Diamond Ring Care & Cleaning Guide - Variation
Care & Cleaning Guide

Keep it brilliant for life.It's simpler than you think.

A diamond is the hardest material on earth — but everyday oils, lotions, and knocks can dull its sparkle and loosen a setting over time. The good news: keeping your ring looking its best takes only a few minutes and a few simple habits. Here's everything you need.

5-Minute CleanAt Home, SafelyCare by Metal
10
Mohs Hardness
A diamond is the hardest natural material — but its setting still needs looking after.
1–2 wks
Cleaning Rhythm
A quick warm-water clean every week or two keeps a worn ring sparkling.
6–12 mo
Professional Check
Have the setting and prongs checked once or twice a year to keep the stone secure.
Same
Lab Grown Care
A lab grown diamond is cared for exactly like a mined one — no special handling.
Why Care Matters

Hard as it is, a diamond still dulls without care.

It surprises people: a diamond can't be scratched by almost anything, yet rings still lose their sparkle. The reason isn't damage to the stone — it's a thin film of skin oils, soap, lotion, and everyday grime that builds up underneath and around the diamond, blocking the light that makes it shine.

Clean that film away and the brilliance returns instantly. The setting is the other half of the story: prongs and bands take the knocks of daily life, and a little attention keeps them holding your stone securely for decades.

"A 'dull' diamond is almost never damaged — it's simply dirty. A few minutes in warm, soapy water brings it straight back to life."

None of this is difficult or expensive. With a simple routine and a few sensible habits, your ring will look as brilliant in twenty years as it does today.

What Dulls a Ring

The everyday culprits to know about.

Oils & Lotions

Hand cream, sunscreen, and natural skin oils coat the stone and settle behind it, where they trap dust and cloud the sparkle most.

Harsh Chemicals

Chlorine, bleach, and strong cleaners can damage and discolour the metal of the setting over time, especially gold alloys.

Knocks & Impacts

The stone is tough, but a hard knock can bend or loosen a prong. Over time this is the main risk to a securely held diamond.

Simple Neglect

Most dullness is just time and wear without cleaning. A regular rinse is the single most effective thing you can do.

The At-Home Clean

Five steps to a sparkling ring.

This gentle method is safe for diamonds in any setting and metal. All you need is warm water, mild dish soap, and a soft brush — no special products required.

1
Make the Bath

Mix a bowl of warm — not hot — water with a few drops of mild dish soap. Skip any harsh or abrasive cleaners.

2
Soak It

Let the ring sit for 20 to 30 minutes. This loosens the oils and residue hiding behind and beneath the diamond.

3
Brush Gently

With a soft toothbrush, gently clean the stone — especially underneath, where buildup hides and dulls the sparkle most.

4
Rinse Safely

Rinse under clean running water — over a bowl or with the drain closed, so there's no chance of losing the ring.

5
Pat Dry

Dry with a soft, lint-free cloth. Avoid paper towels, which can scratch metal and leave fibres behind.

How often? For a ring worn daily, this gentle clean every one to two weeks keeps it brilliant. A quick rinse anytime it looks cloudy works wonders too — it's almost always just everyday film.
Quick Reference

The do's and don'ts.

Keep these in mind and your ring will stay safe and sparkling. When in doubt, gentle is always the right answer.

Do
  • Clean with warm water and mild dish soap
  • Use a soft brush, gently, especially under the stone
  • Rinse over a bowl or closed drain
  • Hold the ring by the band, not the diamond
  • Store each piece separately in a soft pouch
  • Have the setting checked once or twice a year
Don't
  • Use bleach, chlorine, or harsh chemical cleaners
  • Scrub with toothpaste or abrasive powders
  • Wear it for cleaning, gardening, or the gym
  • Swim in chlorinated pools or hot tubs with it on
  • Touch the stone with your fingertips
  • Toss it loose in a drawer with other jewellery
A word on ultrasonic cleaners: they clean well but the vibration can loosen stones in delicate or pavé settings over time. If you'd like that level of clean, it's safest to let us or a professional do it — gentle warm soapy water at home is risk-free.
Everyday Habits

When to take it off.

The simplest way to protect a ring is to slip it off at the right moments. A good rule: it goes on last when you're ready, and comes off first for anything rough or messy.

Lotions & Perfume

Put your ring on after applying creams, perfume, sunscreen, and hairspray — "last on, first off." It stays cleaner and sparkles longer.

Gym & Heavy Lifting

Weights and equipment can knock the setting and bend prongs. Take the ring off before a workout or any hard manual task.

Swimming

Chlorine can harm the metal, and cold water shrinks fingers — rings slip off easily in pools and the sea. Leave it safely aside.

Cleaning & Gardening

Household chemicals and rough work are hard on metal and stones alike. Slip the ring off, or wear gloves, for chores.

Care by Metal

A little extra for each metal.

The diamond is the same; the setting metal has its own small needs. Here's how to keep each looking its best.

Yellow & Rose Gold

The easiest to live with. A gentle clean keeps them bright, and they never need replating — the colour runs all the way through the metal. An occasional professional polish removes fine surface scratches and restores the shine.

White Gold

White gold has a rhodium plating that gives its bright white shine. Over one to three years this gradually wears, and a faint warmth may show through. A simple, inexpensive re-plating returns it to brilliant white whenever you wish.

Platinum

Platinum develops a soft matte patina with wear — many people love this lived-in look. If you prefer the original mirror shine, a professional polish restores it. It never needs plating and holds stones exceptionally securely.

Choosing a metal, or want the full detail on each? See our gold & platinum guide for how the metals compare in colour, purity, and wear.

Professional Care

When to bring in the experts.

Home cleaning handles the day-to-day, but a periodic professional check is what keeps your diamond truly secure for life. The most important reason isn't cleaning — it's making sure the prongs and setting are still holding the stone firmly.

We recommend having the setting inspected once or twice a year, and always after any hard knock. A jeweller can tighten prongs, deep-clean the piece, and re-plate white gold if needed — small things that prevent the one outcome nobody wants: a loose or lost stone.

We're here to help: if you bought your piece from us, message us anytime to arrange a check, clean, or re-plate. We'd always rather you ask than risk a loose setting.
Storing It Well

How to put it away safely.

Keep Pieces Apart

A diamond is the hardest material there is — which means it can scratch your other jewellery, and other diamonds. Store each piece in its own pouch or a lined, compartmented box.

Soft & Dry

A soft fabric pouch or the original box is ideal. Keep jewellery somewhere dry and out of direct sunlight and humidity.

A Safe Spot When Off

Designate one place to set your ring when you take it off — a dish by the sink is where most rings are lost. Never leave it on a basin edge.

Frequently Asked

Care questions, answered.

The questions we hear most about keeping a diamond ring at its best. If yours isn't here, just ask — we're glad to help.

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

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How often should I clean my diamond ring?
For a ring worn every day, a gentle warm-water clean every one to two weeks keeps it sparkling. You can also rinse it any time it looks cloudy — which is almost always just a film of skin oils and lotion rather than anything wrong with the stone. Alongside that, a professional check once or twice a year keeps the setting secure.
What's the safest way to clean it at home?
Warm water with a few drops of mild dish soap, a soak of twenty to thirty minutes, then a gentle scrub with a soft toothbrush — especially underneath the stone — followed by a rinse and a pat dry with a soft, lint-free cloth. That's it. No special products are needed, and this method is safe for any metal and setting. Just rinse over a bowl or a closed drain so there's no chance of losing the ring.
Can I use toothpaste or an ultrasonic cleaner?
Avoid toothpaste — it's mildly abrasive and can scratch gold and platinum. Ultrasonic cleaners clean very effectively, but their vibration can loosen stones in delicate or pavé settings over time, so we'd suggest leaving that to a professional rather than using one at home. Gentle warm soapy water does the job safely and is all most rings ever need.
Why does my diamond look cloudy or dull?
Almost always because it's dirty, not damaged. A thin layer of skin oils, soap, hand cream, and everyday grime builds up on and behind the diamond and blocks the light that creates its sparkle. A clean in warm soapy water removes it and the brilliance returns immediately. If a stone still looks dull after a thorough clean, bring it to us and we'll take a look.
Can I shower, swim, or sleep with my ring on?
The occasional shower won't harm it, though soap film will dull the sparkle over time. Swimming is best avoided — chlorine can damage the metal, and cold water shrinks fingers so rings slip off easily in pools and the sea. Sleeping in it is fine for many people, but prongs can snag on bedding and a ring worn around the clock simply needs cleaning more often. When in doubt, take it off and set it somewhere safe.
Do lab grown diamonds need special care?
No — none at all. A lab grown diamond is physically identical to a mined one, with the same 10 Mohs hardness and durability, so it is cleaned, worn, and cared for in exactly the same way. Everything on this page applies equally. It will not cloud, fade, or change with age; it simply needs the same occasional clean and setting check as any fine diamond.
How do I know if a prong is loose?
Gently tap the ring near your ear — a faint rattle can mean the stone is moving. You might also feel a prong catching on fabric more than usual, or see the diamond sitting slightly off-centre. If you suspect anything, stop wearing it and have it checked promptly. This is exactly why a periodic professional inspection matters: catching a loose prong early prevents a lost stone. Message us anytime and we'll help.
Need a Hand?

We'll keep your ring brilliant.

Bought your piece from us? Message us anytime to arrange a clean, a setting check, or a re-plate — or just to ask a care question. We're here for the life of your ring, not only the day you buy it.

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