The Green Badge Problem in Bangalore’s Jewellery Stores
Walk into almost any jewellery store in Bangalore today and you will find some version of the same claim: eco-conscious, conflict-free, sustainable luxury, planet-friendly diamonds. The words are printed on kraft-paper shopping bags, splashed across Instagram stories, and repeated in WhatsApp catalogues. What you will rarely find is the evidence behind them.
This is greenwashing — and it is more common in India’s fast-growing diamond jewellery market than most buyers realise. According to a study by the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI), 79 percent of green claims made by organisations were exaggerated or misleading. That figure spans industries, but jewellery — with its emotional price points and aspirational marketing — is particularly susceptible.
For buyers in Jayanagar, HSR Layout, Koramangala, and across Bangalore who are actively choosing lab-grown diamonds because they want a more responsible purchase, the presence of hollow green claims is not just annoying. It means you could spend ₹40,000–₹2 lakh on a piece that does not actually deliver on what was promised — either in quality, ethics, or long-term value.
What Greenwashing Actually Looks Like in This Market
Greenwashing in jewellery rarely involves outright lies. It tends to work through omission, vagueness, and the strategic use of imagery and language that implies more than it states.
Vague claims with no substantiation are the most common form. A brand that describes its diamonds as “eco-friendly” or “sustainably sourced” without naming a certification body, a grading report, or a verifiable process is doing exactly what India’s Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) guidelines now flag as potentially deceptive. Under these guidelines, terms like eco-friendly, sustainable, clean, and green cannot be used without adequate qualifiers and substantiation. First-time offenders can face fines up to ₹10 lakh under the Consumer Protection Act.
Misleading visuals are the next layer. Green packaging, leaf icons, and nature photography create an impression of environmental responsibility even when the product itself has no verified green credentials. A diamond set in uncertified gold with no hallmark, sold in a recycled paper box, is still an uncertified piece of jewellery — the box changes nothing about the stone.
Selective disclosure is subtler and arguably more misleading. A brand might prominently advertise that its diamonds are lab-grown — which does avoid the land disruption and human rights concerns associated with mining — while staying completely silent on whether the gold setting is BIS hallmarked, whether the diamond carries an IGI or GIA grading report, or whether any buyback or exchange policy actually exists in writing. Lab-grown origin alone does not make a piece of jewellery sustainable or trustworthy. Without transparent data on environmental impacts and verifiable certifications, diamond producers should not claim sustainable practices.
No traceability or post-purchase accountability is a red flag that buyers in Bangalore often overlook until it matters. Brands that cannot tell you which lab certified your stone, what the exact clarity and colour grade is, or what happens if you want to exchange the piece in five years are not giving you the transparency that genuine sustainability requires. Ethical and sustainable brands offer traceability, allowing consumers to track the origins of their materials.
The Certifications That Actually Mean Something
Two documents separate a verifiable claim from a marketing claim in the Indian diamond jewellery market.
The first is the IGI (International Gemological Institute) grading report. IGI pioneered the grading of lab-grown diamonds in 2005 and continues to lead the field today. An IGI certificate on a lab-grown diamond confirms its 4Cs — cut, colour, clarity, and carat weight — independently of the seller. It also explicitly identifies the stone as lab-grown, so there is no ambiguity about what you are buying. Critically, IGI’s loose diamond reports clearly identify natural or lab-grown origin and document all aspects of the diamond’s value-setting 4Cs. You can verify any IGI certificate number directly on the IGI website — this is a basic check that takes under two minutes and immediately separates a real certificate from a branded piece of paper.
The second is the BIS hallmark on the gold setting. In India, gold hallmarking is regulated by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) and is a mandatory quality assurance process that ensures the purity of gold used in jewellery. A hallmarked piece carries the BIS logo, the caratage number (14K or 18K), the assaying centre logo, and a unique HUID code. Without this, a brand’s claim that its jewellery is “premium gold” is unverifiable. Jewellery with proper BIS hallmarking or IGI certification has better resale value, as these markings prove the genuineness of the metal or gemstone.
Beyond these two, buyers should ask about post-purchase policies in writing. A lifetime exchange policy and a buyback guarantee are not sustainability credentials per se, but they signal that a brand is confident enough in its product quality to stand behind it long-term. A brand making loud green claims but offering no buyback and no documented exchange policy is telling you something important about how it views the relationship after the sale.
Six Questions to Ask Before You Buy
These questions work whether you are shopping online, visiting a store in Jayanagar, or comparing brands on Instagram. They are not complicated — but most buyers never ask them, which is exactly why greenwashing persists.
1. Which lab certified this diamond, and can I verify it? The answer should be IGI, GIA, or SGL — and the brand should hand you the certificate number or QR code without hesitation. If the answer is a proprietary in-house certificate or a lab you cannot independently look up, treat that as a red flag.
2. What is the exact clarity and colour grade of this stone? A brand that says “high quality” or “near-flawless” without quoting a specific grade is not being transparent. VVS (Very Very Slightly Included) and EF (Exceptional-Flawless colour) are the grades you will see on a real certificate. Ask for them specifically.
3. Is the gold BIS hallmarked, and what is the karat? This should be stamped on the piece itself. 14K and 18K are standard for diamond jewellery. If a brand cannot confirm BIS hallmarking, the gold purity is unverified — regardless of what the product page says.
4. What is your buyback and exchange policy, and is it in writing? Verbally promising “we will take it back” is not a policy. Ask for the percentage, the conditions, and whether it applies to custom designs. A 100% lifetime exchange and 80% buyback in documented form is a meaningful commitment. A vague reassurance is not.
5. Where are your diamonds grown, and what energy source does that facility use? This is the harder sustainability question. The significant energy requirements of lab-grown diamond production often rely on fossil fuels, so terms like eco-friendly and green do not commonly apply unless the producer uses renewable energy. Most Indian brands cannot answer this question in detail — but asking it separates brands that have thought about the supply chain from those that have not.
6. Can I see the price breakdown? A transparent brand can explain why a piece costs what it costs — the diamond grade, the gold weight, the making charges. A brand that cannot or will not break this down is probably relying on opacity to protect its margin rather than quality to justify its price.
What a Genuine Standard Looks Like in Practice
It helps to have a concrete benchmark. ONYA Diamonds, a Bengaluru-based lab-grown diamond brand with stores in HSR Layout and Jayanagar, offers a useful reference point for what verifiable claims look like in this market.
ONYA’s collections feature IGI-certified lab-grown diamonds set in BIS hallmarked gold — both of the non-negotiable certifications described above. Every stone is VVS-EF clarity, which is a specific, verifiable grade rather than a marketing descriptor. The brand backs its pieces with a 100% lifetime exchange and 80% buyback guarantee, documented and applicable even on custom designs. Pricing is positioned at approximately 20% of the cost of equivalent natural diamonds — a claim that is testable by comparing the same carat weight and grade across the market.
This does not mean every other brand is greenwashing by comparison. But it illustrates that specific, verifiable commitments are possible and that buyers should expect them rather than accept vague alternatives. When you can check a certificate number, confirm a hallmark, and read a buyback policy in writing, you are dealing with a brand that has made its claims falsifiable — which is the minimum standard for any sustainability or quality claim worth trusting.
For Bangalore buyers exploring diamond rings, earrings, or mangalsutras, the practical takeaway is straightforward: treat every green claim as a question rather than a fact, and use the six questions above to find out whether the answer holds up.
The Broader Picture: Why This Matters in 2026
India’s lab-grown diamond jewellery market is projected to reach approximately $453.7 million in 2026 and is expected to grow at around 14.8 percent annually through 2036. That growth is partly driven by buyers who believe they are making a more ethical and sustainable choice. If a significant portion of that market is built on unverified green claims, the damage is not just financial — it erodes trust in the entire category, including the brands that are doing things correctly.
India’s regulatory environment is catching up. The CCPA’s 2024 greenwashing guidelines introduced real penalties for misleading environmental claims. The ASCI has been developing standards for green advertising. But enforcement remains uneven, and a large portion of consumers remain unaware of what constitutes a genuinely sustainable product, which allows greenwashing to persist. Consumer awareness is, for now, the most reliable check on the market.
For buyers in Bangalore — a city with a particularly educated, brand-aware consumer base — the tools to make an informed decision are available. An IGI certificate number takes two minutes to verify. A BIS hallmark is visible on the piece. A buyback policy is either in writing or it is not. The green packaging and the sustainability language on a brand’s website are the least reliable signals. The documents and the policies are what count.