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Ring Sizes Explained โ€“ Complete Guide to Ring Sizing 2026

Ring Sizes Explained

Everything you need to know about ring sizing in 2026 โ€” how every sizing system works, what UK letters, US numbers and EU sizes mean, how to measure your finger, how to convert between systems, half sizes, comfort fit and expert tips for the perfect fit.

๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK System Explained ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ US System Explained ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ช EU System Explained ๐Ÿ“ Diameter & Circumference ๐ŸŒ All Country Systems ๐Ÿ“… Updated 2026
๐Ÿ‘๏ธ Ring Sizing โ€” The Complete Visual Overview

Ring Size Anatomy โ€” What Every Measurement Means

Every ring sizing system is based on just two physical measurements: inner diameter (d) and inner circumference (C). Everything else is a derived number, letter or code.

Ring Anatomy & Measurements d = inner diameter C = ฯ€ ร— d (inner circumference) Band width EU size = C in mm exactly ISO 8653:2016 international standard The 3 Main Sizing Systems Aโ€“Z+6 ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK / Australia / Ireland / S.Africa Alphabetical letters. A = smallest (37mm circ) Half-sizes available (e.g. Nยฝ). Most common UK. 1โ€“15 ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ US / Canada Numerical, quarter increments. Size 1 (smallest) to size 15. Most common women's: 6โ€“7. 37โ€“76 ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ช EU / Germany / Russia / Netherlands Number = inner circumference in mm. Simplest. EU 50 = 50mm circumference. No conversion needed. How Ring Sizes Scale Up H 14.7mm M 16.7mm โ™€avg T 19.8mm โ™‚avg +5 UK sizes +2.0mm diam +7 UK sizes +3.1mm diam Size Increment Rules โœฆ 1 full UK size โ‰ˆ 1.2โ€“1.6 mm diameter โœฆ 1 full UK size โ‰ˆ 3.8โ€“5.0 mm circumference โœฆ Half size adds ~0.6โ€“0.8 mm diameter โœฆ 1 US size โ‰ˆ 0.4 mm diameter (ยผ increments) โœฆ EU sizes differ by 1 mm circumference each
Aโ€“Z+6
๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK Ring Size
Range (Letters)
1โ€“15
๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ US Ring Size
Range (Numbers)
37โ€“76
๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ช EU Ring Size
Range (mm Circ.)
6+
๐ŸŒ Major Country
Size Systems
โ„น๏ธ

Ring Sizes โ€” The Essential Overview

Ring sizes are standardised codes โ€” letters, numbers or millimetre values โ€” that represent the inner diameter or circumference of a ring. Every ring in the world fits exactly one physical size regardless of what code that country uses to describe it. The UK uses alphabetical letters (Aโ€“Z+6), the US uses decimal numbers (1โ€“15), and the EU/ISO system uses the inner circumference in mm directly (37โ€“76). Despite different codes, they all describe the same physical ring measurements. This guide explains exactly how each system works, how to convert between them and how to measure your own finger accurately at home.

๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง The UK Ring Sizing System โ€” Explained

The UK ring sizing system uses alphabetical letters from A to Z, then Z+1, Z+2, Z+3, Z+4, Z+5 and Z+6 for the largest sizes. It is also used in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa and some other Commonwealth countries. Half sizes are available (e.g. Bยฝ, Kยฝ, Nยฝ) and are common across most UK jewellers and high street chains.

A 37.5mm circ. F K 49.9mm โ™€ avg N T 62.2mm โ™‚ avg W Z 69.7mm Z+3 Z+6 76.0mm circ. Extra Small Women's Men's Extra Large

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Facts About the UK Ring Size System

  • UK ring sizes go from A (smallest, 37.5 mm circumference) to Z+6 (largest, 76.0 mm circumference)
  • Each full letter step increases the inner circumference by approximately 3.8โ€“5.0 mm
  • Half sizes (e.g. Gยฝ, Nยฝ) are available and differ by approximately 1.9โ€“2.5 mm in circumference
  • The most common women's UK size is Kโ€“N (49.9โ€“53.8 mm circumference, 15.9โ€“17.1 mm diameter)
  • The most common men's UK size is Rโ€“W (59.1โ€“65.9 mm circumference, 18.8โ€“21.0 mm diameter)
  • UK sizing is defined by BS EN 28653:1993 (British Standard, equivalent to ISO 8653)
  • Used by all major UK jewellers: Hatton Garden, H.Samuel, Ernest Jones, Pandora UK, Tiffany & Co. UK
๐ŸŒ All Ring Sizing Systems โ€” Explained & Compared

๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK / Australia / Ireland

A โ†’ Z+6

Alphabetical letters. Based on circumference via BS EN 28653. Half sizes common. The standard for all UK jewellers.

Circ: 37.5โ€“76.0 mm ยท Diam: 11.9โ€“24.2 mm

๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ US / Canada

1 โ†’ 15

Decimal numbers with quarter-size increments (e.g. 5.25, 6.75). No simple formula from mm โ€” use a chart. Women's avg: US 6โ€“7. Men's avg: US 10.

Circ: ~37โ€“76 mm ยท Most common: 5โ€“11

๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ช EU / Germany / Russia

37 โ†’ 76

The most logical system โ€” the number IS the circumference in mm. EU 50 = 50 mm inner circumference. ISO 8653:2016 international standard. No conversion required.

Number = circumference in mm directly

๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท French / Swiss / Italian / Spanish

1 โ†’ 36

Number = EU size minus 40. French 10 = EU 50 = 50 mm circumference. Also used in Switzerland (CH), Italy (IT) and Spain (ES) โ€” identical numbers across all four countries.

French = EU โˆ’ 40 ยท e.g. French 12 = EU 52

๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต Japan / China / South Korea

1 โ†’ 33

JIS S 4700:2022. Numbers 1โ€“33. Women's avg: Japan 9โ€“11. Men's avg: Japan 20โ€“22. China uses the same JIS-equivalent numbers. South Korea also uses this system.

JIS S 4700:2022 ยท Same as Chinese/Korean sizes

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ India / Asia (BIS)

1 โ†’ 30

BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards) numbering. Similar to Japanese numbering but slightly different increments. Common in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka for local jewellery.

BIS standard ยท Numbers 1โ€“30
๐ŸŒ Country / Region System Type Sizing Code Based On Women's Avg Men's Avg Standard
๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK ยท Australia ยท NZ ยท S.Africa ยท Ireland Alphabetical letters A โ€“ Z+6 Circumference (mm) Kโ€“M Sโ€“U BS EN 28653:1993
๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ USA ยท Canada Decimal numbers 1 โ€“ 15 Circumference (mm) 6โ€“7 10โ€“11 ASTM / No single std.
๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ช EU ยท Germany ยท Netherlands ยท Scandinavia Whole numbers 37 โ€“ 76 Circumference in mm (direct) 50โ€“52 62โ€“64 ISO 8653:2016
๐Ÿ‡ท๐Ÿ‡บ Russia ยท CIS Countries Whole numbers 15โ€“24 Diameter in mm 16โ€“17 19โ€“20 GOST 18288-88
๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท France ยท ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ Switzerland ยท ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡น Italy ยท ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ธ Spain Numbers (EUโˆ’40) 1 โ€“ 36 Circumference (mm) โˆ’ 40 10โ€“12 22โ€“24 ISO 8653 derivative
๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต Japan ยท ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ China ยท ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ท South Korea Whole numbers 1 โ€“ 33 Circumference-based 9โ€“11 20โ€“22 JIS S 4700:2022
๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ India ยท Pakistan ยท Bangladesh Whole numbers 1 โ€“ 30 Circumference-based 9โ€“12 19โ€“23 BIS IS 4065
๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ท Brazil Numbers (like EU) 10 โ€“ 32 Diameter ร— 10 (approx.) 15โ€“17 20โ€“22 ABNT NBR 11785
๐Ÿ”ฌ How Ring Sizes Actually Work โ€” The Physics
1

Every ring size is defined by one physical measurement

All ring sizing systems globally are built on a single physical measurement: the inner circumference (or equivalently, the inner diameter โ€” the two are linked by C = ฯ€ ร— d). The EU and ISO standard uses inner circumference in mm directly as the size number. The UK, US, French and Japanese systems simply map these same mm values to alternative codes (letters, different number scales). A ring labelled UK Size N, US Size 7, EU 54, French 14 and Japan 13 is physically identical โ€” it has an inner circumference of approximately 53.8 mm and an inner diameter of approximately 17.1 mm.

2

What "half sizes" mean

A half size (UK: Gยฝ, Lยฝ, Pยฝ; US: 6.5, 7.25) represents a ring whose circumference sits midway between two full sizes. In the UK system, a half size increases the inner diameter by approximately 0.6โ€“0.8 mm and the inner circumference by approximately 1.9โ€“2.5 mm. Half sizes matter most when your measurement falls between two sizes โ€” choosing a half size over rounding to the nearest full size gives a more precise, comfortable fit. Not all jewellers stock every half size โ€” check availability before ordering.

3

What "comfort fit" means for ring sizes

A comfort-fit ring has a rounded, dome-shaped inner profile rather than a flat one. Because the rounded interior makes initial contact with a smaller surface, a comfort-fit ring of the same nominal size will feel slightly larger than a standard flat-fit ring. When ordering a comfort-fit wedding band, some jewellers recommend sizing up by half a UK size (0.3โ€“0.4 mm diameter) to account for this. Always ask the jeweller whether the ring is comfort-fit or standard before confirming your size.

4

Why ring size and band width interact

Wider bands feel tighter than narrower bands at the same nominal size because they cover more of the finger and compress a larger area of skin. As a general rule: if you are ordering a band wider than 6 mm, consider going up half a UK size from your measured size. For bands wider than 10 mm, go up a full UK size. This is especially relevant for men's wedding rings, which are commonly 6โ€“8 mm wide, and wide-band eternity rings. Narrow bands (2โ€“3 mm) and solitaire engagement rings need no size adjustment.

๐Ÿ“ How to Find Your Ring Size โ€” All Methods

There are four reliable methods for finding your ring size at home, each with different tools and accuracy levels. For the most important rings โ€” engagement rings and wedding bands โ€” always use at least two methods to cross-check.

Method Tools Needed Accuracy Best For Notes
๐Ÿ—’๏ธ Paper Strip (Circumference) Paper, pen, mm ruler ยฑ1 mm / ยฝ size Measuring finger directly Most accessible home method. Measure 3ร— and average.
๐Ÿ“ Digital Calipers (Diameter) Digital calipers (ยฃ8โ€“15) ยฑ0.1 mm Existing ring or finger oval Most accurate home method. Measures to 0.1mm.
๐Ÿ”ง Ring Mandrel / Gauge Ring sizer stick or gauge Exact size Confirming a ring's size Available at jewellers. Best professional method.
๐Ÿ“ Ruler Tracing Existing ring, paper, ruler ยฑ0.5 mm Matching an existing ring Trace inside of ring on paper, measure traced diameter.
๐Ÿ’ป Printable Sizer Printer, scissors ยฑ1โ€“2 sizes Quick indication only Depends heavily on printer calibration โ€” always verify.
๐Ÿช Jeweller's Ring Gauge Visit a jeweller (free) Exact โ€” best method All situations especially engagement/wedding Most UK jewellers measure for free. Takes 2 minutes.

โฐ Best Time of Day to Measure Your Ring Size

Finger size fluctuates by up to half a UK ring size throughout the day. For the most accurate result:

  • Measure in the afternoon or evening โ€” fingers are at their largest after daily activity
  • Avoid measuring in cold conditions โ€” cold causes fingers to shrink (ring will be too loose)
  • Avoid measuring after exercise or hot weather โ€” swelling causes rings to feel too tight
  • Measure at least 3 times (morning, afternoon, evening) and use the largest reading
  • For wedding rings worn all day, aim for a size that fits well in warm conditions
๐Ÿ“œ History of Ring Sizing Standards

Pre-1900s โ€” No Universal Standard

Ring sizing was entirely at the discretion of individual jewellers and goldsmiths. Sizes were measured by eye, using custom wooden or metal sticks (mandrels) with no agreed scale. A "Size 5" ring from one jeweller had no defined relationship to a "Size 5" from another. Customers had to visit their own jeweller for adjustments.

Early 1900s โ€” UK and US Systems Emerge

The UK alphabetical system (Aโ€“Z) and the US numerical system (1โ€“13) were gradually adopted by the jewellery trades in their respective countries. These were industry conventions, not formal standards โ€” different manufacturers still produced slightly different gauges. The UK system became dominant across Commonwealth countries through this period.

1981 โ€” ISO First Ring Sizing Standard (ISO 8653:1986)

The International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) published the first international ring sizing standard, defining sizes by inner circumference in millimetres. This became the EU standard and was adopted by Germany, Russia (GOST) and many other countries. The logic of making the size number equal the circumference in mm made this the most transparent system ever devised.

1993 โ€” UK Formally Adopts BS EN 28653

The British Standards Institution adopted BS EN 28653:1993, aligning the UK system with the European standard. This standard defines the relationship between UK letter sizes and the ISO circumference measurements, giving UK ring sizes their precise modern definitions. The UK letter system was preserved for consumer familiarity but now has exact ISO/mm equivalents.

2016 โ€” ISO 8653:2016 (Current Standard)

The current version of the international ring sizing standard was published. ISO 8653:2016 defines inner circumference as the primary ring size measurement, covers sizes from 37 mm to 76 mm, and specifies measurement tolerances. It is the standard referenced by EU, German, Russian and international jewellery manufacturers worldwide today.

2022 โ€” JIS S 4700:2022 (Japan Updated)

Japan updated its ring sizing standard (JIS S 4700:2022), maintaining its numerical 1โ€“33 system and aligning more closely with ISO tolerances. China and South Korea continue to use equivalent numerical systems. The global jewellery industry now operates with all major systems mapped to ISO 8653 as the common reference point, making international ring size conversion reliable and consistent.

๐Ÿ” Ring Size Myths vs. Facts

โŒ MYTH: All fingers on both hands are the same size

False โ€” the dominant hand (usually the right hand for right-handed people) tends to have slightly larger fingers due to more use and muscle development. The ring finger on the dominant hand can be half to one full UK ring size larger than the same finger on the non-dominant hand. Always measure the specific finger you intend to wear the ring on.

โœ… FACT: Fingers change size throughout the day

Fingers swell in heat and during physical activity, and shrink in cold. A finger can vary by 0.3โ€“0.8 mm in circumference (up to half a UK size) between a cold morning and a warm afternoon. For rings worn all day, always measure in warm conditions and after being on your feet for a few hours for the most representative size.

โŒ MYTH: Ring size and shoe size are related

No reliable correlation exists between shoe size and ring size. Height, weight and general body size have a loose statistical correlation with ring size, but individual variation is so large that no formula based on body measurements produces a reliable ring size. The only accurate way to determine ring size is direct measurement of the finger.

โœ… FACT: Pregnancy and weight changes affect ring size

Significant weight gain or loss (10+ kg), pregnancy, and some medical conditions (such as rheumatoid arthritis or lymphoedema) permanently or temporarily change ring size. Fingers can increase by 1โ€“3 full UK sizes during pregnancy due to fluid retention. Rings should be removed or resized during pregnancy to prevent discomfort and potential cutting off of circulation.

โŒ MYTH: You can only have a ring resized once

False โ€” most metal rings (gold, silver, platinum) can be resized multiple times by a skilled jeweller. Resizing typically involves cutting the band and adding or removing metal. Rings can usually be sized up or down by 2โ€“3 UK sizes without structural issues. Rings with channel-set stones around the entire band (full eternity rings) are harder to resize and may require stone replacement.

โœ… FACT: The EU size equals circumference in mm exactly

Under ISO 8653:2016, the EU ring size number is the inner circumference of the ring in millimetres with no conversion needed. EU Size 54 = 54 mm inner circumference. This is why EU sizing is the most internationally transparent system โ€” you can verify any ring's size with nothing more than a piece of string and a millimetre ruler.

๐Ÿ’ก Expert Ring Sizing Tips
  • ๐Ÿ’ When to size up vs. size down: If you are between two ring sizes, always go up (larger size). A ring that is half a size too large is easy to manage with a ring adjuster clip (available for ยฃ2โ€“5 online or from most jewellers). A ring that is even slightly too small becomes impossible to remove in hot weather, restricts circulation, and requires expensive professional resizing. The only exception is very wide bands, where a snug fit may be preferred to prevent spinning.
  • ๐ŸŒก๏ธ The knuckle rule โ€” always check it: Your ring must pass over your knuckle as well as sit at the base of your finger. Measure your knuckle circumference and your finger base circumference separately. If your knuckle is more than 2โ€“3 mm larger in circumference (about half a UK size), you have a significant knuckle-to-base size difference. In this case, size to fit the knuckle and use a ring adjuster to secure it at the base. Hinge-opening rings are also available for extreme knuckle differences.
  • ๐Ÿ›’ Buying a surprise ring for a partner โ€” what size to choose: If UK women's average is Kโ€“M, the single safest default surprise size is UK M (US 6.5, EU 52). For men, the safest default is UK T (US 10, EU 62). Most UK jewellers will resize a ring purchased with them as a courtesy (check their policy). Alternatively, ask friends or family to check an existing ring the person already wears, or secretly borrow it for 5 minutes to measure the inner diameter.
  • ๐Ÿ” How to read an existing ring's size stamp: Many rings have the metal purity hallmark (e.g. 925, 750, 585) stamped on the inside. Some also have the ring size stamped alongside. UK sizes are stamped as a letter (e.g. N, T). EU sizes are stamped as a number (e.g. 52, 62). US sizes are stamped as a number with decimal (e.g. 6, 6.5). If you see a number between 37 and 76 inside your ring, it is almost certainly an EU size. A number between 5 and 15 with a possible decimal is likely a US size.
  • ๐Ÿ“ฆ Ordering internationally โ€” always convert before purchasing: When ordering rings from websites based in the US, Japan, China or mainland Europe, never assume the size codes match UK sizes. A "Size 7" on a US website and a "Size 7" on a French website are completely different rings (US 7 โ‰ˆ UK Nยฝ โ‰ˆ EU 54; French 7 โ‰ˆ EU 47 โ‰ˆ UK Hยฝ). Always convert your UK size to the seller's system using a size chart before confirming your order, or contact the seller directly with your measurement in mm.
โ“ Ring Sizes Explained โ€” FAQs
What does a ring size actually mean โ€” is it diameter or circumference?โ–ผ
Ring sizes refer to the inner measurement of a ring โ€” either its inner circumference or inner diameter (both describe the same physical property via C = ฯ€ ร— d). The UK system uses letters derived from the inner circumference in mm. The EU system uses the inner circumference in mm directly as the size number. The US system uses numbers derived from circumference. The Russian system uses the inner diameter in mm. All are interchangeable once you know the mm values โ€” that is why conversion charts work reliably across all systems.
Why does the UK use letters while the US uses numbers?โ–ผ
The choice of letters vs. numbers is purely historical convention โ€” there is no technical advantage to either. The UK jewellery trade settled on an alphabetical system (A, B, C...) in the early 20th century as an intuitive "smallest to largest" scale. The US trade independently developed a numerical system starting at size 1. Both were informal trade standards before the ISO system introduced a mathematically logical circumference-in-mm approach in 1986. All three systems remain in use today because of established trade practice and consumer familiarity.
What is the difference between UK ring size K and UK ring size M?โ–ผ
UK Size K has an inner circumference of 49.9 mm and an inner diameter of 15.9 mm. UK Size M has an inner circumference of 52.5 mm and an inner diameter of 16.7 mm. The difference is 2.6 mm in circumference and 0.8 mm in diameter โ€” equivalent to 2 full UK letter sizes, or approximately 1 US size increment. In practical terms, a ring that comfortably fits a UK M will feel distinctly loose on a UK K finger, and a UK K ring will not sit comfortably on a UK M finger.
Can I convert my UK ring size to a US ring size easily?โ–ผ
There is no simple direct formula โ€” you need a conversion chart or calculator. However, a rough rule of thumb is that UK letter number (A=1, B=2...) minus 1, divided by 2, gives the approximate US size. For example, UK N = 14th letter โ†’ (14โˆ’1)/2 = US 6.5. This approximation works reasonably well in the mid-range but becomes less accurate at the extremes. For accurate conversions, use the ring size calculator or chart on this site โ€” enter your UK size to instantly see the US, EU, French and Japanese equivalents.
What ring size should I start with for a child?โ–ผ
Children's ring sizes vary widely by age and should always be measured rather than estimated. As a rough UK reference: age 3โ€“5 โ‰ˆ UK Dโ€“F (13.2โ€“13.9 mm diameter), age 6โ€“9 โ‰ˆ UK Fโ€“I (13.9โ€“15.1 mm), age 10โ€“13 โ‰ˆ UK Hโ€“K (14.7โ€“15.9 mm). Girls' fingers tend to reach adult size by age 16โ€“18; boys' by 18โ€“21. Child-sized rings are usually sold in full sizes only. Because children's fingers grow quickly, many parents prefer adjustable rings or buy one size up to allow a year or two of wear.
Do ring sizes differ between the left and right hand?โ–ผ
Yes โ€” frequently. The dominant hand (right hand for most people) tends to be half to one full UK size larger on the same finger due to greater use, muscle and tendon development. Additionally, the ring finger and middle finger on each hand can differ in size by 1โ€“3 UK sizes โ€” they are not interchangeable without resizing. Always measure the specific finger on the specific hand that will wear the ring. A ring fitted for the right ring finger will often need to be resized if moved to the left ring finger.