Complete 2026 women's ring size guide — average ring size, full UK A–Z chart with MM and CM measurements, US, EU, French & Japanese conversions, women's size ranges, calculator and 6-step measurement guide.
The average UK women's ring size is UK L — inner diameter 16.31mm (1.631cm), inner circumference 51.2mm (5.12cm). The common women's range is UK H–P (14.88–17.93mm / 1.488–1.793cm diameter).
Below average. Common for slender fingers, younger women and petite frames. Widely stocked at most UK jewellers. US 2½–5 · EU 43–49.
Just below the UK average. Very common across UK women. Ideal for slim-to-average build. Most popular for stackable rings. US 5¼–5½ · EU 50–51.
The most common women's ring size range in the UK. UK L is cited as the single most popular size by Abelini, Fenton, Queensmith and Beaverbrooks. US 6–6½ · EU 51–53.
Above average but still very commonly stocked. Typical for average-to-fuller builds. Common for right-hand rings which often run slightly larger. US 7–7½ · EU 54–55.
Larger women's size, overlapping with smaller unisex sizing. Usually stocked at major jewellers. Consider measuring both hands — dominant hand fingers are often slightly larger. US 8–9 · EU 56–59.
Extended women's sizing. May require special order or sizing up from standard men's ranges. Many UK jewellers offer bespoke resizing for these sizes. US 9½+ · EU 60+.
Measure in the afternoon — ideally between 2pm and 5pm. Fingers are at their natural size. Avoid measuring first thing in the morning (fingers are slimmer) or after exercise or hot weather (fingers swell).
Measure at room temperature (18–22°C). Cold hands can read up to 1–2 UK sizes smaller. If your hands feel cold, warm them gently before measuring for a reliable result.
Cut a strip roughly 6mm wide and 10–12cm long from standard printer paper. Make sure the edges are clean and straight. Avoid thick card — it adds false bulk to your measurement.
Wrap the strip snugly around the base of your ring finger on the hand you will wear the ring. Mark the overlap point with a fine pen. Check the strip is flat with no twisting.
Lay the strip flat against a ruler. Read the length in millimetres (mm) from the start to your mark — this is your inner circumference. Divide by 10 for centimetres. Enter into the calculator above.
Repeat the measurement 3 times and note all readings. Use the largest value to find your ring size. A ring that fits when fingers are at their largest will always be comfortable — never too tight.
💡 Pro tip for engagement & wedding rings: If ordering a surprise ring, a family member can often sneak an existing well-fitting ring and trace around the inside on paper. Measure the inner diameter across the widest point with a ruler in mm, then look it up in the Diameter MM column in the chart below.
| 🇬🇧 UK | 📐 Diam. MM | 📐 Diam. CM | 📐 Diam. Inch | ⭕ Circ. MM | ⭕ Circ. CM | ⭕ Circ. Inch | 🇺🇸 US | 🇩🇪 EU | 🇫🇷 French | 🇯🇵 Japan | Category |
|---|
Your dominant hand fingers are typically 0.5–1 UK size larger than the other hand. Always measure the specific finger and hand you intend to wear the ring on — especially important for engagement and wedding rings worn on the left hand.
Women's fingers can fluctuate by up to 1–2 UK sizes between cold mornings and warm afternoons, or during hormonal changes. Measure in the afternoon at room temperature (18–22°C) for the most accurate everyday fit.
Wide wedding bands (4mm+) sit tighter on the finger than narrow bands. If your ring has a wide band, order half a UK size larger than your measured size. Thin bands (2mm) can be ordered at your exact measured size.
Ring size can change significantly during pregnancy — often up to 2–3 UK sizes larger by the third trimester. If you are pregnant, wait until after pregnancy to order a permanent ring, or order a resizable band during pregnancy.
If your knuckle is noticeably wider than the base of your finger, measure both the knuckle circumference and the base. Choose a size that passes comfortably over the knuckle — a ring that doesn't fit over the knuckle is unwearable even if the base diameter is correct.
If your measurement falls between two UK sizes, always choose the larger size. Adjacent UK half-sizes are only ~0.2mm apart in diameter — slightly loose is always more comfortable and safer than a ring that gets stuck. A jeweller can resize too-large rings more easily than too-small ones.