How to Read a Gemstone Certificate: Comparing the Major Labs
Not all gemstone certificates are equal. The laboratory issuing a report determines how much market credibility it carries — and directly affects resale value. A GRS “Pigeon Blood” certificate on a ruby adds tens of thousands of dollars of value. An unknown lab certificate on the same stone adds nothing. This guide explains what each major laboratory does, what their certificates cover, and which to use for different purposes.
The Major Gemological Laboratories
| Laboratory | Known for | Best suited to |
|---|---|---|
| GRS | Origin and treatment calls on colored stones, especially ruby and sapphire | High-value colored gemstones and unheated claims |
| GIA | Global benchmark for diamonds and colored stones | Diamonds and broad colored-stone certification |
| Gübelin | Premium origin determination on fine colored stones | Investment-grade ruby, sapphire and emerald |
| SSEF | High-end colored-stone and origin reports | Important rubies, sapphires and emeralds |
| IGI | High-volume diamond and jewelry grading | Diamonds, lab-grown stones and jewelry |
| AGL | Detailed colored-stone analysis in the US market | Colored stones needing in-depth treatment analysis |
| GFCO | Accessible colored-stone certification | Everyday certified colored gemstones |
GRS (GemResearch Swisslab)
Based in Lucerne, Switzerland. The preferred laboratory for collector and auction-grade colored gemstones. GRS introduced standardized color terminology — “Pigeon Blood” for ruby, “Royal Blue” and “Cornflower Blue” for sapphire, “Vivid Green” for emerald — that is now used as the industry benchmark at Christie’s, Sotheby’s, and Bonhams. GRS certificates include geographic origin, treatment status, and color designation. For investment-grade purchases above $1,000, GRS is the gold standard.
GIA (Gemological Institute of America)
The world’s most recognized gemological authority, based in Carlsbad, California. GIA’s diamond grading system is the universal standard; their colored stone reports are highly trusted for identity, treatment, and origin determination. GIA does not use qualitative color descriptors like GRS (no “Pigeon Blood” designation) but their origin determinations — “Burma,” “Kashmir,” “Colombia” — carry strong market credibility. Best for: US market, buyers who prioritize institutional recognition, diamond purchasers who also want sapphire or ruby certification.
Gübelin Gem Lab
Based in Lucerne, Switzerland — alongside GRS in the same gem-trading hub. Gübelin is known for exceptional scientific rigor and the Provenance Proof initiative, which uses nanotechnology to create traceable markers within certified stones. Their reports on Kashmir sapphires and Burmese rubies are particularly respected. For museum-quality or ultra-high-value investments, Gübelin is preferred alongside GRS.
SSEF (Swiss Gemmological Institute)
Third of the Swiss “big three.” SSEF reports are respected at the auction level and often issued alongside GRS or Gübelin for important stones. SSEF is known for pioneering research in beryllium treatment detection and origin determination methodology.
IGI (International Gemological Institute)
Based in Antwerp, with offices globally. IGI is the most accessible major lab — faster turnaround, lower cost, widely recognized for commercial-grade colored stones and diamonds. IGI does not carry the collector premium of GRS or Gübelin but is entirely credible for verifying stone identity, treatment, and basic color grading for jewelry purchases. Widely used for sapphires, emeralds, and rubies in the $150–$2,000 range.
AGL (American Gemological Laboratories)
Based in New York. AGL is the leading US-based colored stone laboratory, particularly respected for its detailed treatment grading and origin work on rubies and emeralds. AGL’s “Significant” vs “Minor” oiling scale for emeralds is widely used in the US auction and dealer market.
GFCO (Gem and Fashion Certification Office)
Thailand-based laboratory respected in the Asian and Southeast Asian gem trade. GFCO reports are widely used for commercial to fine grade sapphires and spinels in the Bangkok trading hub. Less recognized in European and US auction markets but entirely credible for gem identity and treatment verification.
Which Certificate for Which Purchase?
| Purchase type | Recommended lab |
|---|---|
| Investment / auction-grade ruby, sapphire | GRS + Gübelin or SSEF |
| Collector-grade colored stone, $1k–$10k | GRS or GIA |
| Fine jewelry, $200–$2k | IGI, GFCO, or GRS |
| US market resale | GIA or AGL |
| Emerald origin & treatment | GRS, Gübelin, or AGL |
| Padparadscha grading | GRS (most conservative & respected) |
Which gemstone certification is the most trusted?
For diamonds and broad colored-stone grading, GIA is the global benchmark. For high-value colored stones, origin and treatment, GRS, Gübelin and SSEF are the most respected. The best lab depends on the stone and the purpose of the purchase.
What is the difference between GRS and GIA certificates?
GIA is the worldwide standard for diamonds and general colored-stone grading. GRS specializes in colored stones — particularly ruby and sapphire — and is widely cited for origin and treatment calls such as unheated determinations.
What does a gemstone certificate actually tell you?
A certificate states the stone’s identity, carat weight, measurements, color, clarity, cut, any treatments detected and often the geographic origin. It is issued by an independent laboratory so you know exactly what you are buying.
Do I need a certificate to buy a gemstone?
For anything of meaningful value, yes. A laboratory report confirms the stone is natural, discloses treatments and supports resale value. Buying an uncertified high-value stone carries real risk of misrepresentation.
Is a GFCO certificate reliable?
GFCO provides accessible colored-stone certification suitable for everyday certified gemstones. For investment-grade or very high-value stones, a premium origin lab such as GRS, Gübelin or SSEF is generally preferred.
Certified Gemstones at MYGEMSET
Every gemstone at MYGEMSET includes an independent laboratory certificate — GRS, GIA, GFCO, IGI, or AGL depending on the stone’s grade and origin. Certificates are provided as high-resolution scans with report numbers available for verification before purchase. Related: What is a GIA Certificate? | What is an Unheated Gemstone? | Gemstones for Investment