Jewelry Metal Weight Comparison Chart

Convert Across Metals

The same design,a different weight.In every metal.

A ring cast in platinum weighs far more than the same ring in silver — because metals differ in density. This chart and calculator convert a piece's weight between platinum, gold from 24k to 9k, and silver, so you can estimate weight and material cost across metals before you produce.

9 MetalsFree CalculatorInstant Convert
9
Metals Compared
Platinum, gold (24k–9k) and silver.
2.07×
The Widest Gap
A design weighs 2.07× more in platinum than sterling.
Density
Drives Weight
Denser metals mean more grams — and more cost.
Live
Calculator
Convert any weight between metals below.
Why It Happens

Why the same ring weighs different amounts.

A jewelry design has a fixed volume — but every metal has a different density, so that same volume weighs a different number of grams depending on what it's cast in. Platinum is the densest of the common jewelry metals; silver is among the lightest.

That matters because precious metal is sold by weight. Two identical rings can carry very different material costs simply because one is platinum and the other 14k gold. If you know a piece's weight in one metal — say, from a silver sample — this chart lets you estimate it in any other.

"Same design, same volume — but platinum weighs more than twice what sterling silver does."
How to Read It

One simple rule.

Find Your Known Metal

Locate the metal you already know the weight in along the left-hand column of the chart.

Read Across to the Target

Follow that row across to the column for the metal you want to convert to. That cell is your factor.

Multiply

Multiply your known weight by that factor. That's the estimated weight in the new metal — or just use the calculator below.

The Calculator

Convert a weight in seconds.

Enter a known weight, pick the two metals, and we'll do the maths from the chart below.

 

Figures are estimates for typical alloys; exact density varies slightly with gold color and alloy mix.

The Full Chart

Metal weight comparison chart.

Find your known metal on the left, read across to the target metal, and multiply. The highlighted diagonal is each metal against itself (×1.00).

From ↓ / To → Pt. F.G. 22kt 18kt 14kt 10kt 9kt F.S. Stg
Pt. 1.00 0.90 0.82 0.70 0.60 0.53 0.53 0.49 0.48
F.G. 1.11 1.00 0.91 0.78 0.67 0.59 0.58 0.54 0.54
22kt 1.22 1.10 1.00 0.86 0.73 0.65 0.65 0.60 0.59
18kt 1.42 1.28 1.16 1.00 0.85 0.76 0.75 0.69 0.68
14kt 1.66 1.50 1.36 1.17 1.00 0.89 0.88 0.81 0.80
10kt 1.88 1.69 1.54 1.32 1.13 1.00 0.99 0.92 0.90
9kt 1.90 1.71 1.56 1.34 1.14 1.01 1.00 0.93 0.92
F.S. 2.04 1.84 1.68 1.44 1.23 1.09 1.08 1.00 0.99
Stg 2.07 1.87 1.70 1.46 1.25 1.11 1.09 1.01 1.00
Worked example: a ring weighs 5 g in sterling silver. To estimate it in 18k gold, find the Stg row and the 18kt column — the factor is 1.46. So 5 g × 1.46 = about 7.3 g in 18k gold.
Why It's Useful

From sample to quote.

For brands and designers, this is the quickest way to estimate metal weight — and therefore material cost — when moving a design between platinum, gold, and silver, or when quoting the same style across a metal range. Cast one sample, and you can price the whole collection.

Good to Know

Weight conversion, answered.

The questions we hear most about converting jewelry weight between metals.

Ask About Manufacturing
How do I use the weight comparison chart?
Find the metal you already know the weight in along the left column, read across to the column for your target metal, and multiply your weight by the number in that cell. The calculator above does this for you automatically.
Why does the same design weigh more in platinum?
Because platinum is denser than gold or silver. A design has a fixed volume, so the denser the metal, the more grams it weighs — platinum weighs a little over twice what the same piece weighs in sterling silver.
Are these weights exact?
They're close estimates based on typical alloy densities. Actual weight varies slightly with the specific alloy and gold color (yellow, white, and rose differ a little), so treat the result as a reliable working figure rather than a guaranteed weight.
Why does metal weight matter for cost?
Precious metal is priced by weight, so a heavier metal means more material cost for the same design. Knowing the weight across metals lets you quote and compare accurately before production.
What do F.G., F.S., and Stg mean?
F.G. is fine gold (24k), F.S. is fine silver (.999), and Stg is sterling silver (925). The kt figures are gold alloys: 22k, 18k, 14k, 10k, and 9k.
Can you manufacture my design in any of these metals?
Yes — we manufacture in-house across platinum, gold from 9k to 24k, and silver, including genuine gold vermeil. Send us your design and target metal and we'll quote the weight and cost.
Manufacture With Us

Any metal, made in-house.

We produce across platinum, gold (9k–24k), silver, and genuine gold vermeil — OEM, ODM, and private label, under strict NDA. Send us your design and we'll quote the weight and cost.

In-House Production
Platinum, Gold & Silver
Strict NDA