When you submit a diamond for sale — to a dealer, a broker, or through Parure — the first question you will be asked is whether you have a GIA certificate. This is not a formality. It is one of the most significant factors in what offer you will receive.
This guide explains what a GIA certificate contains, how buyers use it, and what your options are if you do not have one.
What Is the GIA?
The Gemological Institute of America is the world's foremost authority on diamond grading. Founded in 1931 and operating as a nonprofit, the GIA developed the 4Cs system — Cut, Color, Clarity, and Carat Weight — that is now the universal language of the diamond industry. When a diamond carries a GIA grading report, it means the stone has been evaluated by trained gemologists under controlled laboratory conditions and assigned precise grades on each dimension.
Other laboratories exist — AGS, IGI, EGL, HRD — and their reports carry varying degrees of acceptance in the trade. GIA is the gold standard. A GIA report is accepted without question by every serious buyer in the Diamond District and globally.
What a GIA Report Contains
A standard GIA Diamond Grading Report includes:
- Carat weight — measured to the hundred-thousandth of a carat
- Color grade — on a scale from D (colorless) to Z (light yellow), assessed in comparison to master stones under controlled lighting
- Clarity grade — from FL (Flawless) to I3 (Included), documenting the nature, size, and position of internal characteristics
- Cut grade — for round brilliants, an assessment of proportions, symmetry, and polish on a scale from Excellent to Poor
- Fluorescence — whether the stone fluoresces under UV light, and the intensity
- A plotted diagram — a map of the stone's inclusions
- A unique report number — laser-inscribed on the girdle of most GIA-certified diamonds, allowing instant verification
Why Buyers Pay More for Certified Diamonds
A buyer purchasing an uncertified diamond is taking on risk. Without a laboratory report, they must assess the stone themselves — and even experienced gemologists can disagree on color and clarity grades by one or two grades. That uncertainty has a price. Buyers will discount their offer to account for the risk that the stone is not exactly what it appears to be.
A GIA certificate eliminates that uncertainty entirely. The buyer knows precisely what they are bidding on. They can price it accurately against the market, against comparable stones they have seen, against current wholesale prices. The result is a higher bid, and more confidence in that bid.
In practical terms, a GIA-certified diamond will typically sell for 15-30% more than an identical uncertified stone. The certificate pays for itself many times over.
What If You Do Not Have a Certificate?
Many people selling inherited diamonds, vintage pieces, or rings purchased decades ago do not have a GIA report. This is common and manageable.
Your options:
- Submit the diamond to GIA for grading. The process takes 3-4 weeks for standard service, or as few as 2 business days for expedited service. Fees range from approximately $100 to $200 for most diamonds under 2 carats. For high-value stones, this cost is almost always worth incurring before selling.
- Proceed without a certificate. You will receive offers, but they will be lower, and the range between buyers will be wider. If you have a reputable independent appraisal, share it — it provides some anchoring even if it is not a laboratory grading report.
- Ask your broker to have it graded. Some brokers or platforms will arrange GIA submission on your behalf as part of the sales process.
A Note on Other Certificates
IGI certificates have become more common, particularly on laboratory-grown diamonds. AGS certificates are well-regarded, particularly for cut quality assessment. EGL certificates — especially EGL International — are viewed with significant skepticism by serious buyers due to historically inconsistent grading standards. If your diamond carries an EGL certificate, expect buyers to discount it relative to a GIA equivalent.
Verifying a Certificate
Every GIA report can be verified instantly at GIA's website using the report number. If you have a certificate but are uncertain of its authenticity, this takes 30 seconds. Legitimate buyers will always verify before making an offer.
When you submit through Parure, your certificate information is central to what we present to buyers. If you have a GIA report, include it. If you do not, submit anyway — we work with uncertified pieces and will advise on whether grading makes sense for your specific stone.
Published by the Parure team, New York.