Hardness is one of the oldest gemstone talking points — and also one of the most misunderstood. Most buyers think:
“Diamond is hardest, so diamond is strongest.”
In reality, hardness is only one part of durability.
Stones have three key strength properties:
- Hardness – scratch resistance
- Toughness – resistance to cracking
- Stability – chemical & heat resilience
This article breaks down how moissanite and diamond behave across all three.
1. Mohs hardness: where each stone sits
| Stone | Mohs Hardness | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Diamond | 10 | Virtually scratch-proof except by another diamond |
| Moissanite | 9.25 | Extremely scratch resistant; second hardest gemstone |
| Sapphire/Ruby | 9 | Can scratch glass but not diamond/moissanite |
| Cubic Zirconia | 8–8.5 | Scratches more easily |
2. Toughness: which stone chips more easily?
Many people don’t realize diamonds can chip — especially at sharp points.
Toughness (resistance to breaking):
- Moissanite: Excellent toughness
- Diamond: Good toughness, but cleavage planes make it chip-prone
This means:
- Diamonds are more likely to chip at edges, especially in fancy shapes.
- Moissanite is more resistant to sudden impacts.
High chip-risk diamond shapes:
- Princess
- Pear
- Marquise
- Emerald (thin corners)
Moissanite handles these shapes better.
3. Scratch behavior: what can scratch what?
Diamond:
- can scratch glass, metal, and other gemstones,
- can be scratched only by diamond.
Moissanite:
- scratches glass and most gemstones,
- rarely scratches in normal use,
- can be scratched by diamond due to hardness difference.
4. Impact resistance: what happens if you hit the ring hard?
Hardness ≠ shatter resistance.
Diamonds are incredibly hard but have internal “cleavage planes” — directions in which the crystal can split under impact.
Moissanite’s crystal structure is more uniform, making it better at distributing force.
Impact ranking:
- Best (toughest): Moissanite
- Very good (but cleavage risk): Diamond
This is why you may see chipped diamond tips — but almost never chipped moissanite edges.
5. Daily wear test: 365-day simulation
| Wear Scenario | Diamond | Moissanite | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typing | No effect | No effect | Tie |
| Gym equipment impact | Corner chip possible | Lower chip risk | Moissanite wins |
| Frying pan accidental hit | High-impact edges at risk | More resilient | Moissanite wins |
| Scraping against tile | Stone stays intact | Stone stays intact | Tie |
6. Why jewelers still say “diamond is more durable”
Jewelers use “durable” as shorthand for “hard.”
But durability is multidimensional:
- Hardness: Diamond leads
- Toughness: Moissanite leads
- Thermal stability: Moissanite leads
- Scratch resistance: Diamond leads
7. Which stone is better for active lifestyles?
Moissanite is generally the safer choice if you:
- hit your hands often during work,
- go to the gym frequently,
- cook daily,
- don’t remove your ring often,
- want a stone that resists chips and heat.
Diamond still works for daily wear — but requires slightly more awareness of impacts.
8. Hardness myths (debunked)
“Moissanite scratches easily.”
False — it is harder than almost every gemstone.
“Only diamonds last forever.”
Also false — moissanite has lifetime optical and structural stability.
“Diamond is unbreakable.”
Not true — diamonds chip in real-world conditions.
9. Final decision guide: durability in 2025–2026
- Best scratch resistance: Diamond
- Best chip resistance: Moissanite
- Best all-around daily wear durability: Tie (different strengths)
- Best for active lifestyles: Moissanite
- Best for traditional buyers: Diamond
Next steps:
- Use the Moissanite Savings Calculator to compare lifetime cost vs durability.
- Explore the Vendor Directory to find stones with excellent cut & structural symmetry.
- Pair this article with:
Once you understand hardness vs toughness, choosing between moissanite and diamond becomes a decision of lifestyle — not fear of durability.