# How Much to Spend on a Men's Wedding Band — and the Best Places to Buy

> A clear-eyed budget and buying guide for his ring: realistic prices by metal, online versus the local jeweler, and the warranty and resize policies that quietly decide whether you spent wisely.

*Published 2026-06-24 · By Nathaniel Cross*

In short
Most grooms spend **$300 to $600** on a wedding band, and The Knot puts the average men's band at about **$600**. Metal is the biggest cost lever — tungsten and titanium run $100 to $500, 14K gold $500 to $1,500, platinum $1,500 and up. But the decision that protects your money is the **resize and warranty policy**, because the cheapest metals cannot be resized at all.

Of all the rings in a wedding, his is the quiet one. It carries no center stone and no negotiation, and it is easy to leave to the last minute. Yet it is the ring he will actually wear every single day for the rest of his life — through work, washing up, and forty winters — so it is worth choosing with the same care you gave everything else. The good news is that a men's band is one of the more rational purchases in the whole wedding. Here is what it should cost, where to buy it, and the one piece of fine print that matters more than the price.

## What is the realistic price range for a men's wedding band?

According to [The Knot's 2024 Jewelry & Engagement Study](https://www.theknot.com/content/how-much-to-spend-on-engagement-ring) — which surveyed more than 7,000 recently engaged couples — the average men's wedding band costs about **$600**, while women's bands average around $1,200. That men's figure has risen gently from roughly $510 in 2019, nudged up by the price of gold and a growing taste for small diamond accents in men's bands. Across the market, men's bands span from about $100 to $5,000, but the great majority of grooms settle between $300 and $600.

The single largest factor in that number is metal. Choose the metal first and the price almost decides itself.

Men's wedding band price by metal (typical U.S. ranges, 2026)
MetalTypical priceWhy

Tungsten carbide$100&ndash;$500Hardest common ring metal; about four times more scratch-resistant than titanium; cannot be resized.
Titanium$100&ndash;$500Very light and hypoallergenic; ideal for sensitive skin and active hands; cannot be resized.
14K gold$500&ndash;$1,500The popular middle ground &mdash; durable, classic, the best balance of value and prestige.
18K gold$1,000&ndash;$2,500Higher purity and richer color; softer than 14K, so it shows wear a little sooner.
Platinum$1,500&ndash;$3,000+Rarest and most durable precious metal; naturally white, hypoallergenic, never needs re-plating.

As [With Clarity notes in its cost guide](https://www.withclarity.com/blogs/wedding-bands/a-guide-to-mens-wedding-bands-cost), choosing 14K gold over platinum in a white metal can save hundreds of dollars for an almost identical look — a useful lever if the budget is tight elsewhere.

## Should you buy a men's wedding band online or from a local jeweler?

This is where couples often hesitate, and the honest answer is that both can be right. Online specialists carry far less overhead, which is why James Allen and Blue Nile routinely price 25 to 40 percent below physical stores, and their 360-degree HD imaging and live gemologist video calls have closed most of the gap with seeing a ring in person. A local jeweler earns its premium on three things you cannot get online: an in-person finger measurement on a proper metal mandrel, same-day service, and a real relationship for future repairs.

The path many grooms take blends the two. Have him sized in person — sizing matters enormously, and a hot day or a cold morning can shift a reading by half a size — then decide whether to buy from that jeweler or order the exact style online. What you should never do is guess his size from a string and a ruler for a metal that cannot be corrected later.

## How do warranty and resize policies change the real cost?

Here is the part most buying guides bury, and it is the most important sentence on this page: **tungsten, titanium, ceramic, and cobalt cannot be resized.** They are too hard to cut and re-solder. Fingers, meanwhile, change over a lifetime — weight, temperature, age, the simple swelling of a summer afternoon. So for any non-resizable metal, the band is only a safe purchase if the seller offers a lifetime size *exchange*, where they replace it in the correct size rather than alter the original.

Read each policy for what it actually covers. A &ldquo;lifetime warranty&rdquo; that covers only manufacturing defects is far narrower than one that covers repairs, re-polishing, and sizing. Treat the warranty as part of the price.

## Which retailers are best for buying a men's wedding band?

Where to buy a men's wedding band &mdash; specialty, warranty, and resize at a glance
RetailerBest forWarranty & resize

Manly BandsThe widest style range and durable everyday metals (plus wood, meteorite, and licensed designs)Free lifetime manufacturing warranty; one complimentary resize or exchange within 30 days; free silicone band and 30-day returns.
Blue NilePrecious-metal bands with strong, established serviceLimited lifetime warranty on defects; one free resize within a year (excludes alternative metals).
James AllenBest online imaging; the most service-rich warrantyLifetime warranty covering repairs and maintenance &mdash; free prong work, re-polishing, rhodium plating; now a Blue Nile collection.
Brilliant EarthEthically sourced recycled metals and traceable stonesFree lifetime warranty on defects; free resize within 60 days; paid plan extends coverage.
Larson JewelersTungsten and titanium specialists (500+ styles, popular 8mm widths)Lifetime warranty and lifetime size exchange even on tungsten; free shipping and engraving.

Match the retailer to his metal and the policy he needs. A groom set on a brushed tungsten band is best served by a specialist with lifetime exchange; one who wants a classic platinum band may prefer the established service of [Blue Nile](https://www.bluenile.com/services/warranty) or a trusted local jeweler.

## So how much should you actually spend?

Decide by hand and habit, not by sticker price. If he works with his hands, a $300 tungsten or titanium band may genuinely outlast and out-serve a $2,000 platinum one. If he wants weight, heirloom value, and a ring that never needs re-plating, platinum justifies its premium. For most grooms, a 14K gold or premium titanium band between $300 and $700 is the sensible centre of the market: handsome, durable, and easy to live with. Spend a little less and put the difference toward an engraving inside the band — a date, an initial, a private word — which costs almost nothing and means everything. The right band is simply the one suited to his hand, his work, and the next fifty years.

## Sources

1. [Average Wedding Band & Engagement Ring Cost (2024 Jewelry Study)](https://www.theknot.com/content/how-much-to-spend-on-engagement-ring)
2. [A Guide to Men's Wedding Bands Cost](https://www.withclarity.com/blogs/wedding-bands/a-guide-to-mens-wedding-bands-cost)
3. [10 Things You Didn't Know About Titanium and Tungsten Wedding Bands](https://www.larsonjewelers.com/pages/10-things-about-titanium-tungsten-wedding-bands)
4. [Blue Nile vs James Allen vs Brilliant Earth: Which Is Best?](https://www.creditdonkey.com/blue-nile-james-allen-brilliant-earth.html)
5. [Manly Bands — Handcrafted Men's Wedding Bands (Warranty & Returns)](https://manlybands.com/en-us)
6. [Limited Lifetime Warranty](https://www.bluenile.com/services/warranty)

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Source: https://groomatlas.com/mens-wedding-bands/mens-wedding-band-budget-and-where-to-buy
Index: https://groomatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://groomatlas.com/llms-full.txt
