The easiest at-home method โ cut a strip of paper, wrap, mark, and measure in under 2 minutes. Complete step-by-step guide with tips, common mistakes, full size chart, and a free calculator
Any non-stretch paper โ printer paper, notebook paper, or card
To cut the strip to the right width and length
To mark the exact overlap point on the paper strip
Must show millimetre markings โ not inches only
Takes 30 seconds ยท Uses scissors
Cut a thin strip of paper approximately 1 cm (about ยผ inch) wide and at least 10โ12 cm long. The strip needs to be long enough to wrap all the way around your finger with some overlap left over for marking.
Use regular printer paper, notebook paper, or any non-stretch paper you have available. The strip must be non-stretch โ this is the most important material requirement. Avoid paper towel, tissue, or any soft material that can stretch or compress under tension.
Measure the exact finger the ring will be worn on
Before wrapping, confirm which hand and which finger the ring will be worn on. This matters because your dominant hand is typically ยฝ size larger than your non-dominant hand. Your ring finger, middle finger, and index finger are all different sizes.
For most rings, this is the ring finger (fourth finger) of the left or right hand. Wedding bands are usually worn on the left ring finger in Western countries, and on the right ring finger in many European and Asian countries. Always measure the specific finger the ring will sit on.
Most important step โ snug but not tight
Wrap the paper strip snugly around the base of the finger (closest to the hand, not the fingertip). Hold it flat against the skin without pulling it tight โ the paper should sit against the finger comfortably, the same way a well-fitted ring would feel.
Before marking, make sure the strip can also pass comfortably over your knuckle. If your knuckle is wider than your finger base, the ring must be able to slide past it. In this case, wrap the paper loosely around the knuckle too and check both measurements โ the ring size must be large enough to pass the knuckle.
Use a pen or pencil โ mark clearly
With the paper wrapped snugly around your finger, use a pen or pencil to mark the exact point where the end of the strip overlaps with the rest of the paper. Make a clear, thin vertical line directly on the strip at the overlap point.
The mark must be placed while the paper is still wrapped around your finger โ do not remove the paper first and try to estimate. A precise, clear mark here is what determines the accuracy of your final measurement. A blurry or wide pen mark can introduce 1โ2 mm of error.
From the paper's start edge to your pen mark
Remove the paper strip carefully and lay it flat on a table. Use your ruler to measure from the very start (left edge) of the strip to your pen mark in millimetres (mm). This measurement is your finger circumference.
For most women this reading will be between 47 mm and 57 mm. For most men it will be between 55 mm and 67 mm. If your reading falls outside these ranges, double-check the wrap was not too tight or too loose before re-measuring.
Use the calculator or chart below
Enter your circumference measurement (in mm) into the ring size calculator below โ it will instantly convert your measurement to US, UK, EU, India, and Japan ring sizes. Alternatively, find your measurement in the circumference column of the size chart on this page.
If your measurement falls exactly between two sizes on the chart, always choose the larger size. A ring that is one quarter size too large is far more comfortable than one that is too small โ and is easier to adjust with a ring sizing insert if needed.
Most important accuracy tip
Fingers change size throughout the day โ they shrink in cold weather, swell in heat, and are at their smallest first thing in the morning. For the most accurate result, measure three times: once in the morning, once in the afternoon, and once in the evening.
Add all three measurements together and divide by 3 to get your average circumference. Use this average in the calculator or chart. Mid-afternoon is the ideal single measurement time if you can only measure once โ fingers are at a stable, neutral size at this time of day.
Enter the length you measured on the paper strip (circumference in mm) or the diameter of an existing ring
| ๐บ๐ธ US Size | ๐ฌ๐ง UK / AU | ๐ช๐บ EU | ๐ฎ๐ณ India | ๐ฏ๐ต Japan | Diameter (mm) | ๐ Paper Strip (mm) | Who Wears It |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | H | 46.8 | 7 | 7 | 14.9 mm | 46.8 mm | ๐ฉ Small Women |
| 4ยฝ | I | 48.0 | 8 | 8 | 15.3 mm | 48.0 mm | ๐ฉ Women |
| 5 | Jยฝ | 49.3 | 9 | 9 | 15.7 mm | 49.3 mm | ๐ฉ Women |
| 5ยฝ | Kยฝ | 50.6 | 10 | 10 | 16.1 mm | 50.6 mm | ๐ฉ Women |
| 6 โญ | Lยฝ | 51.9 | 12 | 12 | 16.5 mm | 51.9 mm | โญ Avg Women |
| 6ยฝ | Mยฝ | 53.1 | 13 | 13 | 16.9 mm | 53.1 mm | ๐ฉ Women |
| 7 | Nยฝ | 54.4 | 14 | 14 | 17.3 mm | 54.4 mm | ๐ซ Him & Her |
| 7ยฝ | Oยฝ | 55.7 | 15 | 14 | 17.7 mm | 55.7 mm | ๐ซ Him & Her |
| 8 | Pยฝ | 57.0 | 16 | 15 | 18.1 mm | 57.0 mm | ๐จ Men |
| 8ยฝ | Qยฝ | 58.3 | 17 | 16 | 18.5 mm | 58.3 mm | ๐จ Men |
| 9 โญ | Rยฝ | 59.5 | 18 | 17 | 18.9 mm | 59.5 mm | โญ Avg Men |
| 9ยฝ | Sยฝ | 60.8 | 20 | 18 | 19.2 mm | 60.8 mm | ๐จ Men |
| 10 โญ | Tยฝ | 62.1 | 21 | 20 | 19.8 mm | 62.1 mm | โญ Common Men |
| 10ยฝ | Uยฝ | 63.4 | 23 | 21 | 20.2 mm | 63.4 mm | ๐จ Men |
| 11 | Vยฝ | 64.6 | 24 | 22 | 20.6 mm | 64.6 mm | ๐จ Large Men |
| 12 | Xยฝ | 66.6 | 26 | 24 | 21.2 mm | 66.6 mm | ๐จ XL Men |
Fingers shrink noticeably in cold temperatures. Measuring a cold finger can result in a ring 1โ2 sizes too small. Always measure at comfortable room temperature.
A strip wider than 1.5 cm won't lie flat against the finger and will give an inaccurate reading. Keep the strip narrow โ 5 mm to 1 cm is ideal.
Wrapping the paper tight against the skin compresses the flesh and gives a reading 1โ3 mm too small. The strip should be snug โ you should be able to slide it slightly up and down.
Never remove the strip before marking it. The paper relaxes immediately on removal and the overlap position shifts. Always mark the strip while it is still on your finger.
Fingers are at their smallest first thing in the morning. A ring sized on a morning measurement will feel tight by afternoon when fingers swell slightly with activity.
Ring fingers, index fingers, and middle fingers are all different sizes โ and so are left and right hands. Always measure the exact finger and hand the ring will be worn on.