Diamond Carat Size Guide - Variation
Carat Size Guide

Carat is weight, not size.Here's the difference.

The most misunderstood of the 4Cs. Carat measures how much a diamond weighs — not how big it looks. This guide shows you the true face-up size of each carat weight, to scale, and helps you choose the size that's right for your hand and your budget.

Shown to ScaleSize by CaratBigger for Your Budget
0.2g
One Carat
A carat is a unit of weight — exactly 0.2 grams, or 200 milligrams.
100
Points Per Carat
Each carat divides into 100 points, so a 0.50ct diamond is "fifty points."
6.5mm
A 1 Carat Round
A well-cut one-carat round brilliant measures about 6.5mm across the top.
~2×
The Lab Grown Edge
For the same budget, lab grown lets you choose a far larger carat weight.
The Big Misunderstanding

A bigger carat doesn't mean a bigger-looking stone.

Carat is the easiest of the 4Cs to grasp and the easiest to misread. It is a measure of weight, not dimensions. Two diamonds of the same carat weight can look noticeably different in size depending on how they are cut and what shape they are.

It also helps to know that weight and width don't rise together. Doubling the carat does not double the diameter — a 2 carat round is only about a quarter wider across the top than a 1 carat, because the extra weight goes into depth as much as width.

"What people actually notice on the hand is the face-up size — the width of the diamond seen from above — not the carat number itself."

So the most useful thing this guide can give you is the true, to-scale size of each carat weight — which is exactly what comes next.

What Carat Affects

What the carat number does and doesn't tell you.

It Tells You — Weight

Carat is a precise measure of how much the diamond weighs, recorded to two decimal places on every IGI certificate. It is exact and objective.

It Doesn't Tell You — Width

Two stones of equal carat can differ in face-up size. A well-cut stone carries its weight as visible spread; a deep-cut one hides it below.

It Doesn't Tell You — Shape

An oval or marquise of the same carat looks larger than a round, because elongated shapes spread their surface area more across the finger.

It Strongly Affects — Price

Price climbs steeply with carat, and jumps at round numbers like 1.00 and 2.00ct. This is where lab grown changes the maths entirely.

Shown to Scale

What each carat actually looks like.

These round brilliants are drawn to relative scale, using the true face-up diameter of each carat weight. Notice how gently the width grows — the jump from 1 to 2 carats adds weight far faster than it adds visible size.

0.50 ct
5.2 mm
1.00 ct
6.5 mm
1.50 ct
7.4 mm
2.00 ct
8.2 mm
3.00 ct
9.3 mm

Drawn to relative scale for a well-cut round brilliant. On-screen sizes are proportional, not literal millimetres — for exact dimensions, see the table below.

Carat to Millimetres

The size of each carat, in numbers.

For a well-cut round brilliant, each carat weight corresponds to an approximate face-up diameter. These are the numbers behind the visual above — useful for picturing a stone against a ruler, or comparing against a ring you already own.

Treat them as close approximations. The exact millimetre size of any individual diamond depends on its precise cut and proportions, all of which are recorded on its IGI certificate.

The 1 and 2 carat "magic" sizes: prices step up at round numbers, so a 0.90ct can cost notably less than a 1.00ct while looking almost identical. With lab grown, you can simply choose the full carat.
Why Shape Changes It

The same carat, different widths.

A round brilliant is the benchmark, but it is not the largest-looking shape for its weight. Because elongated shapes spread their surface area, an oval, marquise, or pear of the same carat appears bigger face-up than a round.

If looking large for the carat matters to you, an elongated shape is a smart route. To explore how each shape wears, see our diamond shape comparison guide.

Rule of thumb: at one carat, an oval can look a noticeable step larger than a round of the same weight, despite weighing exactly the same.
Carat WeightPointsRound Brilliant — Approx. DiameterHow It Reads
0.25 ct25 pts~4.1 mmDelicate — ideal for accents and dainty styles
0.50 ct50 pts~5.2 mmPetite and elegant — popular for a first ring
0.75 ct75 pts~5.9 mmA clear presence without being large
1.00 ct100 pts~6.5 mmThe classic choice
1.50 ct150 pts~7.4 mmNoticeably substantial on the hand
2.00 ct200 pts~8.2 mmA statement size
2.50 ct250 pts~8.8 mmBold and unmistakable
3.00 ct300 pts~9.3 mmA true showpiece
4.00 ct400 pts~10.2 mmDramatic, commanding presence
5.00 ct500 pts~11.0 mmRare-feeling scale and impact
Look Bigger for Less

Three ways to maximise visible size.

If presence matters more than the number on the certificate, these levers make a diamond look larger without simply buying more carats.

Choose an Elongated Shape

Oval, marquise, pear, and emerald cuts spread their surface area, so they look larger face-up than a round of the same carat. The easiest way to gain visible size for free.

Add a Halo Setting

A ring of small diamonds around the centre stone extends its outline, often making it read a half-carat larger. See our setting guide for more on this.

Prioritise Cut Quality

A well-cut diamond carries its weight as visible spread and returns more light, so it looks larger and brighter than a poorly cut stone of the same carat.

The Lab Grown Advantage

Choose the carat you want, not just the one you can afford.

Carat is where price rises fastest — and with mined diamonds, that often forces a compromise on size. Because a lab grown diamond costs far less for the same specifications, that compromise largely disappears.

The budget that might reach a modest mined stone can reach a meaningfully larger lab grown one of the same cut, colour, and clarity. It is the single biggest reason buyers choose lab grown — and why average lab grown centre stones are now roughly twice the size of mined ones.

Read the full comparison in our lab grown vs natural diamonds guide.

Go Up a Full Carat

The saving over a mined stone often covers the jump from, say, a 1 carat to a 2 carat — the same money, a dramatically bigger diamond.

Skip the "Magic Size" Tax

No need to settle for 0.90ct to dodge the price jump at 1.00ct. With lab grown, the round-number premium is far smaller.

Keep Quality While Sizing Up

Size up without dropping colour or clarity to fund it — you can have the larger stone and the higher grades together.

How to Choose

Four questions that point you to the right carat.

There is no perfect carat — only the one that fits the hand, the style, and the budget. These help you land on it.

01
How slender is the finger?

The same diamond looks larger on a slim finger and more modest on a broader one. On petite fingers, a 1 carat already reads generously; on larger hands, 1.5 to 2 carats holds its presence better.

02
Sparkle, size, or balance?

If sheer size is the goal, prioritise carat and an elongated shape. If you'd rather a brilliant, lively stone, a slightly smaller, better-cut diamond often outshines a larger dull one.

03
How active is daily wear?

Very large stones sit higher and catch on things more. For hands-on lifestyles, a slightly lower carat in a secure setting is often more practical and more comfortable day to day.

04
Where's your budget best spent?

Decide whether size, cut, or a finer setting matters most to you, then let that lead. With lab grown keeping cost down, you rarely have to sacrifice one for another.

Shop by Carat

Browse by carat weight.

Know the size you're after? Go straight to the collection — all IGI certified, all lab grown.

Frequently Asked

Questions about carat, answered.

The questions we hear most when customers are choosing a carat weight. If yours isn't here, just ask.

Chat with us on WhatsApp — we usually reply within a few minutes.

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Is carat the same as the size of a diamond?
Not quite. Carat is a measure of weight, not dimensions. While heavier diamonds are generally larger, two stones of the same carat can look different sizes face-up depending on how they are cut and what shape they are. What you actually see on the hand is the diameter across the top, so it is worth looking at the millimetre size, not just the carat number.
How big is a 1 carat diamond?
A well-cut 1 carat round brilliant measures roughly 6.5mm across the top. In other shapes it varies — an oval or marquise of the same weight looks longer and larger face-up, while a deeper-cut stone may look slightly smaller. One carat is the most popular engagement size: a clear, confident presence that suits most fingers.
Does a 2 carat look twice as big as a 1 carat?
No — this surprises many people. A 2 carat weighs twice as much, but it is only about a quarter wider across the top, since the extra weight goes into depth as well as width. A 1 carat round is about 6.5mm and a 2 carat about 8.2mm. The 2 carat is unmistakably larger and more impressive, just not double the visible size.
What carat size should I choose for an engagement ring?
There is no single right answer — it depends on the wearer's finger, their style, and your budget. One carat is the classic, versatile choice; 1.5 to 2 carats makes more of a statement; half a carat is elegant and understated. Consider the finger size (slimmer fingers make a stone look larger), the shape, and how active their hands are. With lab grown, you can usually size up without stretching the budget.
How can I make a diamond look bigger without paying for more carats?
Three reliable ways: choose an elongated shape like oval or marquise, which spreads its surface area and looks larger than a round of the same weight; add a halo setting, which frames the stone in small diamonds and can make it read a half-carat bigger; and prioritise cut quality, since a well-cut stone carries its weight as visible spread. Combining all three gives maximum presence for the carat.
What are "magic sizes" and should I avoid them?
Magic sizes are the round numbers — 1.00, 1.50, 2.00 carats — where prices jump, because demand clusters there. A 0.90ct can cost noticeably less than a 1.00ct while looking almost identical, which makes "just under" weights good value in mined diamonds. With lab grown, the premium at these sizes is far smaller, so you can simply choose the full carat without the same penalty.
Is a bigger carat always better?
Not necessarily. A larger carat with a poor cut can look duller and less lively than a smaller, beautifully cut stone — and an oversized diamond may not suit a slim finger or an active lifestyle. Carat is one of four Cs, and balance usually beats maximising any single one. The best choice is the size that looks right on the hand and leaves room for good cut and clarity.
Found Your Size?

Now find your diamond.

Every Variation diamond is IGI certified and made to order — in the exact carat, shape, and setting you choose. Not sure what size suits the hand? Tell us and we'll guide you.

Explore the Guide

Everything you need to choose with confidence.

Start HereThe Engagement Ring Buying GuideNine simple steps from budget to certificate — the guide that ties all of these together. →
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