Crystal Identifier

Crystal Identifier —
Free Online AI Tool

Upload 1–3 photos of any crystal or mineral specimen. Our AI analyses colour, crystal structure, luster, and form to identify it in seconds — with confidence scoring and expert properties.

Crystal Identifier

Upload photos of points, clusters, raw pieces, tumbled stones, or specimens on matrix — get an AI identification with habit, crystal system, and collector tips.

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Description

Origin / formation

Hardness (Mohs)

Luster

Rarity

Relative value

Notable localities / regions

Typical colours

Key properties

    Similar crystals

    Alternative identifications

    Collector tip

    Crystal identification has always required expert eyes — until now. Whether you’ve found a glittering specimen on a hiking trail, inherited a collection with missing labels, or simply want to know what that beautiful stone on your windowsill actually is, our AI crystal identifier gives you a professional-grade answer in seconds.


    What Is Crystal Identification?

    Crystal identification is the process of determining the exact mineral species of a crystalline specimen by analysing its physical and optical properties. Trained mineralogists and crystallographers use a systematic set of diagnostic tests — examining colour, luster, crystal form, cleavage, fracture, hardness, and streak — to arrive at a definitive identification.

    Our AI crystal scanner replicates this same reasoning process. When you upload a photo, the model examines every visible diagnostic feature simultaneously: the specific shade and distribution of colour, the way light reflects off the surface (luster), the shape and habit of any visible crystal faces, the pattern of any fracture or cleavage planes, and the overall texture of the specimen. It then cross-references these observations against a comprehensive geological knowledge base to produce an identification with a confidence percentage.

    The result isn’t just a name. You receive the full picture — scientific name, crystal system, Mohs hardness, typical formation environment, where in the world it’s commonly found, and whether your specimen might be valuable to collectors.

    Some crystals genuinely look similar to each other — rose quartz and pink calcite, for example, or amethyst and purple fluorite. Rather than guessing, our tool tells you exactly how certain the identification is and what the alternative possibilities are. A 91% confidence result is very different from a 58% result, and you deserve to know the difference.

    “A wet crystal shows its true colour more vividly than a dry one. If you’re photographing a river-tumbled stone, photographing it slightly damp will often reveal banding, inclusions, and colour saturation that dry photography misses entirely.”

    Types of Crystals Our AI Identifies

    Our crystal identification tool covers the full spectrum of minerals, gemstones, and crystalline specimens that collectors, rockhounds, and geology enthusiasts encounter. Here are the major categories:

    Quartz Family

    Silicon Dioxide — SiO₂

    Amethyst Rose Quartz Citrine Smoky Quartz Clear Quartz Chalcedony

    Gemstone Minerals

    Corundum, Beryl, Topaz & more

    Ruby Sapphire Emerald Aquamarine Topaz Tourmaline

    Feldspars & Micas

    Silicate minerals

    Labradorite Moonstone Sunstone Muscovite Lepidolite Biotite

    Carbonates & Sulfates

    Calcite, Gypsum & related

    Calcite Aragonite Malachite Azurite Selenite Barite

    Oxides & Halides

    Corundum, Fluorite & related

    Fluorite Hematite Magnetite Rutile Cassiterite Pyrite

    Phosphates & Others

    Apatite, Turquoise & related

    Turquoise Apatite Lazurite Rhodonite Sodalite Garnet

    Key Properties Used in Crystal Identification

    Understanding which physical properties geologists and mineralogists use to identify crystals helps you provide better context to our AI — and makes you a more confident field identifier yourself. These are the seven most diagnostic properties:

    PropertyWhat It Tells UsHow to Observe
    Crystal Form & HabitThe shape of the crystal tells you its internal atomic structure and mineral group. Hexagonal prisms = quartz family. Cubic crystals = halides or pyrite.Visible in photos — look for geometric faces, edges, and overall shape
    Colour & Colour ZoningWhile colour alone is unreliable (the same mineral can occur in many colours), colour distribution patterns are distinctive. Zoning, banding, or colour gradients are highly diagnostic.Use consistent lighting; compare to known specimens
    LusterHow light interacts with the surface. Vitreous (glassy), metallic, adamantine (diamond-like), pearly, silky, resinous, or dull — each luster type narrows the possibilities dramatically.Best visible in natural light; look for reflections and surface quality
    TransparencyWhether light passes through the crystal (transparent), partially (translucent), or not at all (opaque). Combined with colour, this is highly diagnostic.Hold up to light; photograph with backlight for translucent specimens
    Cleavage & FractureHow the crystal breaks. Perfect flat cleavage (mica, calcite) vs conchoidal fracture (obsidian, quartz) vs uneven fracture — each pattern reflects the internal crystal structure.Visible on broken surfaces; flat reflective planes indicate cleavage
    Mohs HardnessThe hardness test is one of the most reliable single tests. Does it scratch glass (hardness >5.5)? Is it scratched by a steel knife? Each answer eliminates dozens of minerals instantly.Physical test; enter result in our optional context fields
    UV FluorescenceUnder UV light, many minerals fluoresce distinctive colours. Calcite glows red, fluorite glows blue or green, scheelite glows bright white. This is one of the most definitive tests available.Use a UV flashlight in a dark room; photograph and describe the colour

    The Six Crystal Systems — A Visual Guide

    Every crystal belongs to one of six crystal systems defined by its internal symmetry. Recognising which system your specimen belongs to is often the fastest route to a correct identification, because it immediately restricts the possibilities to a manageable subset of minerals.

    • Cubic (Isometric): Perfect cubes, octahedra, and dodecahedra. Examples: pyrite (perfect cubes), garnet (dodecahedra), fluorite (octahedra), halite (cubes). The most symmetrical system.
    • Hexagonal: Six-sided prisms with flat terminations. The quartz family lives here — amethyst, citrine, rose quartz, clear quartz. Also includes tourmaline, which shows distinctive striations along the prism length.
    • Tetragonal: Square-based prisms and pyramids. Zircon and apophyllite are the most recognisable examples — they look like elongated cubes.
    • Orthorhombic: Rectangular prisms with unequal axes. Topaz, barite, and olivine belong here. The prismatic cleavage of topaz is characteristic and diagnostic.
    • Monoclinic: Slanted prisms and tilted forms. Gypsum, selenite, azurite, and malachite are common examples. Selenite’s perfect cleavage producing thin flexible sheets is diagnostic of this system.
    • Triclinic: The lowest symmetry — irregular, tabular forms with no right angles. Labradorite, amazonite, and turquoise belong here. The adularescence (internal glow) of labradorite makes it visually unmistakable.

    Photography Tips for Accurate Crystal Identification

    The quality of your photos is the single most important factor in identification accuracy. These four tips make a measurable difference:

    Common Crystal Identification Mistakes to Avoid

    Even experienced collectors make these errors. Being aware of them helps you get a better result from our tool and improves your own identification skills.

    Relying on colour alone

    Colour is the least reliable identification property. Fluorite occurs in every colour of the rainbow. Quartz occurs in purple (amethyst), pink (rose quartz), yellow (citrine), brown (smoky quartz), and clear. Always look at crystal form and luster alongside colour.

    Confusing luster types

    The difference between vitreous (glassy), resinous, and pearly luster is significant but subtle. The key question is: does the surface look like polished glass, like amber/resin, or like the inside of a shell? Each answer points to a different mineral group.

    Assuming a purple crystal is always amethyst

     Purple fluorite is extremely common and frequently misidentified as amethyst. The two minerals have completely different crystal systems — amethyst forms hexagonal prisms; fluorite forms cubes and octahedra. They also feel very different in weight (fluorite is noticeably denser).

    Ignoring the matrix

    The rock that a crystal grew in tells you as much as the crystal itself. Crystals growing on a granite matrix live in a completely different geological context than crystals growing on limestone. Always photograph the matrix when it’s present.

    Photographing dirty specimens

    Surface dirt, oxidation, and mineral coatings obscure the diagnostic properties the AI uses. A gentle rinse with clean water before photographing significantly improves accuracy.