What You’re Actually Paying For
Walk into most jewellery stores in Whitefield and ask the price of a VVS diamond ring. You’ll get a number — usually a round figure — with very little explanation of where it comes from. That opacity is a problem, because a diamond ring in 2026 is made up of four distinct cost components, and each one moves independently. Understanding them is the only way to compare prices fairly across stores.
The four components are: diamond cost, gold cost, making charges, and GST. A complete ring price is the sum of all four. Any quote that bundles these together without a breakdown is worth questioning — not because it’s necessarily dishonest, but because you can’t verify what you’re paying for.
For a VVS diamond ring specifically, the diamond cost tends to dominate the total. VVS stands for Very Very Slightly Included — a clarity grade on the GIA/IGI scale indicating inclusions so small they are difficult to detect even under 10x magnification. VVS diamonds are split into two sub-grades: VVS1 (fewer inclusions, positioned toward the top of the stone) and VVS2. Both are eye-clean, meaning no inclusion is visible to the naked eye. The price difference between VVS1 and VVS2 is typically around 10%, and for most buyers, VVS2 is the more practical choice without any visual compromise.
The Diamond: Where Most of the Cost Lives
In 2026, a 1-carat lab-grown diamond of VVS clarity and E-F colour grade costs between ₹30,000 and ₹55,000 as a loose certified stone in India, depending on cut grade and exact sub-grade. A 0.5-carat stone in the same quality range typically sits between ₹14,000 and ₹22,000. These are for IGI-certified stones — the certification that most Indian retailers and buyers rely on for lab-grown diamonds.
The equivalent natural (mined) VVS diamond tells a very different story. A 1-carat natural diamond of comparable G-colour, VS2 clarity costs approximately ₹1,50,000 to ₹3,00,000 in India in 2026. The lab-grown version at the same clarity delivers the same optical result — identical chemical composition, identical hardness (10 on the Mohs scale), graded by the same institutions — at roughly 20–25% of the natural diamond price.
Beyond carat weight, cut grade is the single factor that most affects how a diamond actually looks. An Excellent or Very Good cut is what makes a VVS stone catch light the way it should. Buying a VVS diamond with a Good or Fair cut to save money is a poor trade — you’ll have clarity no one can see, and brilliance that isn’t there. Colour matters too, but the difference between D and G is invisible once the stone is set in gold. E-F is the sweet spot for VVS rings: genuinely near-colourless, without paying the premium for D-grade colour that adds nothing visible.
Shape also moves the price. Round brilliant cuts command a premium because more rough material is lost during cutting. Oval, cushion, and pear shapes in the same carat weight tend to cost 12–18% less and often appear larger face-up, which is worth knowing if budget is a constraint.
Gold, Making Charges, and GST: The Rest of the Bill
Gold in India is priced daily, and as of June 2026, 18K gold is trading at approximately ₹11,000–₹11,500 per gram. A standard solitaire ring band in 18K gold weighs roughly 3–5 grams, which puts the gold component of a simple ring at ₹33,000–₹57,500 at current rates. More elaborate settings — halo designs, pavé bands, multi-stone arrangements — use more gold and increase this figure accordingly.
The choice between 14K and 18K gold is worth understanding. 14K (58.5% pure gold) is more affordable per gram and is slightly harder, which makes it practical for everyday wear. 18K (75% pure gold) has a richer colour and is the most common choice for diamond jewellery in India. The price difference between the two for a typical ring setting is roughly 15–20%.
Making charges are the labour cost of crafting the piece. In India, these typically range from 8 to 25% of the gold value depending on the jeweller and design complexity. A simple solitaire will sit toward the lower end; an intricate halo or twisted band will be higher. This is one of the most variable components across stores — and one of the least transparent. Always ask for making charges as a specific percentage or fixed amount before confirming a purchase. A vague
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