Mohs Hardness Scale — Interactive Mineral Lookup

The Mohs hardness scale is one of the most practical tools in a rockhound's field kit. Below you'll find a searchable table of 40+ minerals with their hardness values, appearances, and field tests — plus a "what scratches what" lookup tool.

🔍 Mineral Hardness Search

Mineral Hardness Appearance Field Test / Notes

⚔️ What Can Scratch What?

Select two minerals to see which scratches which — and what everyday objects fall in between.

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Select two minerals and click Compare.

What Is the Mohs Hardness Scale?

The Mohs scale was devised by German mineralogist Friedrich Mohs in 1812 as a simple way to characterize the scratch resistance of minerals. The principle is straightforward: a harder material scratches a softer one. Mohs ranked ten reference minerals from softest to hardest:

HardnessReference MineralField Object Reference
1TalcEasily scratched by fingernail
2GypsumScratched by fingernail (2.5)
3CalciteScratched by copper coin (3.0)
4FluoriteScratched by iron nail (4.0)
5ApatiteBarely scratches glass
6OrthoclaseScratches glass (5.5), scratched by file
7QuartzScratches glass and steel, scratched by corundum
8TopazScratches quartz
9Corundum (Ruby/Sapphire)Scratches topaz, scratched only by diamond
10DiamondScratches everything — nothing scratches it

How to Use the Mohs Scale in the Field

Rockhounds use hardness as one of their primary identification tools. Here's how to do a hardness test correctly:

Step 1: Get a fresh surface

Weathered surfaces often give false low readings. Break or sand your specimen to expose fresh, unweathered material before testing.

Step 2: Test systematically

Start with your fingernail (hardness 2.5). If the mineral is not scratched, move up to a copper coin (3.0), then an iron nail (4.0), then glass (5.5), then a steel file (6.5), and finally quartz (7.0). Stop when you find the threshold.

Step 3: Check both ways

Confirm the direction. If you think glass scratches your mineral, verify by also checking whether your mineral scratches glass. Sometimes what looks like a scratch is just powder from the glass plate — wipe both surfaces clean and examine carefully.

Step 4: Read the result

If your mineral scratches glass (5.5) but is scratched by a steel file (6.5), its hardness is between 5.5 and 6.5 — which narrows the field considerably. Combine with streak and luster for a confident identification.

Common Field Testing Objects and Their Hardness

ObjectApprox. Hardness
Fingernail2.5
Copper coin (penny)3.0
Brass key3.5
Iron nail4.0
Pocketknife blade (carbon steel)5.5
Window glass5.5
Steel file6.5
Piece of quartz7.0

Why Hardness Matters for Rockhounds

Hardness is diagnostic for several common identification challenges:

Limitations of the Mohs Scale

The Mohs scale is ordinal, not linear. Diamond (10) is roughly 4 times harder than corundum (9) in absolute terms, but the scale doesn't reflect this. Corundum (9) is roughly twice as hard as topaz (8). The difference between 1 and 2 is much smaller than the difference between 9 and 10.

Hardness can also vary slightly between specimens of the same mineral depending on crystal orientation, impurities, and weathering. Treat hardness as a range (±0.5) rather than an exact number.