Sapphire Value, Price, and Jewelry Information
Few gems have held our attention over millennia as well as sapphire. The pure blue colors and excellent durability of this gem-quality member of the corundum family make for an exceptional gemstone. However, not all sapphires are blue. The September birthstone comes in every color of the rainbow. Except red.
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Few gems have held our attention over millennia as well as sapphire. The durability of this gem-quality member of the corundum family makes it an exceptional gemstone. The rare, blue Kashmir sapphire commands the highest prices, sometimes over $200,000 a carat. Other unheated, pure blues can sell for $2,000-$10,000 per carat depending on size. But, did you know that not all sapphires are blue? The September birthstone comes in every color of the rainbow except red.
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for full access to our price guide (updated monthly).Sapphire Value
Color is the most important element in estimating the value of blue sapphire. Although hue counts, the closer to a pure blue the better, saturation is more important. Top sapphires reach vivid saturation. (Many sapphires on the market are actually grayish). Tone is also an important consideration. Dark sapphires are abundant and never reach very high values. (Of course, the same can be said for all dark gems: too dark and they’ll only be moderately valuable). The pictures below are a rough illustration of differences in blue sapphire saturation.
After blue, pink and pink-orange padparadscha colors command the highest prices.
For more information on sapphire quality factors, consult our sapphire buying guide, blue sapphire appraisal guide, and sapphire engagement ring guide.
What is Sapphire?
All red, gem-quality corundum gems are considered rubies. All other colors of gem-quality corundum are considered sapphires. On the market, blue sapphires are usually simply called sapphires, while sapphires of other colors are commonly specified as yellow sapphires, pink sapphires, etc, and are collectively known as "fancy sapphires." However, when discussing the physical and optical properties of sapphires, the term "sapphire" applies to all sapphires regardless of color.
Does Sapphire Make a Good Jewelry Stone?
Sapphire is one of the most popular gemstones for jewelry of any kind. Sapphire's hardness is second only to diamond among natural gems. It also has no cleavage planes. These qualities make it a superb jewelry stone for everyday wear, with great resistance to scratches and blows. Of course, a heavily included or fractured stone will be less stable.
How Does Sapphire Get its Color?
Sapphires get their extraordinary colors from trace elements such as iron, titanium, chromium, and others. Different trace elements can cause different colors.
What are Color Change Sapphires?
Traces of vanadium may cause color change in some sapphires. These sapphires show one color in daylight or fluorescent light and another in incandescent light.
This custom-cut, 1.33-ct sapphire from the Umba Valley in Tanzania shows a violet-blue color in daylight. However, in incandescent light, it shows a deep purple flash. © The Gem Trader. Used with permission.
Pink Sapphire or Ruby?
There is some disagreement about the distinction between pink sapphires and rubies. Some authorities classify only corundum gems with a dominant red hue as ruby. Others consider any red corundum to be ruby, including pink, which is a light tone of red.
What is a Padparadscha Sapphire?
Debates over colors and definitions extend to padparadscha sapphires, too. Subjective descriptions of these "lotus-colored" sapphires include "sunset," "peach," and "salmon." The preferred color qualities range from a light to medium-tone orange-pink to pink with a slight orange hue to orange with a slight pinkish hue to a more deeply saturated orange-pink. These preferences also vary between consumers from Eastern and Western countries.
The Lore and Lure of Sapphires
For centuries, sapphire has been popularly associated with royalty and said to protect against poison and fraud. Star sapphires have also been associated with the power to divine the future. However, ancient references to sapphires may actually refer to lapis lazuli, another striking but gemologically distinct blue stone.
Learn more about the myths and romance of the traditional September birthstone in our article on sapphire symbolism.
What are Kashmir Sapphires?
The most highly prized sapphires come from Kashmir. High in the Himalayas, these stones could only be found a few months out of the year. However, these sources are now exhausted.
Kashmir sapphires are special. In addition to their fine color, what sets them apart from all others is their very fine silk inclusions. These scatter light and give the stone a soft, velvety appearance. It creates a glow that, at the same time, minimizes extinction. This effect is only seen in one other stone: Myanmar ruby.
Kashmir sapphires have a price structure all their own. Many sapphires are said to have "Kashmir color" or are called Kashmir due to their color. However, simply having fine color isn't enough to prove origin.
Fortunately, Kashmir sapphires have a variety of features that make them easy to distinguish. Kashmir is the only place where tourmaline and corundum are found together. Although you'll rarely see tourmaline inclusions in a finished sapphire, it often shows up on the rough or associated matrix.
Silk Inclusions
The most visible feature of Kashmir sapphire is its silk. It's much finer than that seen in other sapphires. Its appearance is usually muted, rather than sharp and clear. This is what is known as being "velvety." The first picture below shows the traditional fine, or velvety, silk as well as a "streamer" effect. (However, in this concentration, it will affect the clarity of the gem). In the second picture, the silk is much lighter but still soft in texture. Occasionally where the silk crosses, you'll get "snowflakes" as seen in the third picture.
Silk can take on other distinctive appearances. The silk pattern in the picture below left is called "leather." The sideways markings are what distinguish leather. The picture below right shows parallel streamers. When alone like this, they're often called "comet tails."
Distinctive Kashmir Sapphire Features
While Kashmir stones have typical sapphire inclusions, they may also contain unique, elongated zircon crystals. Some of them are much more extreme in length than pictured here. These and other inclusions often have streamers.
Another identifying feature is extreme color zoning. You can usually see colorless bands between the blue. This feature alone wouldn't be sufficient to make a positive identification, but in combination with any of the above features, it's a strong indication.
How to Identify Sapphires
Sapphires are highly prized jewelry stones. Determining their geographic origin and whether they're natural or lab-grown is critical. Fortunately, examining their inclusions, luminescence, and absorption spectra can reveal clues.
Sapphire Inclusions
Sapphires have some characteristic inclusions that can help distinguish them from other natural gems. See the corundum section in our article on inclusions of specific gemstones.
Inclusions can also help identify the source of a sapphire. See our article on identifying the origins of corundum gemstones for more information.
Some inclusions can also help identify a lab-made gem. For example, curved striae are found only in synthetic sapphires and rubies, never natural ones. See our article on inclusions of synthetic gemstones for more information.
Star Sapphires
Sapphires can display asterism or the "star effect" due to rutile inclusions in their hexagonal crystal matrix. If this rutile is sufficiently abundant and precisely arranged, proper cabochon cutting can create six-rayed star sapphires.
Trapiche Sapphires
Some sapphires can show a star-like "spoked wheel" pattern. However, these aren't star sapphires. Known as trapiche gems, these rare sapphires develop with carbonaceous inclusions between their crystal growth sectors, which look like the spokes of a wheel. Since sapphires have a highly symmetrical hexagonal crystal habit, trapiche sapphires can show six distinct spokes.
Lapidaries can highlight the unusual appearance of these sapphires with slices or cabochon cuts.
Trapiche emeralds are perhaps the best-known examples of these gems, but other types of gemstones can develop this pattern, including aquamarines, garnets, rubies, spinels, and tourmalines.
Sapphire Luminescence
Natural Blue Sapphire Fluorescence
Typically, natural blue sapphires have no reaction to ultraviolet light (UV). However, there are some notable exceptions:
- Some blue Thai sapphires fluoresce weak greenish white in shortwave (SW) UV.
- Sri Lankan blue sapphires may fluoresce red to orange in longwave (LW) UV and light blue in SW.
- Blue color-change sapphires may show a weak, light red fluorescence in SW.
- Some African blue sapphires may show moderate to strong orange fluorescence in SW.
- Heat-treated blue gems sometimes fluoresce chalky green in SW.
Natural Fancy Sapphire Fluorescence
- Green sapphires: inert.
- Black sapphires: inert.
- Sri Lankan yellow sapphires: fluoresce a distinctive apricot color in LW and X-rays, and weak yellow-orange in SW. The fluorescence in LW is proportional to the gem's depth of color.
- Pink sapphires: strong orange-red in LW, weaker color in SW.
- Violet or alexandrite-like sapphires: strong red in LW, weak light red in SW.
- Colorless sapphires: moderate light red-orange in LW.
- Orange sapphires: a strong orange-red in the presence of LW.
- Brown sapphires: usually inert or weak red in LW and SW.
- Natural color-change sapphires: inert to strong red in LW, inert to moderate red to orange in SW.
This dramatic crystal specimen features a doubly terminated blueish gray sapphire, 13 cm long, perched in a metamorphic matrix. Both the crystal and matrix fluoresce a striking blue. Soboba Hot Springs, San Jacinto Mts, Riverside Co., California, USA. © Rob Lavinsky, www.iRocks.com. Used with permission.
Synthetic Sapphire Fluorescence
Some lab-created sapphires, both blue and fancy colors, can show different luminescent colors than their natural counterparts. This can help gemologists distinguish synthetics from mined gems.
- Blue sapphires (synthetic): weak to moderate, chalky blue to yellow-green in SW.
- Orange sapphires (synthetic): very weak, orange to red in SW.
- Color change sapphires (synthetic): moderate orange to red in LW and SW, may fluoresce red in LW and mottled blue in SW.
- Brown sapphires (synthetic): inert to weak red in LW and SW.
- Green sapphires (synthetic): weak orange in LW, dull, brownish red in SW.
- Pink sapphires (synthetic): moderate to strong red or orange/red in LW, moderate to strong reddish purple in SW.
- Violet sapphires (synthetic): strong red in LW, strong greenish blue in SW.
- Colorless sapphires (synthetic): inert to weak blueish white in SW.
- Yellow sapphires (synthetic): very weak red in SW.
X-Ray Fluorescence
Some sapphires from Sri Lanka, Montana, and Kashmir glow dull red or yellow-orange when exposed to X-rays.
Sapphire Absorption Spectrum
The ferric iron spectrum dominates these stones. In green and blue-green gems, rich in iron, there are lines at 4710, 4600, and 4500 in the blue-green region. Also, lines at 4500 and 4600 may seem to merge and become a broad band. These three bands are generally known as the 4500 complex and are very distinctive in sapphires. Some blue Sri Lanka sapphires also show a 6935 red fluorescent line, and the 4500 line is very weak in these gems.
- Lines rarely seen in Kashmir sapphires. Heat treated sapphires may show no lines or just at 4500.
- Some flux grown synthetic sapphires have a faint line at 4500, most not diagnostic.
- Synthetic color change sapphires show a line 4740.
- Natural green sapphires show lines at 4500, 4600, and 4700.
- Synthetic green sapphires show lines at 5300 and 6870.
- Natural purple may show combination of ruby and sapphire spectrum.
- Natural yellow, Australian, 4500, 4600, and 4700.
- Other natural yellow to orange-yellow not diagnostic.
- Yellow and orange line sapphires, 6900, cutoff at 4600. If no iron lines, likely synthetic.
- Orange, if only thin lines in red, fluorescent line at 6900, and flawless, probably synthetic.
Are There Synthetic Sapphires?
Corundum gemstones, both rubies and sapphires, were first synthesized in the early 1900s by a simple flame fusion process. Today, many sapphires on the market are grown in labs. Gemologists need to be familiar with flame fusion as well as Czochralski, flux, and hydrothermal growth processes in order to distinguish natural from synthetic sapphires.
Modern laboratory methods can simulate natural formation conditions so closely that colors and even inclusions look extremely natural. Such stones are difficult for all but the most highly skilled professionals to identify as synthetic.
Sapphire Lookalikes
Due to the popularity of blue sapphires, other natural blue gemstones may be used to simulate their appearance. Glass, plastic, and other synthetic materials may also be used. Sometimes, they may be misidentified as sapphires, either accidentally or deliberately in order to sell them for higher prices. Although consumers may find some lookalikes difficult to spot, professional gemologists can usually distinguish these gemstones with standard tests.
Although blue remains the most well-known and expensive sapphire color, you might also encounter simulated pink and padparadscha sapphires as their popularity increases.
Do Sapphires Receive Enhancements?
There are numerous treatment methods for sapphires. For details on these processes and how to distinguish them, see our article on corundum treatments.
Where do Sapphires Come From?
Sapphires occur abundantly all over the world, but gem-quality sapphires occur much more rarely and in fewer locations. The following are some of the most notable gem sources. Consult our article on identifying the origins of rubies and sapphires for additional sources and information.
Sri Lanka
This ancient source still produces beautiful sapphires of all colors. Most blue sapphires on the market originate from here, too. These gems tend to show slightly grayish to violet-blue hues and have a light to medium tone.
Kashmir
Kashmir stones set the standard for evaluating blue sapphires. Verified historic Kashmir sapphires can sell for astronomical prices. They have a velvety texture and their colors tend towards slightly purplish blue, with strong to vivid saturation and medium to medium-dark tone. Review the section on Kashmir sapphires above for more information.
Australia
Australian sapphires tend to have dark colors, although some very fine gems have come from the area. Also of interest are the parti-colored sapphires which are usually yellow and green or yellow and blue.
Myanmar
Formerly known as Burma, Myanmar produces some very high-quality sapphires. The colors are slightly violet blue, highly saturated, medium to medium dark tone.
Thailand
This nation produces blue sapphires abundantly. Their hue and saturation tend to be fine, although many are strongly dichroic, with a dirty green in one direction. Unless properly cut, the green will show in the finished stone. The stones are also very dark, requiring special cutting to show the color.
Montana
This American state produces sapphires of all colors. Unfortunately, most of them are "steely," meaning they have grayish saturation. The sapphires from Yogo Gulch are an exception, with some of the world's finest coloring. However, these small stones rarely finish over one carat.
Stone Sizes
- Smithsonian Institution (Washington, DC): 423 (blue, Sri Lanka, "Logan Sapphire"); 330 (blue star, Myanmar, "Star of Asia"); 316 (blue, Sri Lanka, "Star of Artaban"); 98.6 (deep blue, "Bismarck Sapphire"); 92.6 (yellow, Myanmar); 67 (black star, Thailand); 62 (black star, Australia); 42.2 (purple, Sri Lanka); 16.8 (green, Myanmar)
- Private Collection: "Black Star of Queensland," oval, found in 1948, 733 cts, world's largest black star. A yellow crystal of 217.5 carats was found in Queensland, Australia in 1946.
- Natural History Museum (Paris): the "Raspoli," 135-ct brown sapphire, lozenge-shaped rough, clean.
- Tested by the GIA: 5,600-ct sapphire cabochon; Montana blue sapphire, cushion-cut, 12.54 cts, believed largest stone from this locality.
- Diamond Fund (Moscow): 258.8 (blue), fine, lively gem.
- Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Ontario): 179.4 (golden yellow, Sri Lanka); 28.6 (Padparadscha, Sri Lanka); 43.95 (greenish yellow, Sri Lanka); 193.3 (blue star sapphire).
- In 1929, the British mission to Burma (Myanmar) saw a 951-ct sapphire, which may be the largest ever found there.
- American Museum of Natural History (New York): 536 (blue, "Star of India"); 116 (blue, "Midnight Star"); 100 (yellow, Sri Lanka); 100 (Padparadscha, very fine, Sri Lanka); 163 (blue, Sri Lanka); 34 (violet, Thailand).
- Iranian Crown Jewels: Hollow rectangular cabochon of 191.6 carats; oval, yellow gem of 119 carats. Also fine Kashmir blue oval, nearly clean, 75 carats.
Not surprisingly, some sapphires have become well-known for their sizes as well as their histories. You can learn more about the Logan Sapphire, the Star of India, the Bismarck Sapphire, and others in our article on famous sapphires.
Sapphire Trade Names
Please note: you may find these names used purely as descriptive terms. Always confirm the origin of a sapphire with a vendor, especially if the gem is sold with a "geographic" name. Ask if the name refers to the actual origin or simply the color. Sapphires can't always be identified by their color alone.
- Adamantine spar: brown, usually opaque but may be translucent to transparent.
- African: usually light in tone.
- Australian: usually very dark, some yellow and green parti-colored.
- Burma or Oriental: slightly violet-blue, highly saturated, medium to medium dark tone.
- Cashmere or Kashmir: velvety, slightly purplish blue, strong to vivid saturation, medium to medium dark tone.
- Ceylon or Sri Lanka: light to medium tone, slightly grayish to violetish blue.
- Geuda: milky stones from Sri Lanka that can turn blue as well as yellow or orange when heated.
- Montana: all colors, usually light to medium tone, grayish saturation.
- Padparadscha: "lotus flower" color, pinkish orange.
- Thai or Siamese: dark blue.
Yellow sapphire is sometimes misleadingly referred to as "Oriental Topaz" or "King Topaz." Green sapphire is sometimes misleadingly referred to as "Oriental Emerald." Purple sapphire is sometimes misleadingly referred to as "Oriental Amethyst." Since these sapphire colors are less well-known, vendors might try to present them as gems more commonly and strongly associated with yellow, green, or purple, for example.
Consult our list of false or misleading gemstones names for more information.
How to Care for Sapphire Jewelry
For stones reasonably free of inclusions or fractures, no special wear or care precautions are necessary. However, avoid cleaning any oil-treated sapphires with ultrasonic systems. Otherwise, you can clean sapphires with mechanical systems. Nevertheless, cleaning your sapphires at home with warm water, detergent, and a soft brush or taking them to a professional jeweler are your safest choices.
Consult our gemstone jewelry care guide for more recommendations.
Joel E. Arem, Ph.D., FGA
Dr. Joel E. Arem has more than 60 years of experience in the world of gems and minerals. After obtaining his Ph.D. in Mineralogy from Harvard University, he has published numerous books that are still among the most widely used references and guidebooks on crystals, gems and minerals in the world.
Co-founder and President of numerous organizations, Dr. Arem has enjoyed a lifelong career in mineralogy and gemology. He has been a Smithsonian scientist and Curator, a consultant to many well-known companies and institutions, and a prolific author and speaker. Although his main activities have been as a gem cutter and dealer, his focus has always been education. joelarem.com
Donald Clark, CSM IMG
The late Donald Clark, CSM founded the International Gem Society in 1998. Donald started in the gem and jewelry industry in 1976. He received his formal gemology training from the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) and the American Society of Gemcutters (ASG). The letters “CSM” after his name stood for Certified Supreme Master Gemcutter, a designation of Wykoff’s ASG which has often been referred to as the doctorate of gem cutting. The American Society of Gemcutters only had 54 people reach this level. Along with dozens of articles for leading trade magazines, Donald authored the book “Modern Faceting, the Easy Way.”
International Gem Society
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