

AI generated summary, newsroom reviewed
For decades, the engagement ring industrial complex has trained its considerable firepower on one finger: hers. Meanwhile, the groom got a plain band on the wedding day and was told to be grateful. That math is finally changing. Men are getting engaged with rings now — actual, considered rings — and the houses that have spent a century perfecting the form are paying attention.
Here are the ones actually worth your time.
Louis Cartier drew this in 1924 — three interlocking bands in rose, yellow, and white gold, with five tiny brilliant-cut diamonds along one band. It's the ring Jean Cocteau wore on his pinky and the one Princess Diana wore on her thumb. Definitely can't go wrong with this one.
The platonic ideal of a yellow gold band. Slim, unfussy, the kind of ring that looks like it's been on his hand for fifteen years on day one. If your guy thinks jewelry is "a bit much," this is the one that won't feel like jewelry.
This is a revival of a 1938 design — a wider platinum band with a micro-pavé belt of diamonds circling the middle.
A two-tone, twin-band design in 18K yellow gold with a small diamond accent — under five grams of gold, so it sits light. The Indian fine-jewelry brands have quietly gotten very good at architectural men's pieces, and this is a strong, accessible entry point.
Milgrain — the tiny beaded edge along the rim — is the detail that separates this from every other platinum band on a department store tray. Definitely one for those with taste!
This is the swing-for-the-fences option: a 2.5+ carat emerald-cut diamond set into a platinum signet-shaped band. Tiffany launched this line in 2021 explicitly as a men's engagement ring, and it remains the most fully-realized version of the idea.
Architectural, geometric, made from ethically sourced 18K white gold.
A single bezel-set princess-cut diamond — about 0.10 carats — sunk flush into a platinum band. The bezel matters here: it means the stone won't snag on a sweater or a kid's car seat.
Pure platinum, 5.5mm, no stones, a subtly modern profile. It's the ring for the man who wants Harry Winston craftsmanship without any of the visual proof.