Buying gems in Sri Lanka - is Ratnapura worth visiting and how do you avoid getting scammed?

Asked 4 days agoViewed 1330 times
H
Hans V.280 rep1
asked 4 days ago

Sri Lanka is famous for sapphires and other precious stones and I have a genuine interest in buying a stone as a gemologist. I want to go to Ratnapura rather than a Colombo tourist shop. Is it actually possible for a tourist to visit gem mines in Ratnapura? How does buying directly work versus going through a registered dealer? What are the common scams I should know about? Are there any certifications or seals that mean a stone is genuine?

28
asked 4 days ago
H
Hans V.280 rep1

2 Answers

Accepted Answer

Ratnapura (the name literally means "city of gems") is genuinely accessible to visitors with a real interest in stones, and as a gemologist you will find it fascinating. Let me give you the honest picture.

Visiting gem mines: open-pit alluvial mining happens continuously in the Ratnapura area. If you go to the National Gem and Jewellery Authority office in Ratnapura (there is one), they can direct you to registered mine sites that welcome visitors. A tuk-tuk driver in Ratnapura town will know which mines near town are currently active. Expect muddy, basic operations in wet conditions - this is alluvial gravel washing, not the glamorous operations you see in documentaries.

Buying at Ratnapura: the gem market happens informally every morning near the main bus stand. Miners and small traders spread stones on cloths or hold them in paper packets. As a gemologist, you can examine stones directly. Prices are negotiable and significantly lower than Colombo jewellery shops, but you need to be confident in your grading - there is no return policy.

The National Gem and Jewellery Authority (NGJA): the government body that certifies stones. Any stone sold with an NGJA certificate is genuine and the species/quality is verified. Buying certified stones costs more than the informal market but gives you legal recourse and certainty. For export of stones above a certain value, you need documentation anyway - the NGJA can advise.

Common scams: synthetic (lab-grown) stones sold as natural; heat-treated stones sold as untreated; species misrepresentation (blue spinel passed as sapphire, which is common globally). As a practising gemologist with a loupe you will catch most of these. The main scam targeting tourists without expertise is simply overpricing low-grade material.

What Sri Lanka is actually known for: blue sapphires (including padparadscha), star sapphires, alexandrite, cat's eye chrysoberyl, spinel, and garnets. The NGJA museum in Ratnapura has excellent examples and is worth visiting first for context.

12
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answered 4 days ago
Ruwan Dias
Ruwan Dias1592 rep2

Ruwan's answer is accurate for the buying process. Getting to Ratnapura from Colombo: buses from Colombo (Pettah bus stand) run regularly, about 3-3.5 hours, LKR 250-400. The road through the rubber estates is scenic and the approach to Ratnapura through the gem-bearing hills is interesting. Combine a morning gem market visit with the Maha Saman Devalaya temple nearby (Sri Lanka's most important Saman deity shrine) and the Gem Bureau museum - that makes a full day trip from Colombo or a convenient stop on the way to or from the south.

6
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answered 4 days ago
Kasun Silva
Kasun Silva1720 rep2

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