LONDON, UK -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 29 June 2026 - Natural diamonds are the most desired luxury jewellery
product, average purchase prices have increased 25%, Gen Z is now the
second largest generation buying diamonds, and non-bridal occasions
account for three-quarters of overall US demand. These are some of the
key findings of De Beers Group's latest US Diamond Acquisition Study,
featuring responses from 18,500 women aged 18 – 74 across the industry's
largest consumer market.
Completed in 2026, the biannual study also found that Gen Z is spending
almost double what Baby Boomers spend when buying natural diamonds – at
$4,080 per piece vs $2,250 – and that while love-related purchase
motivations remain the core driver of demand, personal motivations such
as celebrating a new job, getting a promotion, recognising an
achievement or 'just because' are increasingly driving diamond jewellery
purchasing.
The study highlights that US consumers rank natural diamonds as their
top preference for a luxury jewellery item, with 11% of women ranking
natural diamond jewellery their most desired luxury gift. This places
natural diamond desirability ahead of synthetic lab-grown diamonds (8%),
other gemstones (5%) and plain gold jewellery (4%).
Average prices for natural diamond jewellery also increased
significantly in 2025, rising to $4,063 per piece compared with $3,242
in 2023. This growth is being driven by consumers buying larger carat
weights, with average total carat weight increasing to 1.86 carats, up
from 1.65 carats in 2023.
When it comes to the industry's youngest generation, the study found
that Gen Z punches above its weight: the generation now accounts for
just under a quarter (23%) of natural diamond demand value despite
representing just 18% of the population. Gen Z consumers also buy or
receive diamonds for more occasions than any other generation – at 1.83
occasions per year compared with an overall average of 1.7. While bridal
occasions lead Gen Z demand at 45% of total purchases, gifting from
relatives also plays an important role. Birthdays are particularly
significant, representing 17% of all Gen Z diamond acquisitions compared
with 13% across all generations. Gen Z also highly values
self-expression and associates diamonds with being a symbol of identity
more than any other generation, while also having the greatest reliance
on social media for researching their purchases.
Diana Mitkov, lead researcher within Diamond Demand Insights &
Analytics at De Beers Group, said: "The study findings highlight that
today's consumers aspire to own natural diamonds just as much as the
generations that came before them, and ahead of any other jewellery
product. And they are spending more per piece than ever before. But how
and why consumers buy diamonds is evolving. Traditional life milestones
such as getting engaged are no longer the only value driver for the
industry; consumers are increasingly marking a wide range of occasions
with natural diamonds and are looking for distinct pieces that feel
personal to them.
"As unique miracles of nature, the attributes of natural diamonds play
directly into these shifting consumer trends. The opportunity for the
diamond industry is to ensure that natural diamonds continue to capture
the value of this strong underlying desire in an increasingly
competitive landscape by offering compelling designs across all sizes,
colours and price points and for occasions that go well beyond
traditional engagement or wedding jewellery."
These findings feature in a new publication from De Beers, The Diamond
Report, which also includes an editorial on the key forces shaping a
positive future for natural diamonds by EVP Corporate Affairs &
Strategy and Chief Economist, Eirik Wærness; an analysis of US jewellery
retail trends; perspectives from leading US designers and retailers on
how the diamond buying experience is evolving; and reflections on the
role natural diamonds can play in supporting socioeconomic progress for
the people and places where they are discovered.
The report also notes that natural diamond sales are increasing across
US independent jewellers, with Point of Sales data from 950 retailers
showing sales grew 4% and 9% year-on-year in Q4 2025 and Q1 2026,
respectively. Coloured and low-coloured diamonds (those in the K – Z
colour range) promoted by De Beers Group's 'Desert diamonds' campaign
outperformed, with sales growth of 15% and 19%, respectively.
The same data shows that while synthetic lab-grown diamond jewellery
sales are increasing in volume, declining retail prices mean their value
share of demand remains relatively low at 15% of independent jewellers'
diamond sales, compared with 85% for natural diamonds in 2025. In
addition, there is a noticeable drop-off in sales once synthetic
lab-grown diamonds reach 3 carats or larger in size, suggesting that
consumers may feel synthetic lab-grown diamonds beyond this size could
look too big. The report notes this could mean that as synthetic
lab-grown diamond prices continue to decline in line with the multi-year
trend already experienced, retailers may be unable to upsell to larger
sizes, which could result in lower overall sales and impact long-term
gross profits.
Eirik Wærness said: "The diamond industry is evolving at pace with both
supply and demand-side dynamics shaping the industry's future. On the
supply side, declining global production of natural diamonds is expected
to support an improved supply-demand balance over the coming years. On
the demand-side, a resilient US economy and stabilisation of demand in
China saw global natural diamond demand return to growth in 2025 while
the industry's marketing efforts are showing encouraging signs of
momentum. With retail returns from synthetic lab-grown diamonds likely
to come under pressure in the future, we expect retailers will
increasingly differentiate them from natural diamonds in their sales
strategies. As these fundamentals continue to stabilise, the industry
has a significant opportunity to reinforce the value of natural diamonds
and support long-term growth."
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