentimental significance: a stone with billions of years of geological history matters to you in a way that recent lab production doesn't
• Resale or inheritance considerations: natural diamonds have established secondhand markets; lab-grown markets are still developing
• Status and traditional value: in some cultural and family contexts, natural diamonds carry weight that lab-grown stones don't yet match
• Specific provenance preferences: ethically sourced natural diamonds with clear origin documentation (Kimberley Process or beyond) appeal to some buyers
• Investment perspective: natural diamonds retain value more reliably than lab-grown over decades (though investment-grade pieces are rarely set in piercing jewellery anyway)
The honest take
For most piercing jewellery buyers, lab-grown diamonds are the practical choice. The visual outcome is identical, the durability is identical, and the cost saving is substantial. Natural diamonds make sense when provenance matters to you specifically sentimental significance, inheritance considerations, or ethical preferences for naturally formed stones. There's no wrong answer; both are real diamonds.
How to verify the stone in your piece
Reputable piercing jewellery sellers state the diamond type clearly: 'natural diamond' or 'lab-grown diamond' (sometimes 'CVD' or 'HPHT' for technical buyers). If the listing is vague 'diamond' without specifying natural or lab-grown the stone is more likely to be a simulant (CZ or moissanite) than either type of real diamond. Premium pieces from major brands sometimes include grading reports or certificates; smaller piercing studios typically don't certify individual stones at this size.
For absolute certainty about whether a stone is a real diamond (natural or lab-grown) vs a simulant, a jeweller can test it with a thermal conductivity tester. The test takes 30 seconds and costs €5–10. It cannot distinguish between natural and lab-grown diamonds both register as 'diamond' but it reliably distinguishes diamonds from CZ, moissanite, and other simulants.
Shop the look
• Labrets
• Clickers and hoops with stones
Internal links
• Advanced gemstones in piercing jewellery: complete guide
• Investment piercing jewellery
• Caring for jewellery with gemstones
Frequently Asked Questions
Are lab-grown diamonds real diamonds?
Yes. Lab-grown diamonds are chemically and physically identical to natural diamonds same carbon crystal structure, same hardness (Mohs 10), same optical properties. The only difference is origin: lab-grown diamonds form in a controlled laboratory environment over weeks to months, while natural diamonds form in the earth's mantle over billions of years. Both are real diamonds, not simulants. A jeweller's thermal conductivity test cannot distinguish between them both register as diamond.
How much cheaper are lab-grown diamonds in piercing jewellery?
Typically 30–60% less than equivalent natural diamonds at the same size and quality. For piercing-jewellery specifically: a 2mm natural diamond piece runs €120–220 in implant-grade titanium; the equivalent lab-grown diamond piece runs €60–120. The discount holds across sizes and the savings are consistent this isn't a temporary promotional discount but a structural price difference between the two markets.
Can I tell the difference between a lab-grown and natural diamond by looking?
No. The visual appearance is identical. The optical properties brilliance, fire, scintillation are produced by the diamond crystal structure, which is the same in both. Even gemologists with magnification equipment can usually only distinguish between them by examining specific inclusion patterns (the imperfections within the stone that indicate growth conditions). For practical piercing-wear purposes, the two are visually indistinguishable.
Do lab-grown diamonds last as long as natural diamonds?
Yes. They have identical hardness (Mohs 10, the hardest natural material) and identical chemical stability. Lab-grown diamonds in piercing jewellery have the same durability profile as natural diamonds — they resist scratching, chemical exposure, and physical damage equally well. There is no expectation that lab-grown diamonds will degrade faster than natural diamonds over time.
Are lab-grown diamonds more ethical than natural diamonds?
It depends on what you mean by ethical. Lab-grown diamonds avoid the mining industry's environmental and labour concerns by definition they're produced in factories rather than mined from the earth. However, lab-grown diamond production is energy-intensive (significant electricity consumption) so the environmental footprint isn't zero. Ethically sourced natural diamonds (Kimberley Process certified, Canadian-mined, or single-mine traceable) also exist. Both options have ethical dimensions worth considering lab-grown isn't automatically more ethical than every natural diamond.
Will my lab-grown diamond piercing lose value over time?
From a resale perspective, lab-grown diamonds currently have limited secondhand markets compared to natural diamonds. Whether they'll develop stronger resale markets over the coming decades is uncertain. For piercing jewellery specifically, this rarely matters most piercing pieces aren't bought as investments and most owners keep them rather than resell. From a wear-and-use perspective, lab-grown diamonds last just as long as natural ones; the 'value loss' is purely a market positioning question, not a quality question.
Should I buy lab-grown or natural diamond for my first diamond piercing piece?
For most first-time buyers, lab-grown is the practical choice. It gives you the diamond experience visual, tactile, ownership at a fraction of the cost, letting you confirm whether you'll wear and enjoy a diamond-set piercing before committing to a more expensive natural piece. If the lab-grown piece becomes a favourite, you can upgrade to natural for a milestone piece later. If it doesn't become a favourite, you've spent significantly less to learn that.