The Certification Question Most Buyers Ask Too Late
Somewhere between choosing a diamond shape and deciding on the gold karat, most buyers in Bangalore eventually ask: does the certificate matter? And if so, which one — IGI or GIA?
The short answer is yes, it matters quite a bit. But the more useful answer is that for lab-grown diamond jewellery specifically, the two certifications are not equivalent in what they tell you — and in 2026, that gap has widened considerably.
Both the International Gemological Institute (IGI) and the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) are globally recognized bodies that assess diamonds based on the 4Cs: cut, color, clarity, and carat weight. Both are trusted by insurers and appraisers worldwide. But they have taken meaningfully different paths when it comes to certifying lab-grown stones, and understanding that difference is what separates an informed purchase from a confused one.
What IGI Certification Actually Tells You
IGI was founded in 1975 and has grown into one of the largest independent gemological laboratories in the world, with a particularly strong footprint in Asia, including a dedicated facility in Bangalore. Over time, it became the first lab to offer full grading reports for lab-grown diamonds — a move that set the standard for what buyers now expect from any certification body in this category.
An IGI lab-grown diamond report documents the stone’s cut, color, clarity, and carat weight using the same D-to-Z color scale and Flawless-to-Included clarity scale that applies to natural diamonds. It also notes fluorescence, symmetry, polish, shape, measurements, and a unique identification number for traceability. Critically, IGI reports for lab-grown stones specify the growth method — whether the diamond was created via CVD (Chemical Vapor Deposition) or HPHT (High Pressure High Temperature). Many IGI-certified diamonds are also laser-inscribed via their Laserscribe® service, linking the physical stone directly to its grading report under magnification.
For a buyer in Bangalore comparing two solitaire rings or a pair of diamond stud earrings, an IGI report gives you the granular data you need to make a side-by-side quality comparison. You can see whether a stone is D color or G color, VVS1 clarity or VS2, and price accordingly. That specificity is the foundation of an honest transaction.
IGI is widely accepted across the Indian market and is the certification you will encounter most often when buying lab-grown diamond jewellery from reputable brands. It is considered the industry standard for lab-created stones — not because it is more lenient (a common misconception worth addressing), but because it built its infrastructure around this category from the beginning and continues to invest in it.
What Changed with GIA — and Why It Matters in 2026
GIA’s history with lab-grown diamonds is one of the more instructive case studies in how institutions adapt — or don’t — to market shifts.
GIA began accepting lab-grown diamonds for grading in 2020, using the same full 4Cs nomenclature it applies to natural stones. That was a significant step. But starting October 2025, GIA changed course again. It replaced its detailed lab-grown diamond grading reports with a simplified “Quality Assessment” that classifies stones as either Premium or Standard — and nothing more granular than that.
Under the new GIA system, a “Premium” stone must be D color, VVS clarity or higher, with Excellent polish and symmetry. A “Standard” stone covers the range from E to J color with VS clarity. Stones that fall below Standard receive no assessment at all. Critically, specific letter grades for color and clarity are no longer included in GIA’s lab-grown reports. A buyer can no longer tell from the GIA document whether a stone is D or E color, or VVS1 versus VS2 — only whether it cleared the Premium or Standard threshold.
GIA’s stated rationale is that the vast majority of lab-grown diamonds already cluster in a very narrow quality band — reportedly more than 95% of stones submitted since 2022 graded D, E, or F in color, and 98% received VS1 clarity or higher. From GIA’s perspective, fine distinctions within that compressed range are less meaningful.
But for buyers, the loss of specificity is real. Two “Premium” stones from different retailers could differ meaningfully in color or cut quality, and the new GIA assessment will not show you how or why. That makes direct comparison across sellers harder, and puts considerably more trust in the retailer rather than the document.
For the Indian market — where buyers in Bangalore tend to be detail-oriented and value transparency in pricing — this is a practical disadvantage of a GIA assessment for lab-grown stones in 2026.
The Grading Leniency Question
One point that often comes up in online forums is whether IGI grades more leniently than GIA for natural diamonds. There is some basis for this claim in the natural diamond market — GIA is generally considered the stricter grader, and an IGI-graded natural stone may occasionally sit one grade higher in color or clarity than the same stone would receive from GIA.
But this distinction is largely irrelevant when buying lab-grown diamonds. IGI has been the dominant certification body for lab-grown stones for years, and its grading practices for this category are built on far more data and institutional experience than GIA’s. The industry consensus is clear: for lab-grown diamonds, IGI is the standard, not a compromise.
The more important question for a buyer in Bangalore is not which lab grades more strictly in the abstract, but which report gives you more usable information. On that measure, an IGI certificate for a lab-grown stone — with its full 4Cs breakdown, growth method disclosure, and laser inscription — is currently more informative than GIA’s simplified Quality Assessment.
What to Look for When Buying Certified Lab-Grown Diamond Jewellery in Bangalore
Certification is one part of the picture. The other parts are the quality tier of the stone itself, the metal purity, and the after-sale terms the brand stands behind.
For the diamond: an IGI certificate tells you the grade, but you want to know what grade the brand is actually stocking. VVS-EF (Very Very Slightly Included, Colorless to Near-Colorless) is the tier associated with eye-clean, high-brilliance stones — the kind where the difference from a natural diamond is invisible to anyone not using a loupe. Brands that stock at this tier are making a deliberate quality commitment, not just offering whatever the market produces.
For the metal: IGI certification covers the stone, not the setting. Look for BIS hallmarked gold (14K or 18K) as the parallel assurance for the metal component. A piece with an IGI-certified stone set in hallmarked gold gives you documentation at every level of the purchase.
For after-sale terms: the Indian lab-grown diamond market is competitive, and the brands that stand behind their product tend to offer lifetime exchange policies and meaningful buyback guarantees. These terms reflect confidence in the product’s quality — and they protect you if your circumstances change.
ONYA Diamonds, which serves buyers across Bangalore including Jayanagar, stocks IGI-certified lab-grown diamond jewellery at VVS-EF clarity, set in BIS hallmarked 14K and 18K gold. Every piece comes with 100% lifetime exchange and 80% buyback — terms that go further than most brands in the category. Whether you’re considering a diamond ring for an engagement or diamond earrings for everyday wear, the certification and the after-sale policy together tell you what you’re actually getting.
The bottom line for buyers in 2026 is straightforward: for lab-grown diamond jewellery in Bangalore, IGI certification is the practical standard. It gives you the most detailed, comparable, and actionable information available. GIA’s new simplified Quality Assessment, whatever its merits for the broader market, gives you less to work with as a buyer — and that matters when you’re making a purchase that should last a lifetime.