How to Start a Wedding Ring Collection in Your Shop
A practical guide for independent UK jewellers and boutiques — how to add wedding rings and bridal jewellery, with strong margins and without tying up capital in stock.
In short
You don't need to buy a big inventory to start selling wedding rings. The modern approach is display and make-to-order: show a curated set of samples, let the customer choose, and have each piece made to their exact size. You carry the range, not the risk — whether you're opening your first shop or adding a line to an established one.
Why add wedding rings?
Wedding and bridal jewellery is one of the most dependable categories in the trade: demand is steady, purchases are considered and higher-value, and one happy couple brings referrals. If you're near a bridal or bridesmaid shop, the footfall is already there. For an established jeweller, a wedding ring line adds a natural, repeatable revenue stream alongside your existing range.
The old way vs the modern way
The traditional model means buying stock up front and hoping it sells — capital tied up, sizes you don't have, and markdowns on what doesn't move. The modern model is made-to-order with a display set: you invest in samples, not inventory. The customer sees and tries real pieces; the actual ring is made to their size and specification after they order. No dead stock, no guesswork.
Five steps to launch
- Decide your starting range. Pick a spread of widths (2–7mm), a plain and a diamond-set option, and the carats you'll offer (9ct, 14ct, 18ct). Keep it focused at first.
- Show samples, not stock. Launch with a curated display set so customers can see and try pieces in-store — while you hold no inventory.
- Price for margin. Work from trade prices with a suggested RRP so your margin is clear from day one. Keep trade prices private to your business.
- Sell made-to-order. The customer chooses; the piece is made to their exact size and spec, typically in around 3–14 working days.
- Grow with reorders. Reorder single pieces as you sell, and add lines — engagement, lab-grown diamonds, everyday gold — as demand builds.
What to look for in a supplier
- Made-to-order production, so you avoid dead stock
- UK hallmarking — qualifying pieces hallmarked under the Hallmarking Act 1973
- Solid gold, not plated, in 9ct / 14ct / 18ct
- No minimums beyond an opening order, so you can reorder single pieces
- Clear lead times and a named contact who actually answers
- Both natural and lab-grown diamonds, to serve every budget
Already selling? Add a line without the risk
You don't have to start from scratch to benefit. Established jewellers and boutiques often add a single category — wedding rings, lab-grown diamonds or everyday gold — to test demand alongside their existing range, using a display set and made-to-order supply. If it sells, you expand; if a style doesn't, you haven't bought stock you're stuck with.
How Majestic Jewellery helps
We supply independent UK retailers with made-to-order, UK hallmarked solid gold wedding and bridal jewellery — display sets to launch, a digital catalogue of 700+ designs, trade pricing with a suggested-RRP line sheet, and a named contact. Operated by Collecso Ltd, with workshops in Türkiye and the UK. Trade pricing is shared once your account is approved.
Frequently asked questions
How much stock do I need to start selling wedding rings?
With a made-to-order model you don't hold ring inventory — you start with a display set of samples and each sold piece is made to order. Beyond an opening order there are no minimums.
What margin can I expect on wedding rings?
Working from trade prices with a suggested RRP, wedding rings typically carry a healthy retail margin. Exact figures depend on the piece; your supplier confirms trade price and suggested RRP.
How long do made-to-order rings take?
Typically around 3–14 working days depending on the item, confirmed on each order.
I already have a shop — can I add just one category?
Yes. Many retailers add a single line to test demand alongside their existing range, then expand as it sells.
Do the rings come hallmarked?
Qualifying pieces are UK hallmarked under the Hallmarking Act 1973 — the fineness mark (375, 585 or 750) confirms the carat.