Evil Eye Bracelet India — Real Glass Beads, Lab-Tested
Evil Eye Bracelet India
An evil eye bracelet — known across India as a nazar bracelet — is a small piece of jewellery that has been worn for over 3,000 years across India, the Levant, the Mediterranean and Central Asia. The blue glass eye bead is meant to absorb the energy of an envious or admiring glance before it reaches the wearer. At Soultheory we source our evil eye glass beads from the traditional Firozabad glassmaking cluster and pair them with semi-precious stones for layered protection.
What makes our evil eye bracelets authentic
- Real hand-blown glass beads from Firozabad — not plastic imitations
- Concentric rings inside the glass, not printed on the surface
- Lab-tested gemstone pairings (black tourmaline, hematite, rose quartz, amethyst)
- Soft elastic threading safe for daily wear
- Optional Pran Pratishta — Vedic energization ceremony before shipping
Featured products
Our flagship piece in this category: Black Tourmaline Anklet with Evil Eye Nazar Charm — pairs the strongest grounding stone (black tourmaline) with the traditional nazar charm.
Read our complete guide
For authentication checks (real vs plastic), price ranges in India for 2026, who should wear it, and how to wear it traditionally — read our Evil Eye Bracelet India: Buying Guide & Benefits.
Frequently asked
Is an evil eye bracelet okay across religions in India?
Yes. The evil eye tradition predates and crosses religion. Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Jain, and Sikh families across India wear or gift evil eye charms without conflict.
What is the price of a real evil eye bracelet in India in 2026?
Real hand-blown glass bead bracelets retail ₹150–₹500 for a simple elastic-thread design and ₹600–₹2,000 for combinations with grounding stones (hematite, black onyx) or emotional stones (rose quartz, amethyst).
Can children wear evil eye bracelets?
Yes — particularly common as a gift for newborns and toddlers in Indian tradition. Use soft elastic anklet form (not metal) and supervise to prevent chewing.
Information shared here reflects traditional cultural practice. Individual experiences vary. Read our editorial process.
