Real Pearl Authentication Guides

Imitation pearls have been sold as real for over a century, and the imitations keep getting better — glass beads dipped in fish-scale lacquer, coated shell spheres, and plastic “pearls” with convincing weight. The good news: a real cultured pearl is a layered biological material, nacre built from microscopic aragonite platelets, and that structure produces physical signs no coating can fully reproduce. You can learn to check most of them at home in under a minute.

The classic checks work because they test the nacre itself. Rubbed gently against a tooth or against another pearl, real nacre feels slightly gritty — imitation coatings feel glassy-smooth. Under a loupe, a real pearl’s surface shows fine, irregular growth characteristics; imitations show uniform spray-coating texture, and around the drill hole a coating often chips or peels where real nacre shows clean layered edges. Real pearls are also cold to the touch at first and warm slowly, and a strand of real pearls is almost never perfectly identical bead to bead — slight variation is a signature of the genuine article, not a flaw.

Beyond the quick tests, authentication is about provenance: knowing which species produces which pearl, what natural colours are even possible, and what a certificate should actually state. A “black pearl” that cost $30 was not grown in Pinctada margaritifera; a “golden South Sea” with suspicious uniformity may be dyed. The guides below collect everything we have published on telling real from fake — fast home tests, species-specific checks for Tahitian and South Sea pearls, how to read certificates, and the questions an honest seller should be able to answer before you pay.

Real pearl authentication guides

Every pearl we sell ships with a certificate stating species, size and natural colour — browse loose Tahitian pearls or loose South Sea pearls to see real, certified stock.