Lab-grown ruby is ruby grown in a laboratory, not natural ruby and not imitation ruby. For jewelry buyers comparing ruby with garnet, red spinel, rubellite or “red sapphire” terminology, the most important questions are identity, durability, disclosure and the meaning of the finished piece.
This guide focuses on ruby identity, durability, disclosure and buying clarity. If you are looking specifically for the symbolism behind ruby as a romantic gift, read our meaningful ruby jewelry gift guide.
What is lab-grown ruby, and why choose it for jewelry?
Lab-grown ruby is ruby grown in a laboratory. It has ruby’s corundum identity and strong Mohs 9 durability, but it is not natural ruby and should be clearly disclosed as lab-grown.
Compared with garnet, red spinel and rubellite, ruby is usually the clearest choice for July birthstone gifts, promise rings and symbolic red jewelry. Garnet can feel warmer and more vintage, red spinel can feel more collector-like, and rubellite can feel brighter and more pink-red — but ruby carries the most direct romantic and birthstone language.

In Simple Terms
Lab-grown ruby is ruby, but it is not natural ruby. It is grown in a controlled laboratory environment and should be disclosed as lab-grown, lab-created, laboratory-grown or synthetic ruby. For meaningful jewelry, its appeal is clarity: the stone can offer vivid ruby color, strong durability and a clear material identity without pretending to be an untreated natural ruby.
Key Facts About Lab-Grown Ruby
- Lab-grown ruby is corundum, the same mineral family as natural ruby and sapphire.
- Ruby has Mohs hardness 9, making it suitable for rings, necklaces and long-term jewelry wear.
- Lab-grown ruby is not natural ruby, so it should be clearly disclosed as lab-grown, lab-created, synthetic or laboratory-grown ruby.
- Lab-grown ruby is different from imitation ruby, which may be glass, CZ or another red material.
- For July birthstone gifts, ruby is usually more recognizable than garnet, red spinel or rubellite.
Which Red Gemstone Should You Choose?
Before comparing every red gemstone, it helps to start with the buying situation. A July birthday, a promise ring, a vintage-style gift and a necklace chosen without knowing her ring size may all point to different choices.
| Gift Scenario | Best Direction | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| July birthday gift | Lab-grown ruby ring or ruby necklace | Ruby is the traditional July birthstone and carries direct symbolic meaning. |
| Romantic promise gift | Heart-shaped ruby ring | The heart silhouette and red ruby color make the message clear. |
| Gift when ring size is unknown | Ruby necklace | A necklace keeps the ruby meaning without requiring a ring size. |
| Classic fine-jewelry-inspired gift under a more accessible budget | Lab-grown ruby with moissanite accents | Ruby color and white fire create a high-impact look with clear material disclosure. |
| Vintage or warm red look | Garnet | Garnet works well when the gift is more earthy, antique-inspired or January-birthstone focused. |
| Collector-like red gemstone choice | Red spinel | Red spinel is refined and durable, but it is less mainstream than ruby for ordinary gifts. |
Natural Ruby vs Lab-Grown Ruby vs Imitation Ruby
This is the most important distinction in modern ruby jewelry. Natural, lab-grown and imitation ruby may all appear red in a photo, but they do not mean the same thing.

| Type | What It Is | What It Is Not | Buyer Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural Ruby | Ruby formed in the earth under natural geological conditions | Not lab-grown | Value depends heavily on color, origin, size, clarity, treatment and rarity. |
| Lab-Grown Ruby | Ruby grown in a laboratory with ruby’s corundum identity | Not natural ruby; not imitation ruby | Should be clearly disclosed as lab-grown, lab-created, laboratory-grown or synthetic ruby. |
| Imitation Ruby | A different red material made to resemble ruby | Not ruby by material identity | Can be red glass, red CZ, another gemstone or another simulant. The actual material should be named. |
Quick Definitions: Ruby Terms Shoppers Should Know
- Ruby
- The red variety of corundum. Its red color is mainly associated with chromium, and it is the traditional July birthstone.
- Lab-grown ruby
- Ruby grown in a laboratory. It shares ruby’s corundum identity but should be clearly disclosed as lab-grown, lab-created, laboratory-grown or synthetic ruby.
- Ruby color
- A color description, not a gemstone identity. A stone can look ruby red without being ruby.
- Imitation ruby
- A different material made to look like ruby, such as red glass, red cubic zirconia or another red stone used as a ruby look-alike.
- Pink sapphire / fancy sapphire
- Corundum that falls outside the accepted ruby color range may be described as pink sapphire, purple sapphire, orange sapphire or fancy sapphire depending on color classification and trade usage.
Ruby, Garnet, Spinel, Rubellite and Pink Sapphire: Hard Facts
Color and meaning matter, but material identity and durability matter too. This table gives a more technical comparison of the red gemstones most often compared with ruby.
| Gemstone | Mineral Family | Mohs Hardness | Best Use | Main Caution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ruby | Corundum | 9 | Rings, necklaces, July birthstone gifts, meaningful red jewelry | Natural vs lab-grown status, treatments and imitation materials should be clearly disclosed. |
| Garnet | Garnet group | Usually about 6.5–7.5, depending on variety | Vintage-style red jewelry, January birthstone gifts, warm red looks | Not as hard as ruby; should not be presented as ruby or ruby equivalent. |
| Red Spinel | Spinel | 8 | Refined red jewelry, collector-like choices, understated luxury | Less familiar to general buyers; synthetic spinel should be disclosed. |
| Rubellite | Tourmaline | 7–7.5 | Vivid pink-red jewelry, expressive pendants and carefully worn rings | Needs more care than ruby in rings; it is tourmaline, not ruby. |
| Pink Sapphire / Fancy Sapphire | Corundum | 9 | Pink to pink-red corundum jewelry, alternative sapphire colors | Color naming can be confusing near the ruby boundary. |
Is Lab-Grown Ruby Good for Everyday Wear?
Yes, lab-grown ruby can be suitable for everyday jewelry when it is properly cut, securely set and clearly disclosed. Ruby’s Mohs 9 hardness makes it one of the strongest colored gemstones for rings and necklaces.
Hardness is not the only factor, though. A ring also depends on the setting, prong security, how often it is worn, and how the wearer treats the piece. For pendant necklaces, ruby is usually exposed to less impact than in rings, making it an especially practical gift choice when sizing is uncertain.
Does Lab-Grown Ruby Look Fake?
Lab-grown ruby does not look fake simply because it is lab-grown. A ruby can look beautiful or disappointing depending on color, clarity, cut, polish and setting quality. The more important question is whether the seller describes it honestly.
A well-selected lab-grown ruby should show a vivid red color, clean face-up appearance and enough brightness to support the design. It should not be confused with imitation ruby, which may be red glass, red CZ or another material entirely.
Is Lab-Grown Ruby Valuable?
Lab-grown ruby is generally more accessible than comparable fine natural ruby, especially in vivid red colors. Its value in jewelry comes from material identity, color selection, clarity, cutting quality, design, craftsmanship and disclosure — not from natural rarity.
For many gift buyers, that is exactly the point. Lab-grown ruby can offer the ruby story and strong red color in a more practical price range, while leaving room for better design, settings and everyday wearability.
How to Avoid Confusing Lab-Grown Ruby with Imitation Ruby
The safest approach is to look for clear material wording. A trustworthy product page should tell you whether the stone is natural ruby, lab-grown ruby, lab-created ruby, synthetic ruby, glass, cubic zirconia, garnet, spinel or another red gemstone.
Be careful with vague phrases such as “ruby color,” “ruby-like,” “created red stone” or “red sapphire” when the page does not explain the actual material. Beautiful red jewelry does not need unclear language to feel special.
What We Look For When Selecting Ruby for Jewelry
This is where finished jewelry experience matters. A ruby can look strong in a product photo but feel dull in real wear if the tone is too dark, the cut leaks too much light or the shape does not support the design.
1. We avoid red that looks too dark, too pink or too orange
For Dellyrica ruby jewelry, the goal is a vivid ruby-red impression that feels romantic and alive. Stones that look overly dark can lose light in evening or indoor wear. Stones that lean too pink or too orange may be beautiful, but they do not always deliver the classic ruby feeling we want for a July birthstone ring or romantic ruby design.
2. We look at face-up color, not just loose-stone color
A ruby is worn face-up in a ring or pendant. That means we care about how the red color appears from the front once the stone is cut and set, not only how intense the rough or loose stone looks under ideal lighting.
3. Heart-cut ruby needs extra attention
For a heart-shaped ruby, symmetry is emotional as well as technical. We look for a full heart outline, balanced shoulders, a clean cleft, a centered table and a point that feels intentional. If the heart shape is uneven, the entire romantic message becomes weaker.
4. Moissanite accents should frame the ruby, not overpower it
In halo designs, moissanite adds white fire and contrast. The goal is to make the red center stone feel brighter and more celebratory, not to distract from the ruby story.
How Lab-Grown Ruby Is Made — and Why the Method Matters
Lab-grown ruby can be produced through several crystal-growth methods. These methods can affect cost, growth features, production speed and the kinds of stones available for jewelry. They do not replace the need for final gemstone selection.
| Growth Method | How It Works | Strengths | Limitations | Relative Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flame Fusion / Verneuil | Powdered ingredients are melted in a flame and crystallize into synthetic ruby boule material. | Mature, fast, widely available, consistent color, lower production cost. | Often easier for gemologists to identify; may feel less premium when used without careful cutting and selection. | Lower |
| Czochralski / Pulled | A seed crystal is pulled from molten material to grow a larger synthetic ruby crystal. | Can produce larger, clean, consistent crystals with stable quality. | Requires specialized equipment and can still show synthetic growth characteristics. | Medium to high |
| Hydrothermal | Crystal growth takes place in a high-temperature, high-pressure water-based environment. | Can produce growth features that feel more natural in character. | Slow growth, lower output, expensive equipment, higher cost. | Higher |
| Flux Growth | Ruby grows slowly from a molten flux solution. | Can create high-quality synthetic ruby with more natural-looking growth character. | Slow, costly and may show flux-related inclusions or residues. | High |
No growth method automatically makes a ruby beautiful in finished jewelry. The final piece still depends on color selection, clarity, cutting, proportion, symmetry, setting and how the design works around the stone.
Ruby vs Other Red Gemstones
Red is a color family, not a gemstone identity. Other red gemstones can be beautiful, but each belongs to a different jewelry story.
Quick Comparison Table
| Gemstone | Best For | Daily Wear | Lab-Grown Reality | Buyer Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ruby | July birthstone gifts, romantic rings, promise rings, meaningful jewelry | Excellent | True lab-grown ruby exists | The clearest red gemstone for love, celebration and long-term wear. |
| Garnet | Accessible red jewelry, January birthstone gifts, vintage-inspired looks | Good | No mainstream lab-grown red garnet category for ordinary jewelry shoppers | Rich and beautiful, but not a ruby substitute by identity. |
| Red Spinel | Refined red gemstone jewelry, collectors, understated luxury | Very good | Synthetic spinel exists and should be disclosed | A strong ruby alternative, but it should be respected as spinel. |
| Rubellite / Red Tourmaline | Pink-red, raspberry, expressive jewelry | Good with care | Not a mainstream true lab-grown rubellite category | Beautiful and vivid, but it is tourmaline, not ruby. |
| Pink Sapphire / Borderline “Red Sapphire” | Pink-red corundum jewelry, alternative birthstone colors | Excellent | Lab-grown sapphire exists | Ruby and sapphire are both corundum, but color naming matters. |
| Red Diamond / Red Beryl | Collector or high-jewelry interest | Good to excellent, depending on material and setting | Not typical everyday ruby alternatives | Fascinating, rare and expensive in natural form, but less relevant for ordinary red gemstone gifts. |
Ruby vs Garnet: Which Is Better for Jewelry?
Ruby is harder and more directly tied to July birthstone meaning. Garnet is warmer, more vintage-feeling and more accessible.
Garnet is one of the red gemstones most often compared with ruby. It can be deep, warm, wine-red, raspberry or purplish red depending on the variety. It is also often more accessible than ruby.
But garnet is not ruby. It does not share ruby’s corundum identity, and it does not carry ruby’s direct July birthstone meaning. Garnet is best understood as its own gemstone family, not a lower-priced ruby.
Ruby vs Red Spinel: Similar Color, Different Gemstone
Red spinel can be refined, durable and beautiful, but it is not ruby and should be identified as spinel.
Fine red spinel can be vivid, clean and valuable. Historically, some famous red stones were once thought to be ruby before being identified as spinel. For romantic gift giving, however, ruby is usually easier to understand. Red spinel can say, “I know gemstones.” Ruby more directly says, “I chose something with love, meaning and memory.”
Ruby vs Rubellite: Why Red Tourmaline Is Not Ruby
Rubellite is red to pink-red tourmaline. It can look vivid and romantic, but it is not ruby and does not share ruby’s corundum identity.
Rubellite can feel lively, raspberry-like and modern. It is especially appealing when the design wants a softer or brighter red mood rather than classic ruby red. But if the buyer wants a durable, classic, highly recognizable red gemstone for a promise ring or July birthstone gift, ruby is usually the stronger choice.
Ruby vs Pink Sapphire vs “Red Sapphire”: The Corundum Color Boundary
Ruby and sapphire are both varieties of corundum. The difference is mainly color classification, accepted terminology and market value.
Ruby and sapphire are not completely different minerals. They are both varieties of corundum, with the same basic chemical composition: aluminum oxide, Al2O3. They also share corundum’s excellent hardness of 9 on the Mohs scale.
In common jewelry language, corundum with a clearly dominant red appearance is classified as ruby. Borderline corundum with lighter, pinker, orangy or purplish tones may be described as pink sapphire, orange sapphire, purple sapphire or fancy sapphire depending on color classification and market practice.
This is why the phrase “red sapphire” can be confusing. It may be used to describe corundum that looks red but is not classified commercially as ruby, but shoppers should not treat ruby and “red sapphire” as two completely different mineral species.
Dellyrica Ruby Jewelry Recommendations
If you choose lab-grown ruby, the next question is not only carat weight. It is what kind of moment the jewelry is meant to hold: a romantic ring, an easy-to-size necklace, or a classic halo pendant.
Ruby Jewelry Style Directions from Dellyrica
Best romantic ruby ring Heart-Shaped Lab-Grown Ruby Ring|1.5 ct A 1.5 ct heart-cut lab-grown ruby framed by a moissanite halo, crafted in 925 sterling silver with heavy rhodium plating. Designed for July birthdays, anniversaries, promise gifts and romantic moments that call for a clear red gemstone statement. View the ruby ring
Best statement ruby necklace Starlit Garden Ruby Necklace|2.8 ct A 2.8 ct lab-grown ruby necklace with moissanite accents, designed around a starlit garden mood. A graceful choice when you want a ruby gift without ring-size risk. View the ruby necklace
Best classic ruby pendant Moon Halo Ruby Necklace|1.8 ct A 1.8 ct lab-grown ruby set in a luminous halo-inspired design with moissanite sparkle. Classic, gift-ready and easy to wear for birthdays, anniversaries or everyday romance. View the ruby pendant
These examples are style directions, not rules. The best ruby gift should match the person, the occasion and how the piece will be worn.
Final Takeaway
If you only want a red stone, there are many choices: garnet, spinel, rubellite, red agate, fire opal and more. But if you want a red gemstone that is durable, symbolic, gift-ready and deeply connected with love and July birthstone meaning, ruby is usually the strongest choice.
Lab-grown ruby makes that choice more accessible without turning the stone into an imitation. It is ruby grown in a laboratory, and its value in jewelry depends on honest disclosure, vivid color, strong clarity, excellent cutting quality and a design that makes the stone feel meaningful in real life.
A good ruby gift should not only look red. It should say something clearly: this was chosen with intention.
FAQ: Lab-Grown Ruby and Red Gemstones
Is lab-grown ruby a real ruby?
Yes. Lab-grown ruby is ruby grown in a laboratory. It shares ruby’s corundum identity, but it is not natural ruby and should be clearly disclosed as lab-grown, lab-created, laboratory-grown or synthetic ruby.
Is ruby better than garnet?
Ruby is usually stronger for July birthstone gifts, promise rings and long-term romantic jewelry because it is harder, more recognized and more symbolic. Garnet can be beautiful and more accessible, but it is a different gemstone.
Is red spinel the same as ruby?
No. Red spinel and ruby are different gemstones. Red spinel can be beautiful, durable and valuable, but it should be identified as spinel, not ruby.
Is rubellite the same as ruby?
No. Rubellite is red to pink-red tourmaline. It can look vivid and romantic, but it is not ruby and does not share ruby’s corundum identity.
Is red sapphire the same as ruby?
Ruby and sapphire are both corundum. In common jewelry use, corundum with a clearly dominant red appearance is classified as ruby, while lighter, pinker, orangy or purplish corundum may be described as pink sapphire or fancy sapphire. The phrase “red sapphire” can be confusing and should be explained clearly.
What are the main methods for making lab-grown ruby?
Lab-grown ruby can be produced by flame fusion, Czochralski or pulled growth, hydrothermal growth and flux growth. These methods differ in cost, production speed, crystal growth features and availability.
What color ruby does Dellyrica use?
Dellyrica hand-selects lab-grown rubies for a vivid pigeon-blood-inspired red tone, strong clarity and excellent cutting quality. The goal is a saturated, romantic red that looks beautiful in finished jewelry.
What ruby jewelry is best if I do not know her ring size?
A ruby necklace is usually safer if you do not know her ring size. Dellyrica’s Starlit Garden Ruby Necklace and Moon Halo Ruby Necklace are designed as gift-ready ruby necklace options.
Is lab-grown ruby good for everyday wear?
Yes, lab-grown ruby can be suitable for everyday jewelry when it is properly cut and securely set. Ruby’s Mohs 9 hardness makes it one of the stronger colored gemstones for rings and necklaces.
Is lab-grown ruby good for an engagement-style ring?
Yes, lab-grown ruby can work well for an engagement-style ring when the design is chosen for symbolic red color, strong durability and clear material disclosure. Ruby has Mohs 9 hardness, making it one of the more durable colored gemstones for rings. For daily wear, choose a secure setting, avoid harsh impact, and make sure the product is clearly described as lab-grown ruby rather than natural or imitation ruby.
How can I tell if ruby jewelry is lab-grown or imitation?
Look for clear material wording. A trustworthy product page should state whether the stone is natural ruby, lab-grown ruby, synthetic ruby, glass, cubic zirconia, garnet, spinel or another red material.
About This Guide
This guide was written by the Dellyrica Editorial Team and reviewed from a gemstone-selection perspective for clarity, material disclosure and fit with Dellyrica’s lab-grown colored gemstone jewelry standards.
Dellyrica focuses on fine-jewelry-inspired sterling silver designs using clearly disclosed lab-grown gemstones and moissanite accents, selected for color, clarity, cutting quality and everyday giftability.
This guide is for jewelry education and shopping context. It is not a gemstone appraisal or laboratory grading report.
Gemological Institute of America, “Ruby Gemstone.”
Gemological Institute of America, “Ruby Quality Factors.”
Gemological Institute of America, “Sapphire Quality Factors.”
Gemological Institute of America, “An Introduction to Synthetic Gem Materials.”
Gemological Institute of America, “Laboratory Growth of Gem Materials.”
Gemological Institute of America, “Spinel Care and Cleaning Guide.”
Gemological Institute of America, “Tourmaline Gemstone.”
Federal Trade Commission / eCFR, “16 CFR Part 23 — Guides for the Jewelry, Precious Metals, and Pewter Industries.”