Best for at-home measuring when a physical ring gauge is not available.

Printable Ring Size Chart

Use a printer-friendly ring size guide when you want to compare an existing ring or measure with a paper strip at home.

Measure and get a size suggestion

Use your own measurements to find the closest reference row, then confirm with the brand chart.

Ring inside diameter and finger circumference illustration

How to measure

Rings
  1. Measure the inside diameter of a ring that fits.
  2. Or wrap a paper strip around the finger and measure the overlap.
  3. Repeat when hands are at normal temperature.

Your measurements

Closest reference

Enter the measurements you have. A partial result is okay, but more fields give a better match.

Reference only. Product cut, ease, width, material, and brand rules can change the final size.

Measurement details

Ring size is best checked by millimeters. Use either a ring that fits or the finger circumference.

Existing ring diameter

Choose a ring that fits the intended finger and measure the inside diameter edge to edge.

Do not measure the outside edge; that includes the metal thickness.
Finger circumference

Wrap a strip of paper or soft tape around the finger, mark the meeting point, and measure the length flat.

The strip should pass over the knuckle without feeling loose.
Timing

Measure when hands are at a normal temperature. Cold fingers can read small; warm or swollen fingers can read large.

Repeat a few times and compare the average.
Wide bands

Wide rings and ring stacks feel tighter than narrow bands.

If you are between sizes, the larger size is usually safer.

Printable guide

Print a quick ring sizing guide

Print at 100 percent scale, then verify with a physical ruler before measuring.

Scale check

Line above should measure exactly 100 mm after printing.

US 414.9 mm
US 515.7 mm
US 616.5 mm
US 717.3 mm
US 818.1 mm
US 918.9 mm
US 1019.8 mm
US 1120.6 mm
US 1221.4 mm
US 1322.2 mm

Paper strip method

  1. Cut a narrow strip of paper.
  2. Wrap it around the finger and mark the overlap.
  3. Measure the strip length in millimeters.
  4. Compare the result with the ring circumference chart.

Print at 100 Percent Scale

A printable ring size chart only works if the browser and printer do not shrink or expand the page. Choose actual size or 100 percent scale in the print dialog. After printing, verify the ruler or scale check on the page with a physical ruler before using any circle or strip measurement.

Measure an Existing Ring

Place a ring that fits well over the printed circles and look for the circle that matches the inside edge. The printed line should sit just inside the ring opening. If the line is hidden by the ring or visible with a large gap, try the neighboring size and compare against the diameter chart.

Use the Paper Strip Carefully

When using a paper strip, wrap it around the finger where the ring will sit and mark the overlap without pulling too tightly. Measure the strip length in millimeters and compare it to the circumference table. Repeat the process more than once, because a small paper angle can change the result.

Printable Chart Limitations

Printer settings, paper thickness, and finger changes can reduce accuracy. Printable tools are useful for narrowing options, but a jeweler's gauge is still the best choice for expensive rings or final resizing. If the purchase is important, confirm the seller's exchange policy before ordering.

Printable Ring Sizer Accuracy Checks

A printable chart is only useful if the browser and printer keep the page at actual size. Before measuring, print at 100 percent scale, disable fit-to-page, and check the printed ruler with a physical ruler. If the calibration line is off, the entire chart is off. This page should be used as a home reference for narrowing a size, not as a replacement for a jeweler's mandrel when the purchase is expensive.

What a Strong Printable Ring Guide Should Include

The best printable ring guides include at least two methods: matching an existing ring to a printed circle and measuring finger circumference with a strip. They should also explain the difference between inner and outer diameter, warn about wide bands, and show the same sizes in common regional systems. A simple image of circles is not enough because many sizing mistakes come from print scale, paper tension, or measuring the wrong edge.

FAQ

How should I print a ring size chart?

Print at actual size or 100 percent scale, then verify the printed ruler with a physical ruler.

Can I use a printable chart on my phone?

A phone screen can help compare information, but printed measuring guides need verified physical scale.

Why does my printable result differ from a jeweler?

Printer scaling, paper tension, and finger changes can all affect home measurements.

Is a printable ring size chart enough for an engagement ring?

Use it for planning, then confirm with a jeweler or seller before a high-value purchase.