Why All Ouros Jewels Lab Grown Diamonds Are IGI-Certified: Our Quality Promise
A Certificate Is Only as Useful as the Lab Behind It
Shoppers ask this question constantly, and it deserves a direct answer: yes, IGI certification is trustworthy for lab grown diamonds — and for most buyers in 2026, it is the single most reliable quality signal available when purchasing a lab-grown stone.
But that answer only holds if you understand what IGI actually does, why it became the dominant grading lab for lab-grown diamonds specifically, and what the certificate tells you that a retailer’s own description cannot. Those are the things worth knowing before you spend money on a diamond, whether you’re shopping for an [engagement ring](https://www.ourosjewels.com/collections/diamond-engagement-ring) or a loose stone to set later.
At Ouros Jewels, every lab-grown diamond we offer carries IGI certification. That choice is deliberate, and this post explains the reasoning behind it — including the parts of IGI’s grading process that buyers tend to overlook.
What IGI Actually Does When It Grades a Diamond
The International Gemological Institute was founded in Antwerp in 1975 and has since grown into one of the world’s largest independent gemological laboratories, operating across more than 20 countries. What makes it particularly relevant to lab-grown diamonds is timing: IGI began certifying lab-grown diamonds in 2005, years before most of the industry took them seriously. That early commitment built the protocols, the equipment, and the institutional expertise that still defines its position in the market today.
When a diamond arrives at an IGI lab, it goes through a multi-step grading process that is more involved than most buyers realize. Color grading is performed in a standardized viewing environment, with the diamond placed upside down and viewed through the side to eliminate any bias from table-up brilliance. Multiple graders submit independent opinions — no collaboration — and a final grade is assigned only when there are enough agreeing assessments. Clarity is assessed at 10x magnification, with the size, number, location, and nature of any internal or surface characteristics all factored into the grade. Cut grade for round brilliant diamonds is determined by comparing proportions against IGI’s own studies of brightness, fire, scintillation, and pattern. Fancy shapes go through a four-step system that combines finish assessment with shape-specific light return grading.
Beyond the 4Cs, the IGI report for a lab-grown diamond explicitly identifies the stone as laboratory-grown and specifies the growth method — either HPHT (High Pressure High Temperature) or CVD (Chemical Vapor Deposition). That disclosure matters because the two processes can produce stones with subtly different characteristics, and buyers have a right to know which method was used. The report also includes polish and symmetry grades, a fluorescence assessment, precise measurements, and a clarity diagram that maps inclusions visually.
Perhaps the most practical feature: every IGI-certified diamond receives a laser inscription on its girdle — the narrow band around the diamond’s widest point — matching the unique report number on the certificate. That inscription is your physical link between the paper report and the actual stone. You can verify it yourself under magnification, and you can cross-check the report number on IGI’s official website at any time.
IGI vs. GIA for Lab-Grown Diamonds: What the Difference Actually Is
GIA — the Gemological Institute of America — is the institution that invented the modern 4Cs grading system and remains the most recognized name in natural diamond certification. For natural diamonds above roughly half a carat, GIA’s conservative grading and global dealer recognition make it the sensible default.
For lab-grown diamonds, the picture is different. IGI grades the large majority of the world’s lab-grown diamonds and has become the practical industry standard for this category. GIA’s approach to lab-grown grading was historically cautious — before 2020, GIA reports for lab-grown stones did not include full 4Cs grades. It has since updated its system, but its market share in the lab-grown space remains modest compared to IGI’s.
The other meaningful difference is grading calibration. IGI’s grades for lab-grown diamonds tend to run slightly more generous than GIA’s — roughly one grade in either direction on color and clarity is the industry consensus. This is worth understanding rather than fearing. It means that when Ouros Jewels selects stones with strong IGI grades, we apply a quality floor that accounts for this calibration. A stone graded VVS2/E by IGI is a genuinely excellent diamond — eye-clean, near-colorless, and visually indistinguishable from what most buyers would consider a premium stone.
The practical upshot: IGI certification is the recognized standard for lab-grown diamonds, accepted by retailers, insurers, and trade professionals worldwide. An IGI certificate confirms the stone’s measurable properties as assessed by a qualified, independent gemologist — someone who has no financial stake in whether the grade is high or low.
Why Ouros Jewels Builds Its Quality Promise Around IGI Certification
The core problem with uncertified lab-grown diamonds is that you are relying entirely on the seller’s own description of the stone. There is no independent check. A retailer can describe a diamond as VS1/G without any third party having verified that claim. In a category that has grown as fast as lab-grown diamonds, that gap between claim and verification is where buyer regret tends to live.
Ouros Jewels offers IGI-certified lab-grown diamonds because certification is the only mechanism that separates a seller’s claim from an independently verified fact. When you purchase from our [certified lab diamond collection](https://www.ourosjewels.com/collections/certified-diamonds), the grade on the report was determined by IGI gemologists who have never met us and have no incentive to inflate a stone’s quality. That independence is the point.
Beyond the grading itself, IGI certification serves a practical function in the life of a piece of jewelry. Should you ever need to insure a diamond, most insurers recognize IGI reports as valid documentation for coverage. Should you want to upgrade or trade in a stone, a certified diamond is substantially easier to value than an uncertified one. The certificate also travels with the stone — it is a permanent record of what the diamond was when it left the lab, regardless of who owns it in the future.
And there is something simpler than all of that: knowing exactly what you bought. A 2.5ct oval with a VVS1 clarity grade and an E color grade means something specific and verifiable when it comes with an IGI report. Without that report, those numbers are just marketing language.
This is why our [lab-grown diamond engagement rings](https://www.ourosjewels.com/collections/lab-grown-diamond-engagement-ring) and wedding jewelry are built around certified stones. A ring is a significant purchase — often the most significant jewelry purchase a person makes. Attaching an independent grading report to every diamond in that ring is the minimum standard of transparency we think buyers deserve.
What to Do With an IGI Certificate Once You Have One
Most buyers receive their IGI certificate as a physical document or a digital PDF and file it away. A few things are worth doing before that.
First, locate the report number on the certificate — it will be printed clearly near the top. Then find the matching laser inscription on your diamond’s girdle. Under 10x magnification (a jeweler’s loupe works fine), you should be able to read the alphanumeric inscription and confirm it matches the report. If the numbers match, the diamond in your ring is the same stone that was graded.
Second, take the report number to IGI’s official website and enter it into their verification tool. The database will return the same details shown on your certificate. This step takes about 30 seconds and definitively confirms the report is authentic.
Third, photograph the certificate and store a digital copy somewhere separate from the physical document. If you ever need it for insurance or resale, you will want it accessible.
One thing worth noting: the certificate grades the stone as it existed at the time of grading. It does not change if the diamond is later chipped or damaged, so the certificate and the stone should always be evaluated together rather than independently.
For buyers who want to go deeper — comparing stones across different carat weights, shapes, or clarity grades — the IGI report gives you a consistent framework for comparison. Two stones with identical IGI grades from the same period were evaluated under the same conditions by the same grading standards. That consistency is what makes certification useful for comparison shopping, not just for individual verification.
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