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Precious9 Mohs

Ruby

The king of colored gemstones, valued for its vivid red brilliance.

Ruby is the red variety of the mineral corundum (aluminum oxide), with its color caused by trace amounts of chromium. Along with diamond, emerald, and sapphire, ruby is classified as one of the four precious gemstones. Top-quality rubies — particularly those from Myanmar (Burma) — can exceed diamonds in per-carat price. The most desirable color is a saturated, medium-dark red known in the trade as 'pigeon blood.' Heat treatment to improve color and clarity is standard practice and accepted by the industry.

Physical Properties

Hardness (Mohs)9
Refractive Index1.762–1.770
Specific Gravity3.97–4.05
Crystal SystemTrigonal
Chemical FormulaAl₂O₃ (with Cr)

Color Varieties

Pigeon Blood RedVivid RedPinkish RedPurplish RedBrownish RedStar Ruby (asterism)

Major Sources

Myanmar (Burma) · Mozambique · Madagascar · Thailand · Sri Lanka · Tanzania

Pricing Factors

Color

The primary value driver. 'Pigeon blood' — a vivid, saturated red with a hint of blue — commands the highest premiums. Stones that are too dark or too pink are discounted.

Origin

Burmese rubies are the most valued. Mozambique has emerged as a major source producing fine-quality material. Origin is documented on lab reports.

Treatment

Unheated rubies command 30–100%+ premiums over heated equivalents. Lead-glass filling dramatically lowers value and durability.

Clarity

Rubies are Type II gems — some inclusions are expected. 'Eye-clean' stones are rare and premium. Silk inclusions can create desirable star effects.

Care Instructions

Do

  • Clean with warm soapy water and a soft brush
  • Safe for ultrasonic cleaning (if not fracture-filled or heavily included)
  • Store in a soft pouch to prevent scratching softer stones

Don't

  • Never use ultrasonic or steam on lead-glass-filled rubies
  • Avoid harsh chemicals and sudden temperature changes
  • Don't assume all rubies can be treated the same — check treatment disclosure

Cleaning Method

Warm soapy water is universally safe. Ultrasonic and steam are fine for untreated or heat-only treated rubies, but dangerous for fracture-filled or glass-filled stones.

Insider Buying Tips

1

Always request a lab report from GIA, Gübelin, or SSEF that discloses treatment and origin.

2

Mozambique rubies offer excellent quality at lower per-carat prices than Burmese stones.

3

Heat-treated rubies are industry standard and offer great value — the premium for unheated is often unjustified unless you're collecting.

4

Avoid lead-glass-filled rubies for fine jewelry — the glass can deteriorate over time.

5

In smaller sizes (under 1 carat), rubies offer dramatically better value than in larger sizes where prices escalate steeply.

Did You Know?

Ancient warriors believed rubies granted invincibility in battle.

The 'Sunrise Ruby' sold for $30.3 million in 2015, making it the most expensive ruby ever auctioned.

Ruby and sapphire are the same mineral — corundum. Only red corundum qualifies as ruby.