Jewelcrafting in TBC Classic is not a get-rich-once profession — it is a weekly subscription income. Every raid reset, every new dungeon drop and every respec sends players back to the auction house for the same handful of cuts.

The evergreen cuts

  • Runed Living Ruby — the caster gem. Warlocks and mages buy these in stacks; it is routinely the highest-volume cut on any realm.
  • Bright Living Ruby — attack power for every melee and hunter re-gemming into new gear.
  • Solid Star of Elune — stamina for tanks, and tanks re-gem constantly.
  • Glowing Nightseye — the hybrid caster/PvP gem with quietly persistent demand.

Where the margin actually comes from

The trick is not cutting — anyone can cut. It is sourcing raw gems below market: prospecting Adamantite when ore dips on weekends, sniping raw Living Rubies listed under the cut price, and converting your daily Brilliant Glass style cooldowns into free inventory. A jewelcrafter who prospects a few stacks of ore each evening usually clears 50-150g a day in cut margins with five minutes of posting.

Timing your listings

Post heavy on raid nights — Tuesday through Thursday on most servers — when a fresh drop makes someone need two gems immediately and price sensitivity disappears. Undercut by a few silver, never by gold; the market re-floors itself within hours.

The bigger picture

JC gold is reliable but grindy: prospecting sessions, bag management, cancel-scans. If your goal is simply an epic mount or consumable budget rather than a market empire, weigh the hours honestly — steady cut margins are great, but they are still hours. Whether you craft your stack or buy it outright, the point is the same: never turn up to a raid under-gemmed.