# Diamond Clarity & the Eye-Clean Threshold

> The GIA clarity scale has eleven grades. Only one question actually matters when you're buying an engagement ring: can you see the inclusions? Here's the shape-by-shape answer.

*Published 2026-06-25 · By Naomi Adler, GG*

In short
The GIA clarity scale runs from Flawless (FL) to Included (I3), but the only grade that changes how your ring looks in real life is whether inclusions are visible without magnification — the eye-clean threshold. For round brilliant cuts, VS2 is the reliable benchmark at 1.00 carat; SI1 is viable on individual stone inspection. For step cuts (emerald, Asscher), VS1 is the minimum because their open facet geometry offers far less inclusion masking. Flawless costs 2–3× more than VS2 and looks identical to the naked eye. The money saved by choosing the right grade over FL or VVS can fund a meaningfully better cut, carat, or setting.

The clarity chart on a diamond grading report is eleven grades long. The practical buying guide is considerably shorter: you need to know where inclusions stop being visible to the naked eye, and you need to know that threshold shifts depending on which shape of diamond you are buying. Everything else on the chart — the difference between VVS1 and VVS2, the precise number of pinpoints in a cluster — exists for gemologists, appraisers, and collectors, not for someone choosing a center stone for an engagement ring.

This guide decodes every grade on the [GIA clarity scale](https://www.gia.edu/diamond-quality-factor), maps real price differences at each level, explains exactly which grade delivers eye-cleanliness for each major diamond shape, and identifies the inclusion types that matter most when you are inspecting a specific stone. If you are still building your foundation on the 4Cs as a whole, our [diamond 4Cs guide](https://caratyes.com/diamonds-stones/4cs-guide) covers all four grades together with priority order for trade-offs.

## What Is the GIA Clarity Scale and How Is It Structured?

The GIA clarity scale was developed in the 1950s as part of the same grading revolution that produced the D-to-Z color scale and the modern 4Cs framework. It grades the appearance of internal characteristics (inclusions) and external characteristics (blemishes) as seen under 10x magnification by a trained grader. Eleven grades span the scale:

  GIA Diamond Clarity Scale: All Eleven Grades, What They Mean, and Approximate Price Range (1.00 ct, G color, Excellent cut, natural round brilliant)

      Grade
      Full Name
      What Graders See at 10x
      Visible to Naked Eye?
      Approx. Price Range

      FL
      Flawless
      No internal or external characteristics
      No
      $8,000–$15,000

      IF
      Internally Flawless
      No internal characteristics; minor surface blemishes only
      No
      $7,000–$13,000

      VVS1
      Very Very Slightly Included 1
      Microscopic inclusions extremely difficult to locate
      No
      $6,500–$11,000

      VVS2
      Very Very Slightly Included 2
      Microscopic inclusions very difficult to locate
      No
      $6,000–$10,000

      VS1
      Very Slightly Included 1
      Minor inclusions difficult to locate
      No
      $5,000–$8,500

      VS2
      Very Slightly Included 2
      Inclusions noticeable under magnification
      Rarely (under 2 ct, brilliant cuts)
      $4,500–$7,500

      SI1
      Slightly Included 1
      Inclusions easy to see under magnification
      Often not (requires inspection)
      $3,500–$6,000

      SI2
      Slightly Included 2
      Inclusions very easy to see under magnification
      Sometimes
      $2,800–$5,000

      I1
      Included 1
      Obvious inclusions; may affect transparency and brilliance
      Yes
      $1,500–$3,000

      I2
      Included 2
      Obvious inclusions; likely affect transparency and brilliance
      Yes
      $800–$1,800

      I3
      Included 3
      Prominent inclusions; affect transparency, brilliance, durability
      Yes (clearly)
      $400–$900

Price data reflects 2026 retail benchmarks at major online retailers for a 1.00-carat natural round brilliant in G color with Excellent cut, sourced from [The Diamond Price](https://thediamondprice.com/blog/article/diamond-price-chart-2026/). Ranges are wide because cut quality within a grade, fluorescence, and retailer markup all affect final price. The key observation: moving from FL to VS2 — a jump across five grade steps — saves $3,500–$7,500 on a single 1.00-carat stone, with zero visible difference in a mounted ring.

## Where Is the Eye-Clean Threshold for Round and Brilliant-Cut Diamonds?

Round brilliant cuts are the most forgiving diamond shape for clarity. Their 57 or 58 precisely angled facets — triangular and kite-shaped, arranged to bounce light in multiple overlapping directions — create a kinetic pattern of brightness, fire, and sparkle that effectively camouflages inclusions within the visual noise. This is not a metaphor: the scattering of light paths inside a well-cut brilliant genuinely breaks up and redirects contrast that would otherwise allow an inclusion to stand out against a bright background.

The practical result, documented by gemologists at the [International Gem Society](https://www.gemsociety.org/article/si1-clarity-diamond/), is that more than 85% of SI1 round brilliants at 1.00 carat are eye-clean — meaning their inclusions are invisible to the unaided eye at a normal viewing distance in a finished, mounted ring. **VS2 is the grade at which round brilliants reliably achieve eye-cleanliness** without requiring individual stone inspection; you can select any VS2 on a trusted retailer's platform with reasonable confidence.

SI1, however, cannot be purchased on grade alone. The critical variables are inclusion type and position:

  - **Favorable inclusions:** pinpoints and clouds near the girdle edge, feathers positioned under a prong, needles with low contrast, minor surface blemishes. These are invisible in finished rings.

  - **Unfavorable inclusions:** dark crystals (black or dark brown minerals with high contrast against the brilliant white interior), chips on the culet or girdle, and central-table feathers. These are the inclusions most likely to be visible — and they appear at SI1.

The solution: inspect the actual stone. Both James Allen and Blue Nile offer 360-degree high-definition video at 20–40x magnification, which allows you to evaluate inclusion position before purchasing. A dark crystal at SI1 that sits near the girdle and will be covered by a prong in a six-prong solitaire is a completely different purchase than a dark crystal positioned at the center of the table. The grade certificate tells you nothing about which one you are looking at; the video does.

For oval, cushion, pear, and radiant cuts — all brilliant-cut shapes — the eye-clean threshold is similar to round: VS2 for grade-based confidence, SI1 viable on individual inspection under 1.50 carats. One additional caveat for elongated brilliant cuts (oval, pear, marquise): the *bow-tie shadow* — a dark, butterfly-shaped optical pattern that runs across the center of most elongated brilliants — can visually amplify inclusions positioned within that shadow zone. When inspecting SI1 ovals or pears, check specifically whether inclusions fall within the bow-tie area. See our [diamond shapes guide](https://caratyes.com/diamonds-stones/diamond-shapes-guide) for a full comparison of how each brilliant cut handles light.

## Why Step-Cut Diamonds (Emerald and Asscher) Demand Higher Clarity

Step cuts are among the oldest diamond cutting traditions — the emerald cut's beveled corners and rectangular parallel facets were developed in the 1920s; the square Asscher cut was patented by the Asscher Brothers of Amsterdam in 1902. Their visual character is entirely different from brilliant cuts: rather than maximizing sparkle through light scatter, step cuts create a series of large, flat reflections that produce what jewelers call the *hall of mirrors* — deep, layered rectangular reflections visible from the table down into the pavilion.

The gemological trade-off is direct: those same large, flat, parallel facets that create the hall-of-mirrors effect offer essentially no inclusion masking. They function as windows into the stone's interior, allowing the eye to look past the surface and into the body of the diamond. An inclusion that would be completely invisible in a round brilliant of identical clarity grade can be clearly apparent in an emerald cut — not because the inclusion is larger, but because the optical geometry provides no scatter to hide it.

Industry gemologists and independent experts including [Your Diamond Teacher](https://yourdiamondteacher.com/diamond-4cs/clarity/diamond-clarity-scale-chart-comparison/) consistently recommend **VS1 as the minimum practical clarity grade for emerald and Asscher cuts**. For stones above 1.50 carats, where the table is large enough that even minor characteristics fall in an unobstructed visual path, VVS2 provides a higher margin of confidence. SI1 — acceptable in round brilliants with inspection — is generally not recommended for step cuts because the probability of visible inclusions increases substantially under step-cut geometry.

This shape-clarity interaction has a meaningful financial implication: if you are drawn to an emerald or Asscher cut, budget for a one-to-two grade clarity premium relative to the round brilliant equivalent. The step-cut premium on clarity is not negotiable without incurring visible quality risk. It is one reason step cuts are often paired with near-colorless or colorless color grades — both the step-cut buyer and the high-color buyer are paying for perfection that the stone's geometry makes visible.

## How Carat Size Shifts the Eye-Clean Target

Carat weight and clarity interact in a predictable way that most buyers underestimate. An inclusion that is genuinely invisible in a 0.90-carat diamond may become detectable in the same clarity grade at 2.00 carats. The physics are straightforward: a larger diamond has a larger table (the flat top facet that serves as the primary visual entry point), which means any inclusion near the center of the table is further from masking facet edges and more prominently positioned in the field of view.

A practical rule: for every 0.50-carat increase above 1.50 carats, consider upgrading your target clarity by one grade to maintain the same eye-clean probability. Applied concretely:

  - **Under 1.50 ct, round brilliant:** VS2 for grade-based eye-cleanliness; SI1 viable on inspection.

  - **1.50–2.00 ct, round brilliant:** VS1 for reliable eye-cleanliness; VS2 viable on inspection.

  - **2.00–3.00 ct, round brilliant:** VS1 minimum; VVS2 for highest confidence.

  - **Emerald / Asscher, any size:** VS1 minimum under 1.50 ct; VVS2 minimum at 1.50 ct and above.

The financial stakes of this interaction grow sharply at larger sizes. The price difference between VS2 and VS1 on a 1.00-carat stone is approximately $1,000–$1,500. At 3.00 carats, the same grade step represents $15,000–$25,000. Clarity decisions at larger carat weights are among the most financially significant choices in the entire diamond purchase — and getting them right requires understanding both the grade and the geometry, not just the certificate number.

## The Real Cost of Over-Buying Clarity: FL Through VVS2

The inclusions in FL, IF, VVS1, and VVS2 diamonds are, categorically, not visible to the human eye without magnification. No unaided observer at normal viewing distance can distinguish a Flawless diamond from a VS2 in a finished ring. The GIA itself does not claim otherwise — the grading scale is a classification of what trained graders see under 10x magnification, not a scale of visible beauty.

What FL and IF grades represent is rarity — fewer than 1% of diamonds graded by GIA achieve Flawless or Internally Flawless status. That rarity has real collector and investment value for a narrow segment of buyers. For engagement-ring buyers prioritizing how the ring looks and how far their budget reaches, the FL premium is a cost without a corresponding visual benefit.

The saving from VS2 over FL on a 1.00-carat G-color Excellent-cut round brilliant is roughly $3,500–$7,500 at 2026 retail prices. At 2.00 carats, the spread between FL and VS1 (the minimum recommended for larger brilliants) easily exceeds $20,000. Directed differently, that budget can fund: a step up from 1.00 to 1.30 carats while maintaining identical quality; a switch from white gold to platinum with a custom hand-engraved setting; a lab-grown upgrade from 1.00 carat to 2.00 carats at equivalent cut and color grades. None of these outcomes are visible in a Flawless certificate. All of them are visible in the finished ring.

If you are weighing whether to stretch budget toward a lab-grown stone to access higher clarity at a larger carat weight, our [lab-grown versus natural diamonds guide](https://caratyes.com/diamonds-stones/lab-grown-vs-natural) covers every relevant variable — price, resale, FTC disclosure, and physical identity — in full.

## Sources

1. [Diamond Quality Factors — The 4Cs of Diamond Quality](https://www.gia.edu/diamond-quality-factor)
2. [SI1 Clarity Diamond: Is It The Right Choice For Your Ring?](https://www.gemsociety.org/article/si1-clarity-diamond/)
3. [Diamond Clarity Chart (2026): Compare All Grades with Real Photos](https://yourdiamondteacher.com/diamond-4cs/clarity/diamond-clarity-scale-chart-comparison/)
4. [Diamond Price Chart 2026: Complete Pricing Guide](https://thediamondprice.com/blog/article/diamond-price-chart-2026/)
5. [Guide to Diamond Clarity: Scale & Grading Chart](https://www.bluenile.com/education/diamonds/clarity)
6. [Diamond Clarity Chart: A Complete Guide](https://www.jamesallen.com/learning-center/diamonds/diamond-clarity-chart/)

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Source: https://caratyes.com/diamonds-stones/diamond-clarity-eye-clean
Index: https://caratyes.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://caratyes.com/llms-full.txt
