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Continue ShoppingBuying a loose gemstone for an engagement ring is one of the most personal purchases you will ever make. But most buyers are not prepared for how confusing, and how misleading, the gemstone market can be. This guide will walk you through everything — clearly and honestly — so you can make the right choice with confidence.
Most high street engagement rings are produced in bulk. The stones are selected for volume, not quality. When you buy a loose gemstone first and have it set separately, you get full control over what matters most:
A bespoke ring built around a carefully chosen loose stone will almost always outlast — in beauty and meaning — anything bought off a shelf.
Diamond is not your only option. Natural rubies, sapphires, and spinels are all used in fine engagement rings. If you are considering a natural spinel engagement ring, you are already thinking differently from the majority of buyers — and that is a good sign. Each gemstone has different properties, rarity levels, and price points. Think about what matters most — colour, rarity, meaning, or long-term appeal.
This is the single most important thing most buyers miss. The majority of gemstones on the market have been heat-treated or chemically enhanced to improve their colour or clarity. An untreated stone is as it came from the earth — and it commands a significantly higher value. Always ask directly: "Has this stone been treated in any way?"
Where a gemstone comes from affects both its value and its story. Mogok, Myanmar is globally recognised as producing some of the finest rubies and spinels in the world. A Mogok spinel engagement ring carries genuine provenance — a story that goes far beyond the high street. Knowing the origin — and having it verified — adds meaning to your purchase that no mass-produced ring can offer.
For larger or higher-value stones, a certificate from a reputable international laboratory such as GIA, Gübelin, or Lotus Gemology is strongly recommended. It confirms the stone’s identity, whether it has been treated, and in some cases its geographic origin. For smaller or lower-value stones, a trusted supplier’s written guarantee may be sufficient — though a lab report is always the most reliable confirmation.
Gemstones behave differently under natural daylight, indoor lighting, and candlelight. Before committing, view the stone in at least two different light sources. A stone that looks vibrant under spotlights but flat in daylight may disappoint in everyday wear.
The shape and size of your stone will determine your setting options. Cushion cuts — the most popular shape for loose spinel — suit halo and solitaire designs beautifully. Talk to your jeweller first — some stone shapes are harder to set well, and this affects cost and lead time.
When working with a UK jeweller to set your stone, ensure the finished precious metal setting is hallmarked by one of the UK Assay Offices — London, Birmingham, Sheffield, or Edinburgh. Under the Hallmarking Act 1973, hallmarking is a legal requirement for precious metal items sold in the UK and provides an independent guarantee of metal purity.
Once you have chosen your stone, the metal setting will define the overall look and feel of the ring. Here is a straightforward comparison of the most popular options:
| Metal | Durability | Colour | Popularity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Platinum 950 | Excellent | Naturally white — does not fade | Very popular for fine jewellery |
| 18ct White Gold | Very Good | Bright white (rhodium plated) | Popular, more affordable than platinum |
| 18ct Yellow Gold | Very Good | Warm gold | Growing in popularity |
| 18ct Rose Gold | Very Good | Pink-gold tone | Niche, suits warm-toned stones beautifully |
For a natural spinel engagement ring, platinum and rose gold are both excellent choices. Platinum complements cooler-toned stones such as blue or violet spinel. Rose gold pairs beautifully with warm-toned pinks and reds — the colours Mogok is most celebrated for.
There is no gemstone-specific retail licensing or grading standard enforced in the UK market. While UK consumer law protects buyers against misleading descriptions, gemstone-specific standards vary considerably between sellers. The difference between a reliable supplier and an unreliable one comes down to transparency — are they willing to answer detailed questions? Do they offer honest information about treatment and origin? Are they accessible after purchase?
Here is a straightforward comparison of the most popular gemstone choices for engagement rings in the UK:
| Gemstone | Hardness | Typically Treated? | Market Demand | Rarity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diamond | 10 | Sometimes | Very high | Common at retail |
| Ruby | 9 | Almost always | High | Fine quality is rare |
| Sapphire | 9 | Commonly treated | High | Moderate |
| Natural Spinel | 8 | Rarely treated | Strongly growing | Exceptionally rare |
| Emerald | 7.5 | Almost always oiled | Moderate | Fine quality rare |
Natural spinel stands apart because it is far less commonly treated than most other gemstones. The vast majority of fine natural spinels on the market are untreated — their colour and clarity are entirely as they came from the earth. Unlike ruby or sapphire, where heat treatment is near-universal, untreated spinel is genuinely the norm rather than the exception.
That said, some spinels do receive treatment. A small number are heat-treated to improve clarity, and in rare cases diffusion treatment has been used to alter colour. Synthetic (lab-created) spinel also exists and has been commercially produced since the 1920s. This is precisely why buying from a transparent supplier — one who clearly states the treatment status of each stone — matters so much.

A natural Mogok spinel set in a platinum floating halo ring — designed around the stone, not despite it.
Spinel has been worn by royalty for centuries, often mistaken for ruby in crown jewels and royal collections. It is only in recent decades — as gemological science has advanced — that the world has begun to properly understand just how rare fine natural spinel truly is. For buyers seeking an alternative engagement ring stone with genuine character and provenance, natural spinel is increasingly the first choice among those in the know.

A natural untreated cushion-cut Mogok spinel — as it came from the earth, nothing added or altered.
Unlike ruby or sapphire — where heat treatment is near-universal — the majority of fine natural spinels are untreated, exactly as nature created them.
Mogok Valley in Myanmar has produced the world’s most prized rubies and spinels for over a thousand years. Mogok is one of the world’s most celebrated and historically significant sources for fine gemstones — recognised by gemologists and collectors globally for the exceptional quality and character of its stones. Mogok spinel — sourced directly from the miners — carries both extraordinary beauty and genuine provenance.

A natural Mogok spinel set in a rose gold engagement ring — warm-toned, elegant, and entirely one of a kind.
A reputable supplier will answer all of these questions without hesitation. If you receive vague answers, evasiveness, or pressure to decide quickly — walk away.
Unlike precious metals — which are protected under the Hallmarking Act 1973 — there is no gemstone-specific retail licensing or grading standard enforced in the UK market. UK buyers are protected by general consumer law, including the Consumer Rights Act 2015, which covers misleading descriptions and goods not as described. However, gemstone-specific standards vary considerably between sellers, which is why transparency from the supplier matters far more than it might in other retail categories.
At Natural Spinel Gem, every loose spinel is sourced directly from Mogok, Myanmar — with no middlemen, no treatment applied to our stones, and complete transparency on origin. We supply both private buyers seeking a natural spinel engagement ring and fine jewellery designers across the UK.
Gemstone pricing in the UK varies enormously — and that gap between the cheapest and most expensive is almost always explained by treatment, origin, and quality of sourcing. A “bargain” gemstone that has been heavily treated is not a bargain at all; it is a compromised stone at an inflated value relative to what it truly is.
When it comes to an engagement ring — something worn every day, for decades — buying the finest untreated stone you can afford will always be the wiser decision. Quality holds its meaning. Compromised stones rarely do.
Buy the best natural untreated stone your budget allows. You will never regret it — and decades from now, neither will the person wearing it.