Is Your Amethyst Real or Fake?
How to tell genuine amethyst from imitations
Amethyst is cheap enough that outright counterfeits are less common than two specific issues: dyed glass sold as amethyst, and synthetic (lab-grown) quartz. Both are physically 'real' material in a sense, but neither is natural amethyst, and glass is worth almost nothing.
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Common amethyst fakes & look-alikes
- Dyed glass. Perfectly uniform purple, rounded internal bubbles, mold seams, and a warm feel. Natural amethyst is never bubble-perfect and shows uneven color.
- Synthetic amethyst. Lab quartz is real quartz but grown to be flawlessly clean and evenly colored — 'too perfect.' Hard to detect without a lab; suspiciously cheap eye-clean large stones are a flag.
- Color-enhanced / irradiated. Some pale amethyst is irradiated to deepen color; not a fake, but affects value vs naturally deep stones.
Simple at-home tests
- 1Scratch test. Amethyst is Mohs 7 and will scratch glass; glass imitations won't scratch glass back.
- 2Color zoning. Natural amethyst shows uneven, banded or patchy color under good light. Dead-uniform color points to glass or synthetic.
- 3Temperature & bubbles. Quartz feels cool to the touch and warms slowly; glass feels warmer and may show round bubbles under a loupe.
At-home tests are indicative, not definitive — for valuable pieces, get a professional gemologist's opinion.
The bottom line
If it scratches glass, feels cool, and has uneven natural color zoning, it's almost certainly genuine amethyst. Uniform color + bubbles + warmth = dyed glass.
FAQ
- How can I tell if my amethyst is real?
- If it scratches glass, feels cool, and has uneven natural color zoning, it's almost certainly genuine amethyst. Uniform color + bubbles + warmth = dyed glass.
- Is amethyst worth money?
- Common amethyst is inexpensive ($2–$30), but large geodes and deeply saturated specimens can be worth hundreds to thousands.
- What makes amethyst more valuable?
- Deep, even purple color is the biggest factor, followed by clarity, size, and intact crystal form.
- How can I tell if my amethyst is real?
- Real amethyst scratches glass (Mohs 7), feels cool, and usually shows natural color zoning rather than perfectly uniform color.
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