This collection contains 414 engagement rings priced at or below £2,000, all made to order at our Hatton Garden workshop. The range spans simple solitaires below £700, diamond-set trilogy rings in the £800–£1,100 bracket, and more elaborate three-stone and nature-inspired designs approaching the £2,000 ceiling — a budget that buys considerably more than most buyers expect. Every ring is available with certified diamonds, coloured diamonds or gemstones as the centre stone, in gold or platinum, and every order includes complimentary insured UK delivery and free resizing for life.
At the entry end, rings such as The Wave Setting at £630 and The Delicate Pave Trilogy at £620 demonstrate that the lower price point does not mean plain or minimal — both carry diamond detail in the setting. Further up, the Luxe Rhiannon Three Stone Sapphire Engagement Ring at £1,771 and the Petite Luxe Twisted Vine Sapphire and Diamond Engagement Ring at £1,548 show how a coloured stone centre — natural sapphire or lab-grown emerald — can deliver scale and visual presence that a budget-matched natural diamond cannot. The £2,000 threshold is not a ceiling on what the ring looks like; it is a budget within which the right decisions matter.
Every diamond above 0.10ct in this collection is independently certified by GIA, IGI or HRD. Every ring is hallmarked at the London Assay Office before delivery. The process is the same regardless of price point: CAD design, a silver or wax sample reviewed at our workshop, casting, hand-finishing, hallmarking and insured dispatch — all within 7–14 working days from order confirmation.
What does an engagement ring under £2,000 buy in the UK?
The UK average engagement ring spend is £2,247 (Bridebook, 2026), which means this budget sits just below the national average — not a bargain tier, but the range in which most UK buyers are actively shopping. Within £2,000, the question is not whether the ring is good; it is which aspects of the ring receive the most investment.
At the lower end of this collection — roughly £600–£900 — you are buying a well-made solitaire or simple trilogy in 9ct or 14ct gold, with a modest centre stone or total diamond weight. The The Baguette Trilogy at £830 and The Majestic Solitaire at £850 are representative: structured settings with real presence, without the premium of 18ct gold or a large centre stone. From roughly £1,100 to £2,000, the budget opens up considerably — 18ct gold becomes accessible, coloured stone centres of meaningful size are achievable, and shoulder diamond detail can be added without compromise. The Nadia Sapphire and Diamond Engagement Ring at £1,155 and the Luxe Willow Sapphire and Diamond Engagement Ring at £1,378 both sit in this range.
Where to stretch: cut grade, carat or metal
Within a fixed budget, every pound spent in one direction is a pound not spent in another. The most consequential decision is where to concentrate the budget — and the answer depends on what the wearer prioritises in daily wear.
Cut grade is the one place it rarely pays to compromise on a diamond centre stone. A poorly cut diamond of higher carat weight will return less light than a well-cut smaller stone, and the difference is immediately visible. Carat weight is where most buyers find room to flex — dropping from 0.70ct to 0.50ct in a well-cut round brilliant, for instance, can free up enough budget to move from 14ct to 18ct gold or to add pavé shoulder detail. Metal choice is more visible in daily wear than most buyers anticipate: 18ct gold carries more intrinsic warmth and density than 9ct, and 950 platinum holds small accent stones more securely over decades. If the ring will be worn continuously, the metal grade is worth the budget.
Lab-grown vs natural diamonds at this budget
Lab-grown diamonds are chemically and optically identical to mined diamonds, certified by the same laboratories — GIA, IGI and HRD all issue grading reports for lab-grown stones — and typically cost 60–80 per cent less per carat at equivalent cut and clarity grades. Within a £2,000 budget, choosing a lab-grown centre stone of 1.00ct or above becomes feasible where a natural equivalent at that weight might sit closer to £3,000–£4,000.
President Jewellers presents both options without advocacy. The practical distinction is resale value — natural diamonds hold secondary market value more reliably, while lab-grown prices have softened considerably in recent years. For buyers who prioritise size and optical quality within a defined budget over long-term value, lab-grown is the rational choice. For buyers who weight provenance or long-term value, natural is worth the smaller carat weight. Either can be set into any ring in this collection; the decision changes only the stone, not the setting, the metal or the craftsmanship.
Coloured stone centres at this budget
At the £2,000 ceiling, a natural sapphire or lab-grown emerald as the centre stone produces visual scale that a same-budget diamond centre often cannot match. A 1.50ct–2.00ct oval sapphire in a three-stone or halo setting reads significantly larger than a 0.50ct round brilliant at the same price, and the colour contrast against white gold or platinum is harder to achieve through diamond selection alone.
Several rings in this collection are built around this principle. The Willow Ring With Sapphire Accents Engagement Ring at £1,221 and its lab-grown emerald counterpart, the Willow Ring With Lab Emerald Accents Engagement Ring at the same price, use the coloured stone not just as a centre but as a design element woven through the shoulders. The Luxe Rhiannon Three Stone Lab Emerald Engagement Ring at £1,705 takes this further, pairing a lab-grown emerald centre with diamond side stones in a three-stone setting. Coloured centre stones in this collection are described as available alternatives to diamond — they are not a compromise; they are a different choice entirely.
PayPal Pay in 3 and how it applies
For orders between £20 and £3,000, PayPal Pay in 3 is available at checkout. Your order is split across three equal payments with no interest: the first payment is made today at checkout, and the remaining two follow monthly over the next two months. This is Buy Now Pay Later, not a loan or credit agreement. For a ring at £1,548, for example, each payment is £516 — spread over three months.
The entire collection shown here — from £620 up to £2,000 — falls within the eligible range. The ring is made to order immediately on confirmation of the first payment; there is no delay to production. If you are comparing options at the upper end of this budget and a specific design sits slightly above what you want to spend in a single transaction, PayPal Pay in 3 makes the full collection accessible without adjusting your selection.
Made to order at President Jewellers
Every ring in this collection is made to order in our Hatton Garden workshop. Lead time is 7–14 working days from order confirmation — simpler solitaires and half-set bands at the faster end, intricate pavé and bespoke designs at the longer end. The process begins with a CAD design shared for approval, followed by a silver or wax sample that can be reviewed in person at the workshop before any precious metal is cast. Casting, setting and finishing are completed in-house; hallmarking is carried out at the London Assay Office; insured UK delivery tracks the ring through to receipt.
Loose stones ordered separately are delivered within 5–7 working days. If you are sourcing a specific certified diamond from our loose diamond inventory to set into a ring from this collection, the combined timeline moves to the ring's standard 7–14 working days once the stone arrives. Every order carries a lifetime warranty against manufacturing defects, free resizing for life, and a 30-day return window — bespoke and engraved orders excepted.
Frequently asked questions
Can you get a good engagement ring for £2,000 in the UK?
Yes, comfortably. The UK average engagement ring spend is £2,247, meaning £2,000 is close to the national midpoint — not a restricted budget. At this level, the choice is not between a good ring and a better ring; it is between different configurations of the same quality. A £2,000 budget can buy an 18ct gold or platinum solitaire with a well-cut certified diamond, a three-stone ring with a sapphire or emerald centre, or a pavé-shoulder design with meaningful total diamond weight. The 414 rings in this collection demonstrate the range of what is available.
What is the "three-month rule" for engagement rings?
The three-month rule — the idea that an engagement ring should cost three months' salary — is a marketing construct that originated in 1980s advertising by De Beers in the United States. It has no basis in tradition, etiquette or practicality. Most UK buyers spend considerably less than three months' net income, and the figure in any given case is determined by the buyer's financial position and what the wearer actually wants to wear daily, not by a formula. The Bridebook 2026 survey places the UK average at £2,247.
What is the cheapest engagement ring available in this collection?
The most affordable rings in this collection begin around £620. At that price, designs such as The Delicate Pave Trilogy include real diamond detail in the setting and are made to the same specifications — CAD design, silver sample, hallmarked at the London Assay Office — as every other ring in the range. Price here reflects total diamond weight and metal grade; it does not reflect the quality of craftsmanship, which is consistent across the collection. Rings at the lower end of the range are well suited to buyers who prioritise setting design over stone size.
What metals are available at this price point?
9ct, 14ct and 18ct gold in white, yellow or rose, plus 950 platinum — all available across this collection. At the lower price points, 9ct gold is the default as it keeps the ring within budget while maintaining the same visual profile as higher-karat options. From roughly £1,000 upward, 18ct gold becomes accessible without sacrificing stone weight. Platinum is available on most designs and is worth considering for any ring that will be worn without removal — it is denser and more resistant to long-term surface wear than gold, and holds small accent stones more securely over time.
How long does a made-to-order engagement ring take?
Seven to fourteen working days from order confirmation. Simpler solitaire and half-set designs sit at the faster end; detailed pavé settings and three-stone commissions with bespoke stone selection sit closer to fourteen days. A CAD rendering is shared before casting begins, and a silver or wax sample is available for review at the Hatton Garden workshop before any final metalwork proceeds. Insured UK delivery is included and tracked. If you need the ring for a specific date, contact us before ordering and we will confirm what is achievable.
Can I use PayPal Pay in 3 on these rings?
Yes. The entire collection falls within the eligible range of £20–£3,000. PayPal Pay in 3 splits your order into three equal payments with no interest: the first is taken today at checkout, the second one month later, and the third one month after that — three payments over three months in total. Production begins immediately on confirmation of the first payment, so there is no delay to your order. This is a Buy Now Pay Later arrangement, not a credit product. It is available directly at checkout with no separate application required.
