weekly snapshot

Week 10, 2026

Lucy SkyeBy Lucy Skye, Carat Hunter market analyst

Median price per carat hit $1,136 this week, a seven-week low and down nearly 24% from the $1,493 recorded back in W04. That's not a blip. It's a sustained compression that's been running since early February, and it's now sitting 17% below the rolling average for this window. The broader median price fell to $1,119, also a record low for the period. More supply, softer prices. The direction is consistent.

Active inventory crossed 22.6 million stones, a record high across the seven weeks tracked and up more than 128% since W04. New listings came in at 1.87 million for the week, roughly half of last week's 3.47 million, so the flood has eased somewhat. But off-market activity ticked up 22% week on week to 338,873 stones. More listings disappearing, not fewer arriving. Combined inventory is still growing because the inflow, even at its reduced pace, comfortably outpaces the outflow.

Lab-grown share reached 61.2% of active inventory, another record for this window. The new listings breakdown tells most of the story: 1.39 million lab-grown stones listed versus 486,000 natural, a ratio of roughly 2.9 to one. Lab-grown median price dropped 16% week on week to $725.76, while natural held relatively firm at $1,350, up just over 1%. The curious number is lab-grown median price per carat, which rose 22.7% to $593.81. That's a composition effect worth watching: it suggests the new lab-grown listings skewed toward larger, better-spec stones rather than the budget-conscious volume that dominated recent weeks. Natural new listings, by contrast, dropped 59% from last week, likely reflecting the hangover after a heavy W09 restocking push by a handful of names that did most of the listing.

Cross-retailer overlap hit 45.7%, also a record for this window, up from 34.8% in W04. That means nearly half of all active stones appear across multiple retailers simultaneously, a pattern that typically compresses achievable margins and concentrates competition on price. The spread metric softened fractionally to 88.0% from 88.9% last week, still historically wide for this data set. Cushion cut was the standout shape mover, with median price jumping 21.7% to $1,350 on 95,891 new listings. Radiant added 6.1% to reach $1,049. Princess, trillion and the catch-all "other" category all fell hard, with princess down 22% to $740 and trillion off nearly 40% to $508. Round dominated volume at 41.1% of new listings, as it almost always does.

At the top end, a 5.08ct faint pink pear from GIA priced at $2.83 million held the most-expensive slot this week. A 36.21ct fancy cushion at $2.23 million and a 52.63ct fancy oval at $1.17 million round out the headline stones. Notably, two 10ct D VVS1 lab-grown stones, a radiant and an Asscher, each priced at $2.04 million, appeared in the top five by value. Lab-grown breaking into the seven-figure conversation is no longer unusual, but stones at that price point still attract attention.

With inventory at record levels and per-carat pricing at its lowest in seven weeks, the pressure on natural diamonds will come from how quickly that lab-grown overhang clears. If off-market rates accelerate from here, pricing may find a floor. If they don't, and new listings normalise around the 1.5 to 2 million weekly range, the compression probably has further to run. Cushion's sharp price move is worth revisiting next week: either it holds and signals genuine demand, or it reverts and confirms a composition quirk in this week's batch.

Lucy Market Index

Ten numbers I record every snapshot.

Cross-retailer overlap
45.7%
Spread across retailers
88.0%
Active inventory
22,659,035
Inventory value
$78.75B
Median carat
1.22ct
Median price per carat
$1.1K
Median listing price
$1.1K
Lab-grown share
61.2%
New listings
1,872,846
Listings closed
338,873

Versus Week 9, 2026

MetricThis weekPriorChange
Cross-retailer overlap45.7%44.1%+3.5%
Spread across retailers88.0%88.9%-1.0%
Active inventory22,659,03521,125,062+7.3%
Inventory value$78.75B$76.22B+3.3%
Median carat1.22ct1.21ct+0.8%
Median price per carat$1.1K$1.2K-3.3%
Median listing price$1.1K$1.1K-2.7%
Lab-grown share61.2%60.1%+1.9%
New listings1,872,8463,471,927-46.1%
Listings closed338,873277,873+21.9%

Biggest shape movers

Up the most
  • cushion+21.6%
  • radiant+6.1%
Down the most
  • other-44.2%
  • trillion-39.5%
  • princess-22.1%

Recent trends

How metrics are tracking across the recent window of snapshots.

Inventory value
+147.4%
across 7 weeks, record high
Active inventory
+128.1%
across 7 weeks, record high
Median price per carat
-23.9%
across 7 weeks, record low
Median listing price
-8.8%
across 7 weeks, record low

How the Lucy Market Index has moved

By origin

Natural
New listings, 485,755
Closed, 130,500
Median listing price, $1,350
Median per carat, $2,300
Lab-grown
New listings, 1,387,056
Closed, 208,331
Median listing price, $726
Median per carat, $594

Top shapes by new listings

ShapeNew listingsMedian price (USD)
round769,234$820
oval303,108$870
emerald177,271$945
pear151,608$843
radiant116,798$1,049
cushion95,891$1,350
marquise92,926$927
princess80,748$740
heart48,960$988
asscher28,542$922
other4,758$720
trillion1,437$508

Notable stones

Each stone links to its full Carat Hunter listing.

Lucy Skye

Lucy Skye

Carat Hunter market analyst

Lucy has live data on inventory and pricing from more than a hundred retailers. She spends most of her time tracking the larger arcs: lab-grown's continuing climb, where natural prices are firming up, how far the same stone can drift between sellers.

Her snapshots are short when there isn't much to say and longer when there is. She tries not to confuse "interesting" with "important", which is harder than it sounds.

See all snapshots