Free U.S. Shipping
Dispatched from the USA with care
Hustle-Free Returns & Exchanges
Simple, worry-free process
Ethically Crafted
Responsibly sourced, consciously made
Loved by 200,000+ Couples
Fantasy-inspired, handcrafted jewelry
What Is Tanzanite?
Tanzanite is the trade name for blue-violet zoisite — a calcium aluminum silicate mineral that develops its characteristic blue-violet color through trace amounts of vanadium and iron in its crystal structure. The stone was first discovered in 1967 by Manuel d'Souza, a Goan-Indian tailor and prospector, who initially mistook the deep blue crystals for sapphire. After verification by gemological testing, the new variety was named "tanzanite" by Tiffany & Co. in 1968 — both as a tribute to its single source country and as a commercial decision (Tiffany's marketing chief reportedly determined that "blue zoisite" sounded too much like "blue suicide" for retail success).
The stone is found commercially in only one 8-square-mile area of the Merelani Hills in northern Tanzania, near Mount Kilimanjaro. This single-source provenance is unusual among major gemstones — most commercially significant stones are mined across multiple global locations. Geological surveys suggest tanzanite's commercial supply is finite, with most industry estimates putting accessible reserves at 20–30 years at current mining rates. This finite supply has contributed to tanzanite's distinctive market position: a stone that may not be available to future generations in the same way.
Tanzanite ranks 6–7 on the Mohs hardness scale — durable enough for jewelry contexts where daily impact is limited (earrings, pendants, occasional-wear rings) but at the lower threshold for daily-wear ring contexts. The stone is heat-treated as industry standard, which stabilizes the desired blue-violet color permanently under normal conditions.
Tanzanite Color and Pleochroism
Tanzanite's defining optical property is pleochroism — the display of different colors from different viewing angles. High-quality tanzanite shifts visibly between blue, violet, and burgundy depending on light direction and stone orientation. This isn't a fault or color instability; it's an inherent characteristic of the crystal structure that skilled cutters work with deliberately.
The grading hierarchy for tanzanite color runs roughly from "AAA" (deep saturated blue with strong violet secondary, pronounced pleochroism) through "AA" (medium-deep saturation, clear pleochroism) to "A" (lighter saturation, weaker pleochroism). For high-quality jewelry use, AA and AAA grades present with strong color presence and visible pleochroism in normal lighting. We select tanzanite for color saturation and pronounced pleochroism as primary quality criteria.
Tanzanite cut affects color presentation. Skilled cutters orient the stone to emphasize the most desirable color — typically blue for Western markets — while preserving secondary violet flashes that emerge from different angles. Faceted brilliant cuts (oval, round, cushion, pear) maximize light return and color flash. Step cuts (emerald, Asscher) emphasize color depth and clarity over sparkle.
Tanzanite Earrings
Tanzanite earrings are one of the most practical applications of tanzanite as a gemstone. The Mohs 6–7 hardness that creates considerations for daily-wear engagement rings is significantly less of a constraint in earring contexts — earrings don't experience the regular impact, scratching, and chemical exposure that ring jewelry does. Tanzanite earrings hold up indefinitely in normal wear and can showcase the stone's color and pleochroism without durability compromises.
Common tanzanite earring formats include:
- Tanzanite stud earrings — single stones in classic four-prong or bezel settings, available across carat weights from accent sizes (0.25 carat each) to statement sizes (1+ carat each).
- Tanzanite drop earrings — articulated designs with movement, allowing the stone to catch light from changing angles and amplifying pleochroism display.
- Tanzanite halo earrings — center stones surrounded by smaller accent stones (typically lab-grown diamonds or moissanite), creating dramatic contrast and visible scale.
- Tanzanite cluster earrings — multiple smaller tanzanite stones arranged in floral or geometric patterns, particularly suited to vintage and Art Deco aesthetic preferences.
For broader earring options across stones, see earrings and gemstone earrings.
Tanzanite Necklaces and Pendants
Tanzanite necklaces are the most flexible application of tanzanite — pendant configurations let the stone catch light at the wearer's clavicle area, where movement during normal activities triggers visible pleochroism throughout the day. Like earrings, necklaces don't subject the stone to the impact and abrasion concerns that affect ring contexts.
Common tanzanite necklace configurations:
- Tanzanite solitaire pendants — single stones on simple chains, the most versatile format for daily wear and layering.
- Tanzanite halo pendants — center stones surrounded by smaller accent stones, creating strong visual presence at chest height.
- Tanzanite drop pendants — elongated pendant configurations that emphasize the stone's color depth and movement.
- Tanzanite station necklaces — multiple tanzanite stones spaced along a chain, allowing color variation and pleochroism display at multiple points.
For broader necklace options, see necklace and gemstone necklaces.
Tanzanite Rings (Non-Engagement)
Tanzanite fashion rings, cocktail rings, and statement rings are popular non-engagement applications of the stone. In contexts where the ring isn't worn daily for decades — occasional-wear cocktail rings, statement pieces for specific occasions, anniversary rings, birthstone rings — the Mohs 6–7 hardness consideration relaxes significantly. The stone can be displayed at larger sizes and in more elaborate settings without the protective requirements of engagement-context rings.
Common tanzanite ring formats outside engagement use:
- Tanzanite cocktail rings — large statement stones (3+ carats commonly) in elaborate settings designed for occasional rather than daily wear.
- Tanzanite birthstone rings — December birthstone-themed designs, often given as birthday or anniversary gifts.
- Tanzanite anniversary rings — eternity-style or three-stone configurations marking specific anniversaries.
- Tanzanite stacking rings — slim band configurations with smaller tanzanite accents, designed to stack with other rings.
For tanzanite engagement rings specifically — with engagement-appropriate setting recommendations and durability framing for daily wear — see our dedicated tanzanite engagement rings collection. For broader gemstone ring options, see gemstone rings.
Metal Options for Tanzanite Jewelry
Sterling Silver Tanzanite Jewelry
925 sterling silver is the most accessible metal in this collection — genuine precious metal, repairable, suited to daily-wear earrings and necklaces. Silver's cool tone preserves tanzanite's blue-violet at full saturation and is the traditional pairing for blue gemstones across Western fine jewelry. For the broader silver range, see sterling silver jewelry, sterling silver earrings, and sterling silver necklaces.
Gold Vermeil Tanzanite Jewelry
Gold vermeil — sterling silver with a thick gold electroplated layer meeting US FTC standards — delivers gold aesthetics at accessible pricing. Yellow gold vermeil creates striking warm-cool contrast against tanzanite's blue-violet. Rose gold vermeil softens the stone's intensity into a more romantic register. White gold vermeil preserves tanzanite's color saturation similar to silver. See gold vermeil jewelry and yellow gold vermeil jewelry.
Solid 14K Gold Tanzanite Jewelry
The premium tier within the collection: solid 14K gold throughout the entire piece — gold alloy, no plating. Available in white, yellow, and rose gold across earrings, necklaces, and rings. White gold and platinum-toned settings are the most traditional pairing for tanzanite. Heirloom-grade. Holds material value across decades.
From the Blog
Purple Gemstones: The Complete Guide to 13 Names, Meanings, Hardness & Value
From the imperial purple of murex sea snails to the violet fire of Tanzanian zoisite — an expert journey through 13 purple gemstones. Amethyst, lavender sapphire, tanzanite, charoite, kunzite &...
Blue Gemstones: The Complete Guide to Every Shade, Stone & What Sets Them Apart
From sapphire to aquamarine to blue sandstone, blue gemstones span Mohs 5.5 to 9, three different color mechanisms, and a price range of hundreds to tens of thousands per carat....
What Is My Birthstone?
Every month has a gemstone assigned to it — but the standard chart only tells you the name. This guide covers what each birthstone actually is: why its color looks...
The Fascinating History of Gemstones: Meaning, Symbolism & Origins Through Time
Every gemstone in a modern ring carries the weight of thousands of years of human meaning. This guide traces that history — from the lapis lazuli burial goods of ancient...