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Just scrolled through some absolutely wild luxury phone listings and honestly, the gap between what we consider 'expensive' and what these collectors actually spend is mind-bending.
So there's this thing called the Falcon Supernova iPhone 6 Pink Diamond floating around valued at $48.5 million. Let that sink in for a second. We're talking about an iPhone 6—hardware from like 2014—but the back features a rare pink diamond cut in emerald style, all wrapped in 24-carat gold. The most expensive phone ever made, basically a gemstone with a phone bolted on.
Then you've got Stuart Hughes, this British designer who's basically the Michelangelo of luxury phones. His Black Diamond iPhone from 2012 goes for $15 million. The home button? A 26-carat black diamond. The whole chassis is solid 24-carat gold with 600 white diamonds running along the edges. Took nine weeks to hand-craft a single unit. That's the kind of commitment we're talking about.
Before that, Hughes made the iPhone 4S Elite Gold at $9.4 million—rose gold bezel with 500 diamonds, platinum Apple logo with 53 more diamonds, and here's the kicker: the packaging is a platinum chest lined with actual T-Rex dinosaur bone. Not a replica. Actual dinosaur bone.
Even his earlier Diamond Rose model from the iPhone 4 era hits $8 million with a 7.4-carat pink diamond home button. Only two ever made.
Working backwards, the Goldstriker 3GS Supreme took ten months to build and cost $3.2 million. The Diamond Crypto Smartphone sits at $1.3 million with 50 diamonds including rare blue ones. And the Goldvish Le Million—literally named that because it was the first to hit the million-dollar mark back in 2006—still holds up as one of the most expensive phone designs ever created with its boomerang shape and 120 carats of VVS-1 diamonds.
Here's what's wild though: none of this is about the actual phone technology. You're not paying for better cameras or processing power. You're paying for material rarity, artisanal craftsmanship taking months per device, and the fact that diamonds and rare gemstones appreciate over time. These aren't gadgets. They're portable investment assets wrapped in gold.
The most expensive phone market is basically where traditional tech meets high jewelry meets alternative investments. Pretty fascinating rabbit hole if you think about how value actually works.