Free Ring Identifier by Photo

Use a photo to inspect visible ring clues like setting, shank, stones, prongs, stamps, wear, and possible style period.

Secure photo analysisPhoto-based first passDaily free limit

Upload a ring photo

Secure photo analysisPhoto-based first passDaily free limit

Your photo analysis

Upload a photo and run the analysis. The result will summarize visible clues, next checks, and any value signals that can safely be inferred from the image.

Need the full jewelry ID?

Use the app to save scans, compare results, and keep your jewelry photos organized in one place.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Ring clues that matter

Rings often carry useful visual details in a small area. The setting, prongs, stone cut, shank shape, band wear, and inside-band stamp can all change the first-pass identification.

  • Inside-band marks such as 10K, 14K, 18K, 585, 750, 925, or PT950.
  • Stone shape, setting height, prong count, bezel work, and side profile.
  • Wear inside the band or under the setting where plating can show.
  • Style cues such as solitaire, halo, signet, cocktail, eternity, or cluster.

What the ring identifier result covers

A ring photo result focuses on visible construction: likely ring family, setting style, stone and gemstone clues, metal or hallmark clues, wear patterns, and safe next checks.

The result can also flag when a side profile, macro stone photo, or inside-band close-up would be more useful than the first image.

Best photos for ring identification

Start with one full ring photo, then capture the inside band, side profile, stone face, and underside of the setting. Those angles help separate style clues from material clues.

  • Use indirect daylight so prongs and stamps do not disappear in glare.
  • Place the ring on a plain background with the band and setting in focus.
  • Include scale if the ring is unusually large, small, wide, or ornate.

What a photo cannot prove

A photo can suggest ring style and visible materials, but it cannot confirm diamond authenticity, exact karat, exact carat weight, or appraisal value. Treat the result as a short list of next checks.

When to continue beyond the free ring tool

Use the full app if you want to keep ring scans together, compare multiple angles, or revisit the result later. Use a jeweler or appraiser when the ring may affect insurance, resale, estate, or engagement decisions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can this tell if my ring is diamond?

It can identify visible diamond-like clues, but a photo cannot prove whether a stone is diamond, moissanite, cubic zirconia, glass, or another gem.

What ring photo should I upload?

Upload the clearest photo you have. A side angle and a close-up of the inside band usually make the result more useful.

Can the tool read ring stamps?

It can report visible stamps when the image is sharp enough, but worn or partial marks may need magnification or a jeweler's inspection.

Can it identify vintage or antique rings?

It can flag visible vintage-style clues such as setting shape, shank detail, patina, and older-looking construction, but age and maker attribution need more evidence than one photo.

Ready for the full jewelry ID?

Use Jewelry Identifier when you want a broader photo scan with material, gemstone, style, and construction clues organized in one place.

Scan the piece in the app

Get the full photo-based identification flow after this quick pre-check.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play