#Rock identification
2 tools curated for you
Instantly identify any rock, crystal, or gemstone by pointing your camera, with AI analyzing texture, color, pattern, and composition for accurate results. Know the market value of your specimen immediately, with price estimates based on type, rarity, size, and quality. Build a personal collection of identified stones, with each entry showing rarity classification, origin, and estimated value for easy tracking. Explore a searchable encyclopedia of rocks, crystals, and minerals offline, organized by chakra, zodiac sign, element, planet, and healing property. Achieve accurate identification even without an internet connection, as the full database works offline once loaded. Protect your privacy during every scan, as photos are processed and deleted immediately with no personal data collected.
Identify any rock, crystal, or mineral instantly from a photo—get the name, type classification, and Mohs hardness without any prior knowledge. Know exactly what your find is worth with an estimated value range for every specimen, from beach pebbles to gem show pickups. Distinguish genuine gold from pyrite or real diamonds from simulants using specialized tools for gold, diamond, and fossil identification. Turn a child's mystery rock into a learning moment with a simple photo—no expertise needed to classify igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic specimens. Get comprehensive geological data for teaching or study—formation type and Mohs hardness delivered in seconds from a single clear photograph. Identify trail-found rocks, beach pebbles, or museum-quality crystals with the same AI that analyzes color, luster, grain size, and fracture patterns against thousands of known types. Confirm a diamond's authenticity by uploading a photo of raw, cut, or simulated stones—no scratch tests or special equipment required. Discover if your fossil find is an ammonite, trilobite, or shark tooth using the dedicated fossil identification tool. Upload JPG, PNG, WebP, or HEIC images up to 50MB and get accurate results even from dull specimens—just wet the surface to highlight colors and grain patterns.
