Gen Z, non-bridal top diamond jewellery buyers in US
Demand for natural
diamonds remains strong in the US, with younger buyers alongside
non-wedding-related purchases driving growth, De Beers’ latest study revealed.
The biannual US
Diamond Acquisition Study surveyed 18,500 women aged 18 to 74 across the US –
the world’s largest jewellery consumer by market value.
The research,
completed in 2026, found that diamonds are the most desired luxury jewellery,
fuelled by Gen Zs who have become the second-largest generation of diamond
buyers as well as non-bridal occasions, which account for three-quarters of
overall US demand.
Notably, young buyers
invest almost twice as much as Baby Boomers in natural diamond purchases,
spending US$4,080 per piece versus US$2,250.
Buying motivations are
likewise evolving. While romantic occasions remain the primary driver, personal
milestones – new jobs, promotions, achievements or self-gifting – are
increasingly driving diamond jewellery sales.
Another highlight is
how US consumers view natural diamonds’ luxury proposition, with 11 per cent of
women ranking natural diamond jewellery as the most desired luxury gift,
surpassing lab-grown diamonds at 8 per cent, other gemstones at 5 per cent and
plain gold jewellery at 4 per cent.
The study further
revealed that average purchase price per piece rose 25 per cent to US$4,063 in
2025 from US$3,242 in 2023, driven by sales of larger carat weights. Average
total carat weight rose 1.86 carats from 1.65 carats in 2023.
Gen Zs now account for
23 per cent of natural diamond demand value despite representing just 18 per
cent of the population. They 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 per cent of total purchases, gifting from relatives
also plays an important role. Birthdays are particularly significant,
representing 17 per cent of all Gen Z diamond acquisitions compared with 13 per
cent across all generations.
Gen Zs also place
exceptional value on self-expression, viewing diamonds as symbols of personal
identity more than any previous generation. They also rely more heavily on
social media than other cohorts when researching purchases.
Diana Mitkov, lead
researcher within Diamond Demand Insights & Analytics at De Beers Group,
remarked, "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... the attributes of natural diamonds play directly into
these shifting consumer trends."
Diamond Report
These findings feature
in a new De Beers publication, The Diamond Report, which delves deeper into
latest developments in the US diamond jewellery market. According to the
report, natural diamond sales are increasing across US independent jewellers,
with point-of-sales data from 950 retailers showing year-on-year growth of 4
per cent and 9 per cent in Q4 2025 and Q1 2026, respectively.
Fancy colour and
low-colour diamonds (those in the K – Z colour range) promoted by De Beers
Group’s ‘Desert diamonds’ campaign outperformed as well, with sales inching up
15 per cent and 19 per cent, respectively.
Data also showed that
while lab-grown diamond jewellery sales are rising in volume, declining retail
prices mean their value share of demand remains relatively low at 15 per cent
of independent jewellers’ diamond sales, compared with 85 per cent for natural
diamonds in 2025.
De Beers noted a sharp
sales decline for lab-grown diamonds exceeding 3 carats, suggesting consumers
find larger lab-grown stones excessive. Combined with ongoing price erosion,
this could limit retailers' ability to upsell, ultimately reducing sales and
gross profits.
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