Is Your Moldavite Real or Fake?
How to tell genuine moldavite from imitations
Moldavite is the poster child for fakes: genuine material is restricted to one Czech location, so the flood of cheap 'moldavite' online is overwhelmingly molded green glass. Telling them apart is mostly about surface texture and provenance.
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Common moldavite fakes & look-alikes
- Molded green glass. Glossy, smooth surfaces, mold seams, and uniform round bubbles. Real moldavite has a matte, etched, wormy texture — never factory-smooth.
- Too-cheap / bulk lots. Bags of identical 'moldavite' or prices far below ~$8/g are a near-certain tell of glass.
Simple at-home tests
- 1Surface under a loupe. Natural moldavite shows etched, fern-like or 'wormy' sculpting and pitting. Smooth, glassy, flowing surfaces indicate molded glass.
- 2Bubbles & inclusions. Genuine pieces have irregular elongated bubbles and lechatelierite (glassy swirls). Perfectly round, evenly spaced bubbles suggest manufactured glass.
- 3Provenance / COA. Buy only with a certificate from a reputable Czech dealer. For moldavite, source and paperwork are part of authentication.
At-home tests are indicative, not definitive — for valuable pieces, get a professional gemologist's opinion.
The bottom line
Matte etched 'wormy' texture, irregular bubbles, organic shape, and a credible Czech COA point to genuine moldavite. Glossy + seamed + dirt-cheap = green glass.
FAQ
- How can I tell if my moldavite is real?
- Matte etched 'wormy' texture, irregular bubbles, organic shape, and a credible Czech COA point to genuine moldavite. Glossy + seamed + dirt-cheap = green glass.
- Why is fake moldavite so common?
- Real moldavite comes from one small Czech strewn field and demand spiked, so the market filled with mass-produced green glass imitations.
- How much is real moldavite worth?
- Roughly $8–$20 per gram common grade, and $30–$100+ per gram for fine museum-grade sculpted pieces.
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