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πŸ’ Ring Size Converter

Pick the sizing system you know, or enter an inner diameter/circumference in mm, to see equivalents in every system.

Conversion result

⚠️ This chart is an approximation based on commonly published standard size tables. Actual fit varies by brand and manufacturer β€” for an important purchase, get measured at a jewelry store.

Related tools Length Circle
GUIDE

Learn more

01

Ring sizing systems around the world

Ring size notation differs by country. The US uses numbers with half steps (3, 3.5, …), the UK uses letters (F, G, …), the EU uses numbers close to the inner circumference in mm (e.g. 52, 54), and Japan and Korea use integer "go/ho" sizes. Japanese and Korean sizes effectively share the same system, so this converter shows them identically. All systems ultimately describe the ring's inner diameter or inner circumference, so knowing a mm measurement lets you convert to any notation.
02

How to measure your ring size

The most accurate method is measuring the inner diameter of a ring that already fits well (in mm, inside edge to inside edge). Without a ring, wrap a paper strip or string around the finger, mark where it overlaps, and measure the length β€” that gives the circumference. Finger size changes between morning and evening and across seasons, so measure several times, and if your knuckle is large, size for the knuckle.

Frequently asked questions

Are Korean and Japanese sizes the same?
Effectively yes β€” the Korean jewelry industry generally uses the Japanese size standard, so this converter displays them as the same value.
What if my measurement falls between two sizes?
In measurement mode, the converter shows the closest standard size. If you are exactly between two sizes, choosing the larger one is generally safer.
Why do sizes fit differently across brands?
Band width, thickness, and profile (e.g. comfort-fit interiors) change how the same nominal size feels, and manufacturers have tolerances. For expensive rings, get professionally measured in store.