The complete guide on how to check ring size accurately โ 5 methods ranked by accuracy, paper strip, string, tape measure, existing ring & ring sizer, accuracy factors, common mistakes & fixes, full UK chart AโZ+2 & free calculator
Checking ring size accurately means measuring finger circumference in mm using a reliable method, then matching to the correct UK letter size. As Maya Magal London, Blue Nile and Tiffany all confirm, the five most accurate at-home methods are: adjustable ring sizer tool (most accurate), existing ring + ruler, paper strip method, string or dental floss method, and soft tape measure. Accuracy depends on five key factors: correct material (non-stretchy), correct width (under 1 cm), time of day (evening), temperature (room temperature), and repeating measurements (three times and averaging). This guide covers all five accurate methods step by step, ranked by precision, plus a dedicated common mistakes and fixes section, full UK chart AโZ+2, and a free accuracy calculator.
All five methods measure finger circumference in mm and match it to a UK letter size. Accuracy improves significantly when you: use non-stretchy material, measure in the evening, repeat three times and average the results, and measure the correct finger on the correct hand. As Blue Nile confirms, measuring at the right time of day and using a non-stretchy medium are the two factors that most improve at-home ring size accuracy.
Adjustable plastic sizer tightened to snug on the finger. Reads UK letter directly. Used by professional jewellers. Under ยฃ2 online.
Measure inner diameter of a well-fitting ring in mm, multiply by ฯ. Best used with a digital calliper for the highest accuracy.
Cut thin paper strip, wrap at base, mark overlap, measure in mm. Repeat three times and average. Achieves ยฑ0.5 mm accuracy at home.
Non-stretchy dental floss wrapped around finger and measured in mm. Requires care to avoid stretching โ gives ยฑ1.0 mm accuracy.
Thin fabric sewing tape wrapped at base and read directly in mm. Fastest single-step method โ thin tape essential for accuracy.
As Blue Nile and Tiffany both confirm, fingers are at their largest in the evening after a day of activity and warmth. Measuring in the morning can produce a reading up to 2 mm smaller than the true size. An evening measurement ensures the ring will be comfortable throughout the entire day, not just first thing in the morning.
Stretchy materials compress under wrapping tension and produce a circumference reading smaller than the actual finger. As Dean Davidson confirms, paper does not stretch โ making it inherently more accurate than string for a single measurement. If using string, it must be non-stretchy dental floss or cotton thread, never elastic or wool.
A single wrapping produces error of up to ยฑ1.5 mm depending on tension. As Blue Nile and Dean Davidson both explicitly state, measuring at least three times and averaging reduces this to under ยฑ0.5 mm โ equivalent to the precision of a professional ring gauge. This is the single most impactful improvement to at-home accuracy.
As Vogue and Maya Magal London confirm, the dominant hand is typically ยฝโ1 UK size larger than the non-dominant hand. The ring finger and middle finger also differ in size. For maximum accuracy, always measure the exact finger on the exact hand where the ring will be worn โ not the nearest equivalent on the other hand.
A paper strip wider than 1 cm sits unevenly on the curved finger surface and produces a slightly inflated circumference reading โ typically 1โ2 mm larger than the actual size. For accurately checking ring size, the strip or string must be between 4โ6 mm wide. This matches the profile of a standard wedding or engagement ring band.
Cold causes fingers to contract (reducing circumference); heat and salty food cause temporary swelling (increasing circumference by up to 1 mm). For the most consistent, accurate ring size check, measure at room temperature with normal hydration โ not immediately after exercise, a hot bath, cold exposure, or a salty meal.
For the most accurate at-home ring size check, follow these three rules confirmed by Blue Nile, Tiffany and Maya Magal London: (1) Measure in the evening at room temperature. (2) Use non-stretchy paper or dental floss, under 1 cm wide. (3) Measure three times and take the average. Following all three rules gives a home measurement accurate to within ยฑ0.5 mm โ the same precision as most jewellery shop ring gauges.
Before cutting a single strip, confirm the conditions are right for an accurate measurement. Measure in the early evening after a normal day of activity. Be at comfortable room temperature โ not cold from being outside, not hot from a bath or exercise. As Blue Nile specifically states, this alone is the most important accuracy factor.
Use standard A4 printer paper or thin card. The width must be under 1 cm โ ideally 4โ6 mm. As Dean Davidson confirms, paper does not stretch, making it inherently more accurate than string for a single reading. Cut it cleanly with scissors โ a straight, even strip produces an even, consistent measurement.
Wrap the strip around the base of the specific finger and hand where the ring will be worn. Snug means comfortable โ it should not pinch or leave a mark, but should not rotate freely either. Also ensure it can pass over the knuckle without bunching.
While holding the strip in place, make a clean, fine mark exactly where the end first meets the rest of the paper. Use the finest pen tip available โ a blunt or wide mark can add 0.5โ1 mm of error to the reading.
Lay the strip flat on a ruler. Measure from the very beginning of the strip to the pen mark in millimetres (mm). Round to the nearest 0.5 mm. Record the number โ do not rely on memory.
As Blue Nile, Dean Davidson and Maya Magal London all confirm: repeat the full process twice more. Average all three mm readings. This single step reduces error from ยฑ1.5 mm to under ยฑ0.5 mm. If two readings are close and one is an outlier, discard the outlier and average the two closest readings.
Find your average in the Circ. (mm) column. The UK letter in that row is your accurate ring size. As Blue Nile and Tiffany both confirm: if your reading falls between two rows, always choose the larger UK size โ a ring slightly too large is far easier to manage than one too small.
The ring must fit the specific finger and hand where the new ring will be worn. As Blue Nile advises, a ring from a different finger or the opposite hand will give an inaccurate size. Choose a ring that fits comfortably โ not too tight, not loose โ at the base of the finger, not just the knuckle.
Place the ring flat and measure the inner diameter โ the distance from one inner edge to the directly opposite inner edge. For maximum accuracy, use a digital calliper (accurate to 0.01 mm). A mm ruler gives ยฑ0.5 mm accuracy. Measure across the centre of the band โ not at an edge where the metal may taper.
Circumference = Inner Diameter (mm) ร 3.1416. For example: 17.1 mm ร 3.1416 = 53.74 mm โ match to chart โ UK N. Or use the calculator below โ enter the diameter in the "Ring Inner Diameter (mm)" field.
Morning measurements โ especially in cold UK weather โ give a reading up to 2 mm smaller than the true size. The ring will feel tight by afternoon.
Elastic, wool or stretchy cord compresses under tension, giving a smaller reading than the actual finger circumference โ producing a ring that is too large.
A wide strip sits unevenly on the curved finger and reads 1โ2 mm larger than the actual circumference โ producing a ring one size too large.
A single measurement can be off by ยฑ1.5 mm depending on wrapping tension โ equivalent to one full UK ring size difference.
The dominant hand is typically ยฝโ1 UK size larger. Using the non-dominant hand to size a dominant-hand ring gives a result that is one size too small.
A ring sized only to the base cannot pass over the knuckle. Rings that cannot clear the knuckle are unwearable regardless of base fit.
Salt causes temporary water retention and swelling; exercise causes circulation-related expansion. Both give an inflated reading for a non-representative situation.
Selecting the smaller size when a reading falls between chart values produces a ring that is too tight โ which is uncomfortable and potentially unsafe to remove.
As confirmed by Blue Nile, Tiffany and Vogue, the most frequently made ring size checking error is measuring first thing in the morning in cold weather. UK winters cause fingers to be up to 2 mm smaller in circumference in the morning than in the evening โ equivalent to a full UK ring size (e.g. UK L vs UK N). Always measure in the early evening at a comfortable indoor temperature for the most accurate result. This one change eliminates the most common source of inaccurate ring size checks.
| UK Size | Circ. (mm) | Circ. (cm) | Diam. (mm) | Circ. (inches) | ๐บ๐ธ US Size | ๐ช๐บ EU Size | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 37.8 mm | 3.78 cm | 11.9 mm | 1.488โณ | โ | 37 | Children / XS |
| B | 39.1 mm | 3.91 cm | 12.3 mm | 1.539โณ | 1 | 38 | Children / XS |
| C | 40.4 mm | 4.04 cm | 12.7 mm | 1.590โณ | 1.5 | 40 | XS Women |
| D | 41.7 mm | 4.17 cm | 13.1 mm | 1.642โณ | 2 | 41 | Small Women |
| E | 42.9 mm | 4.29 cm | 13.5 mm | 1.689โณ | 2.5 | 42 | Small Women |
| F | 44.2 mm | 4.42 cm | 13.9 mm | 1.740โณ | 3 | 43 | Small Women |
| G | 45.5 mm | 4.55 cm | 14.3 mm | 1.791โณ | 3.5 | 45 | Women |
| H | 46.8 mm | 4.68 cm | 14.7 mm | 1.843โณ | 4 | 46 | Women |
| I | 48.0 mm | 4.80 cm | 15.1 mm | 1.890โณ | 4.5 | 47 | Women |
| J | 48.7 mm | 4.87 cm | 15.5 mm | 1.917โณ | 4.75 | 48 | Women |
| K | 50.0 mm | 5.00 cm | 15.9 mm | 1.969โณ | 5 | 49 | Women |
| L | 51.2 mm | 5.12 cm | 16.3 mm | 2.016โณ | 5.5 | 50 | Women |
| M | 52.5 mm | 5.25 cm | 16.7 mm | 2.067โณ | 6 | 51 | Women |
| N โญ | 53.8 mm | 5.38 cm | 17.1 mm | 2.118โณ | 6.5 | 52 | Women's Avg โญ |
| O โญ | 55.1 mm | 5.51 cm | 17.5 mm | 2.169โณ | 7 | 54 | Women Popular |
| P โญ | 56.3 mm | 5.63 cm | 17.9 mm | 2.217โณ | 7.5 | 55 | Women Popular |
| Q | 57.6 mm | 5.76 cm | 18.2 mm | 2.268โณ | 8 | 57 | Slim Men |
| R | 58.9 mm | 5.89 cm | 18.6 mm | 2.319โณ | 8.5 | 58 | Lean Men |
| S | 60.2 mm | 6.02 cm | 19.1 mm | 2.370โณ | 9 | 60 | Avg Slim Men |
| T โญ | 61.4 mm | 6.14 cm | 19.56 mm | 2.417โณ | 9.5 | 61 | Men's Avg โญ |
| U โญ | 62.7cm | 19.96 mm | 2.469โณ | 10 | 63 | Men Popular | |
| V โญ | 64.0 mm | 6.40 cm | 20.37 mm | 2.520โณ | 10.5 | 64 | Men Popular |
| W | 65.3 mm | 6.53 cm | 20.78 mm | 2.571โณ | 11 | 65 | Athletic Men |
| X | 66.6 mm | 6.66 cm | 21.18 mm | 2.622โณ | 11.5 | 67 | Broad Men |
| Y | 67.8 mm | 6.78 cm | 21.59 mm | 2.669โณ | 12 | 68 | Large Build |
| Z | 68.5 mm | 6.85 cm | 21.79 mm | 2.697โณ | 12.5 | 69 | XL Build |
| Z+1 | 69.7 mm | 6.97 cm | 22.20 mm | 2.744โณ | 13 | 70 | XL Custom |
| Z+2 | 72.3 mm | 7.23 cm | 23.01 mm | 2.846โณ | 13.5 | 72 | Custom |
For the highest possible ring size accuracy, visit any UK high-street jeweller for a free professional measurement. H.Samuel, Beaverbrooks, Goldsmiths and Ernest Jones all use calibrated metal ring gauges and mandrel sets that give a precise UK letter size in under two minutes at no cost. This is particularly important for tungsten, ceramic or titanium rings (which cannot be resized), fitted eternity bands, and engagement rings with side stones that cannot be adjusted later. A free professional check is always the most accurate option available in the UK.