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Passing on Diamonds and Gems: What Your Trumbull Estate Planning Should Include

Franklin Drazen

October 15, 2025

Diamond engagement rings, inherited gemstone jewelry, and precious stone collections represent both sentimental and financial value in many families. Yet these sparkling assets often create the biggest headaches during estate administration. Unlike gold or silver, which have relatively straightforward market values, diamonds and gemstones require specialized knowledge to properly evaluate, insure, and transfer to the next generation.

Do Your Loved Ones Understand What They're Inheriting?

Many families assume that valuable jewelry is automatically worth what was originally paid for it, or what an insurance appraisal states. The reality is more complex. Retail jewelry prices, insurance replacement values, and actual resale values can vary dramatically. A diamond ring purchased for $10,000 might have an insurance appraisal of $15,000 but only sell for $4,000 in the secondary market.

Your estate plan should include realistic guidance about the nature of these assets. Consider documenting the original purchase information, any certificates of authenticity, and your own understanding of current market conditions. This helps your beneficiaries make informed decisions about keeping, selling, or dividing inherited pieces.

Professional Appraisals Are Essential

Unlike precious metals with published spot prices, diamonds and gemstones require expert evaluation to determine their true worth. Factors like cut, clarity, color, carat weight, origin, and treatments all affect value, and these assessments require specialized training and equipment.

Include instructions in your estate plan for obtaining professional appraisals from certified gemologists. The American Society of Appraisers or American Gem Society can help your family find qualified experts. Getting items appraised during your lifetime also helps with insurance coverage and provides baseline documentation for estate tax purposes.

Specific Instructions Prevent Family Disputes

Jewelry often carries deep emotional significance that can complicate inheritance decisions. Your grandmother's engagement ring or a necklace from a special anniversary might be treasured by multiple family members. Without clear guidance, even close families can find themselves in painful disputes over who should receive which pieces.

Be specific in your estate planning documents about how you want jewelry distributed. Consider whether certain pieces should go to particular individuals, whether beneficiaries should have opportunities to select items in turns, or whether everything should be sold and proceeds divided. Some families benefit from having beneficiaries choose items during your lifetime to avoid later conflicts.

Storage and Security Considerations

Valuable gems require proper storage, insurance, and security measures that your family may not understand. Safe deposit boxes provide security but can create access delays during estate administration. Home safes protect against theft but may not offer adequate fire or flood protection.

Your estate plan should include information about where jewelry is stored, how it's insured, and any special security measures your family needs to maintain. Consider whether your beneficiaries want the responsibility of ongoing insurance, storage, and security that valuable gems require.

Consider a Trust for High-Value Collections

For substantial gem collections, a revocable living trust allows immediate access and management without probate delays. The successor trustee can arrange professional appraisals, maintain insurance coverage, and handle secure storage while determining the best distribution approach.

Get Professional Estate Planning Guidance

Properly planning for diamond and gemstone inheritance requires understanding both the legal and practical aspects of these unique assets. Our Trumbull estate planning team can help you create documentation that protects these precious items and guides your family through proper valuation and distribution.

Contact us today at 203-877-7511 to discuss incorporating your valuable jewelry into a comprehensive estate plan.

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