When jewellers grade a diamond they read four numbers — Cut, Colour, Clarity and Carat. Understanding the 4 Cs lets you compare stones objectively and spend your budget where it has the most visible impact.
1. Cut — the only C the cutter controlsCut is the most important of the four because it determines how a diamond returns light to the eye. Two stones with identical colour, clarity and weight can look dramatically different if one is cut shallow and the other is cut to ideal proportions. A well-cut diamond reflects light through its crown rather than leaking it out the bottom.
GIA grades cut on a five-step scale: Excellent, Very Good, Good, Fair, Poor. For a round brilliant, target Excellent or Very Good — the price step is small but the visual difference is significant. Cut is also the only C that humans, not nature, control, so it is where craftsmanship matters most.
2. Colour — the absence of yellowDiamond colour is graded from D (colourless) to Z (light yellow). The lower the letter, the rarer and more expensive the stone. In real-world wear:
- D–F (colourless): the rarest tier, usually reserved for showcase stones. The price premium is significant.
- G–H (near-colourless): the sweet spot for most engagement rings — the warmth is invisible to the eye but you avoid paying for the top grade.
- I–J: shows a faint warmth especially in larger sizes, but pairs beautifully with yellow gold which masks the tint.
Match colour to your metal. White metals (platinum, white gold) reveal warmth; yellow gold settings hide it, so an H or I stone in yellow gold looks as bright as a G in platinum.
3. Clarity — what's hidden insideAll natural diamonds carry tiny inclusions — the fingerprints of their growth. Clarity grading describes how visible those marks are under 10× magnification:
- FL / IF: flawless or internally flawless. Investment grade, very rare.
- VVS1 / VVS2: very, very slight inclusions, invisible to the eye.
- VS1 / VS2: very slight inclusions, also invisible without magnification — excellent value.
- SI1 / SI2: slightly included, often eye-clean depending on inclusion location.
- I1–I3: visible inclusions; usually avoided in fine jewellery.
For most ring shoppers, VS1 or VS2 is the smartest grade — it looks identical to a flawless stone in normal viewing but costs significantly less.
4. Carat — weight, not sizeOne carat equals 0.20 g. Carat measures weight, not visible diameter, which is why two 1-ct stones can look different sizes if one is cut deeper than the other. Diamond pricing scales non-linearly: round numbers like 1.00 ct or 2.00 ct attract a premium, so buying a stone just below the threshold (e.g. 0.92 ct or 1.85 ct) often delivers the same face-up size at a noticeably lower price.
For everyday wear, consider how the diamond sits relative to your finger length and the setting style — a 1.2 ct solitaire on a slim band reads more elegant than a 2 ct stone on a dainty hand.
How to balance the 4 CsIf we had to rank them by visual impact per dollar spent, our editors recommend:
- Cut first — never compromise here.
- Carat second — pick the size that suits the wearer's hand.
- Colour third — match it to your metal choice.
- Clarity last — eye-clean is enough.
What's the most "bang for buck" combination?
A round brilliant with Excellent cut, G or H colour, VS2 clarity and weight 0.20 ct below a round number tends to give the most visible diamond per dollar.
Do the 4 Cs apply to lab-grown diamonds?
Yes — they are graded on the same scale, and the same priorities apply. See our natural vs. lab-grown guide for cost differences.
Can the 4 Cs be verified independently?
Always insist on a current GIA, IGI or HRD certificate for any diamond above 0.30 ct. The lab provides an unbiased reading of all four grades and a unique identification number laser-inscribed on the girdle.
Ready to put theory into practice? Explore our diamond rings or read how to choose a solitaire setting.



