One of the most persistent rumors online is:
“Moissanite gets cloudy over time.”
This is factually incorrect—but the myth survives because most people confuse **dirt** with **degradation**.
1. What cloudiness actually is (and isn’t)
Stones only look cloudy for three real reasons:
- Oil buildup — lotion, soaps, skin oils
- Setting grime — trapped dirt under the stone
- Metal reflection — dull or oxidized prongs reflecting inside the stone
These affect *all* stones:
- moissanite,
- lab-grown diamonds,
- natural diamonds.
2. Why people THINK moissanite clouds
Reason 1: Moissanite shows dirt more dramatically
Because moissanite has higher dispersion (more fire), any film on the surface disrupts the rainbow pattern dramatically.
So when it’s dirty, it looks “off.”
Reason 2: Diamond marketing has pushed the myth for years
Older moissanite (pre-2015) sometimes had slight tints—but never cloudiness. Newer generations (2020–2026) are visually stable.
Reason 3: Social media compression makes dirty stones look hazy
A stone filmed on a phone with lotion residue = “moissanite looks cloudy!” No — it looks dirty, and compression doubled the effect.
3. Long-term stability comparison (10-year wear forecast)
| Factor | Moissanite | Diamond (Natural/Lab) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Internal clouding | Impossible | Impossible | Tie |
| Surface film accumulation | Moderate | High | Diamond looks dirtier sooner |
| Setting grime visibility | High | Medium | Moissanite looks worse when setting is dirty |
| Long-term optical stability | Extremely stable | Extremely stable | Tie |
4. Does moissanite yellow over time?
No. Modern moissanite is color-stable.
Any “yellowing” people see is caused by:
- warm indoor lighting,
- metal reflection (especially yellow gold),
- dirty settings creating a warm glow,
- phone camera auto-white-balance.
5. Why settings affect cloudiness more than the stone
The biggest cloudiness culprit is the **setting**, not the moissanite.
Settings that trap the most grime:
- hidden halos,
- ornate under-galleries,
- pavé clusters,
- low baskets with tight spacing.
These settings trap oils behind the stone, which reflect upward and make the stone appear dull.
Settings that stay cleaner longer:
- 4-prong solitaires,
- 6-prong solitaires,
- open baskets,
- cathedral designs.
The stone isn’t dull—its environment is.
6. How to instantly “fix” cloudiness
Cloudiness disappears with basic cleaning:
- warm water
- Dawn or mild dish soap
- soft toothbrush
- rinse thoroughly
For maximum brilliance:
- home ultrasonic cleaner (best for moissanite),
- 90-second cleaning per week.
7. Who is most sensitive to cloudiness?
You’ll notice cloudiness more if you:
- wear lotion daily,
- cook frequently,
- sleep with your ring on,
- have a hidden halo or pavé setting,
- film your ring often (camera amplifies dirt).
You’ll barely notice cloudiness if you:
- clean weekly,
- remove your ring when applying products,
- choose simpler settings,
- prefer DEF stones (which appear cleaner when slightly dirty).
8. Long-term wear: 1-year, 5-year, 10-year expectations
After 1 year:
- stone remains identical to day one,
- setting may dull depending on metal.
After 5 years:
- stone still identical to day one,
- setting may need polishing.
After 10 years:
- stone remains unchanged,
- prongs may need tightening (same for diamonds).
9. Final decision guide
If cloudiness is your concern:
- Moissanite is completely safe.
- Cloudiness is never internal.
- Proper cleaning = permanent brilliance.
- Settings influence cloudiness more than the stone itself.
Next Steps:
- Use the Moissanite Savings Calculator to compare long-term value when cloudiness is not a concern.
- Browse the Vendor Directory to choose clean, easy-to-maintain settings.
- Pair this with:
Once you understand that moissanite does not degrade, the decision becomes far simpler—and far more confidence-driven.