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Just stumbled down this rabbit hole of absolutely insane luxury phones and honestly, the price tags are wild. We're talking tens of millions of dollars for devices that barely function compared to what you can grab for a few hundred bucks today.
The craziest one? The Falcon Supernova iPhone 6 Pink Diamond sitting at $48.5 million. Think about that for a second. It's basically a massive pink diamond with a phone bolted to it. The entire thing is wrapped in 24-carat gold, and the whole value proposition comes down to one thing: that emerald-cut pink diamond on the back. Pink diamonds are genuinely rare, so rare that the actual tech specs don't even matter anymore.
Then there's the work of Stuart Hughes, this British designer who clearly decided regular luxury wasn't enough. His Black Diamond iPhone from 2012 cost $15 million and took nine weeks just to handcraft. We're talking 26-carat black diamond replacing the home button, solid gold chassis, 600 white diamonds around the edges, sapphire glass screen. The guy basically turned an iPhone 5 into a piece of jewelry.
He didn't stop there though. The iPhone 4S Elite Gold came in at $9.4 million with 500 diamonds totaling over 100 carats embedded in rose gold, plus a platinum Apple logo decorated with 53 more diamonds. And the packaging? A literal platinum chest with actual T-Rex dinosaur bone pieces inside. That's not a phone box, that's an artifact.
Before that was the Diamond Rose edition at $8 million, featuring a 7.4-carat pink diamond as the home button. Only two were ever made, which is the whole point of exclusivity in this market.
Even the older stuff holds up. The Goldstriker 3GS Supreme from way back was $3.2 million, made from 271 grams of 22-carat gold with 136 diamonds on the front bezel and a 7.1-carat diamond home button. Took ten months to build. The Diamond Crypto Smartphone hit $1.3 million with platinum frame and 50 diamonds including rare blue ones. And the Goldvish Le Million from 2006? Still legendary. 18-carat white gold, 120 carats of VVS-1 diamonds, that iconic boomerang shape. Made Guinness World Records back then and somehow it's still one of the most expensive phones ever made.
Here's the thing though: you're not paying for better performance or innovation. These aren't the most expensive phones because they have better cameras or processors. You're paying for three things. First, the materials themselves are genuinely rare. We're talking high-grade diamonds, solid precious metals, sometimes literal dinosaur bone. Second, every single one is handcrafted by master jewelers over months, not stamped out on an assembly line. Third, these gems actually appreciate in value over time, so you're not just buying a phone, you're buying an investment that could be worth more in five years.
It's a completely different market from what most of us exist in. These aren't consumer products. They're bespoke commissions for people where a million-dollar phone is basically pocket change. The craftsmanship is genuinely impressive, but at that price point, the actual technology becomes almost irrelevant.