# White Gold Men's Wedding Bands: Buyer's Guide (vs Platinum)

> They look identical on the wedding day and age nothing alike. Here is how platinum and white gold compare on durability, upkeep, allergy, and the price gap — so his band and your ring stay matched for life.

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

The short version
Platinum and white gold look nearly identical on your wedding day, but they age nothing alike. Platinum is solid, naturally white, hypoallergenic metal that softens into a patina and keeps its mass for life. White gold is a gold alloy plated in rhodium to read white — cheaper to buy, but it needs re-dipping every year or two to stay bright, and some alloys carry nickel. Choose platinum for low-maintenance permanence; choose white gold for a lower entry price you're willing to maintain.

If you're researching his ring while he's focused on everything else, the white-metal question is the one that quietly matters most. Two bands can look the same in the case and feel completely different a decade in. This is the premium-metal decision — platinum versus white gold — laid out plainly, with an eye on keeping his band and your ring in step for the long run. (For the harder, more modern metals like tungsten and titanium, that's a separate conversation; this is about the precious white metals.)

## What is the actual difference between platinum and white gold?

It helps to know what each metal really is. **White gold** is yellow gold alloyed with white metals — commonly nickel or palladium — to lighten its color, then finished with a thin **rhodium** plating that gives it that bright, mirror-white look. A 14K white-gold band is about 58.5% gold; 18K is 75%, with the rest made up of the whitening alloy.

**Platinum**, by contrast, is used in fine jewelry as *950 platinum* — about 95% pure, alloyed only with a little ruthenium or iridium for strength, and **naturally white with no coating at all**. So on the wedding day the two read almost the same bright white. The real difference is what lies beneath the surface: white gold's whiteness is a coating that wears, while platinum's whiteness is the metal itself, as both [Blue Nile](https://www.bluenile.com/blog/diamonds-jewelry/platinum-vs-white-gold) and [Brilliant Earth](https://www.brilliantearth.com/engagement-rings/buying-guide/precious-metals/platinum-vs-white-gold/) explain.

## Which is more durable for a man who works with his hands?

This is where a men's band earns its keep, because his ring tends to take harder daily contact than yours — desks, tools, steering wheels, the gym. Both metals are durable, but they behave very differently under wear.

Platinum is dense and slightly malleable, so when it's scratched the metal *displaces* — it's pushed to the side rather than shed. The ring keeps its mass over decades and gradually takes on a soft gray-satin **patina**. White gold's surface is a touch harder, but when it's scratched it actually *loses* a little material, so over many years a white-gold band thins faster than a platinum one. More noticeably, its rhodium plating wears unevenly — the back and top go first, revealing the warmer alloy beneath while the sides stay bright, which can look patchy until it's re-plated. Calla Gold Jewelry breaks this down well in its [wedding-ring metal comparison](https://www.callagold.com/custom-design/white-gold-vs-platinum-wedding-rings/).

For a hands-on groom, that durability story tends to favor platinum: it's the metal that asks the least of him over a lifetime of wear.

## How much does the rhodium re-plating upkeep really cost?

This is the line item most couples never see coming. Because white gold's bright finish is a rhodium coating, it has to be restored periodically by having the ring **dipped** — re-plated. How often depends on how hard the ring is worn, but plan on roughly every **one to three years**, and sometimes as often as every twelve to eighteen months for a man who works with his hands. Each dip runs about **$60 to $120** depending on the setting, per Blue Nile. It isn't expensive in isolation, but it's a recurring, lifelong cost — and a chore to remember.

Platinum sidesteps all of it. There's no plating to renew; the only maintenance is an occasional polish, and that's purely optional — many men simply let the patina be.

## Is the price gap as big as people think in 2026?

Platinum has traditionally cost more than white gold, for two reasons: it's denser, so the same-size ring uses more metal by weight, and it was historically pricier per ounce. Both are still true at the cash register — at a men's-band specialist like [Manly Bands](https://manlybands.com/collections/platinum-wedding-bands), a build-your-own platinum band starts around $1,050, above comparable 14K white-gold builds.

But the raw-material gap has narrowed. Through 2026, gold's spot price has climbed well ahead of platinum's, so by melt value a heavier platinum band and a 14K white-gold band can land surprisingly close, as [Versani's 2026 price comparison](https://versani.com/blogs/resources/white-gold-vs-platinum-the-complete-price-comparison-for-2026) notes. Add years of re-plating to the white-gold side and the *lifetime* cost difference is smaller than the sticker suggests.

Platinum vs. white gold for a men's wedding band, at a glance
FactorPlatinum (950)White Gold (14K/18K)

Color sourceNaturally white metal — no coatingRhodium plating over a gold alloy
DurabilityDisplaces under wear; keeps its massLoses a little metal when scratched
MaintenanceOptional polish; develops a patinaRe-dip every ~1–3 yrs ($60–$120)
AllergyHypoallergenic (95% pure)May contain nickel; ask for palladium-based
Upfront priceHigherLower
Lifetime costFront-loaded, then minimalLower start + ongoing re-plating

## What about allergies and coordinating with your ring?

Two last things worth checking before he commits. On **allergy**: some white-gold alloys are hardened with nickel, one of the most common contact allergens. The rhodium plating shields skin while it's intact, but exposure rises as the coating wears — a real consideration on a ring worn every day. If sensitivity runs in his family, ask specifically for a **palladium-based** white gold, or choose platinum, which is naturally hypoallergenic.

On **coordination**: if your engagement ring or band is platinum, matching his to platinum keeps the white tone identical for life, with nothing to re-plate and drift out of step. A platinum prong setting also tends to hold a center stone more securely over the years because it doesn't shed mass. If your ring is 14K white gold, his can match beautifully — just plan to have both re-dipped together so they age as a pair. The one outcome couples regret is not realizing white gold needs upkeep, then watching one ring quietly yellow before the other. Decide that now, together, and the rings will look as right in your fortieth-anniversary photos as they do on the day.

## Sources

1. [Platinum vs. White Gold: Which Makes Better Jewelry?](https://www.bluenile.com/blog/diamonds-jewelry/platinum-vs-white-gold)
2. [Platinum vs. White Gold: What's the Difference & Which Is Better?](https://www.brilliantearth.com/engagement-rings/buying-guide/precious-metals/platinum-vs-white-gold/)
3. [White Gold vs Platinum: The Complete Price Comparison for 2026](https://versani.com/blogs/resources/white-gold-vs-platinum-the-complete-price-comparison-for-2026)
4. [White Gold vs Platinum For Wedding Rings — What's the Difference?](https://www.callagold.com/custom-design/white-gold-vs-platinum-wedding-rings/)
5. [Men's Platinum Wedding Bands & Rings](https://manlybands.com/collections/platinum-wedding-bands)

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Source: https://groomatlas.com/mens-wedding-bands/platinum-vs-white-gold-mens-wedding-band
Index: https://groomatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://groomatlas.com/llms-full.txt
