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A diamond ring accumulates residue faster than almost any other piece of jewellery. Every time you apply hand cream, wash dishes, touch your face, or simply wear it through the day, a thin film of oil, lotion, and fine particles builds up on the diamond's surface and under the setting. The effect is gradual and easy to miss until you compare your ring under direct light to how it looked the day you received it. The difference is almost always greater than you expected.
The good news: cleaning a diamond ring at home is straightforward, takes under thirty minutes, and requires nothing more than warm water and a drop of dish soap. This guide covers the complete method, what to avoid (some popular suggestions actively damage rings), and how to tailor your cleaning routine to the specific metal your ring is set in. As the jewellers who made your ring in Auckland, we want it to look as good in twenty years as it does today.
Before You Start — One Essential Check
Before placing your ring in any cleaning solution, inspect the setting carefully under a good light source. Look at each prong of the small metal claws that hold the diamond and check that they sit evenly and securely against the stone. Gently move the diamond with your fingertip: it should not shift or rock in any direction.
If any prong appears lifted, bent, or if the diamond moves at all, do not clean the ring at home. Immersing a ring with a compromised setting in water can cause the diamond to loosen further, and a soft brush can dislodge a stone that is already insecure. Bring the ring to a jeweller first TJ Diamond offers complimentary setting inspections at our Auckland studio.
The most important step in cleaning a diamond ring is not the cleaning itself — it is the thirty seconds you spend inspecting the setting beforehand.
The Safest Method: Warm Water and Mild Dish Soap
This is the method recommended by gemologists, professional jewellers, and fine jewellery brands worldwide. It is effective, completely safe for all metals and diamond types, and requires no specialist equipment.
What you need:
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A small bowl
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Warm water (not hot — sudden temperature changes can stress some settings)
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Two to three drops of mild, pH-neutral dish soap
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A soft-bristled toothbrush kept specifically for jewellery
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A lint-free or microfibre cloth
Step-by-Step Method
1. Fill the bowl with warm water and add two to three drops of mild dish soap. Stir gently to combine.
2. Place your ring in the solution and leave it to soak for 20 to 30 minutes. This is the most important step the soak loosens the accumulated oils, hand cream residue, and particles that have built up under the setting. Do not skip or shorten it.
3. Remove the ring and hold it over the bowl (not the sink drain). Using the soft toothbrush, gently brush the diamond from all angles the top, the sides, and underneath through the setting. Use small, circular motions rather than scrubbing strokes. Pay particular attention to the area directly behind the stone and between the prongs, where residue concentrates.
4. Rinse the ring under warm running water. Before rinsing, close the sink drain. Hold the ring securely and rinse thoroughly, ensuring all soap residue is removed from under the setting and between any pavé or accent stones.
5. Gently pat the ring dry with a lint-free or microfibre cloth. Do not rub vigorously this can drag particles across the metal surface. Allow the ring to air dry completely before wearing or storing.
6. Optionally, finish with a gentle buff using a jewellery polishing cloth on the metal band. This restores surface lustre to the gold or platinum without any abrasive risk.
How Often Should You Clean Your Ring?
For rings worn daily, cleaning once a week is the recommended frequency. Regular, light cleaning prevents the gradual accumulation that requires longer soaking and more effort to shift. For rings worn occasionally, clean before each wear.
Weekly home cleaning should be supplemented by a professional cleaning and inspection at your jeweller every six to twelve months. A professional cleaner uses specialist equipment to remove deposits that home cleaning cannot reach particularly inside pavé settings and between very fine prong work. The inspection component is equally important: a professional examines each prong under magnification, identifying wear or damage before it leads to stone loss.
TJ Diamond offers complimentary professional cleaning and inspection at our Auckland studio for all customers no booking required, no charge.
What to Avoid — Common Mistakes That Damage Rings
Several commonly recommended cleaning methods including some that appear in widely shared online guides are actively harmful to diamond rings. Avoid the following:
✗ Toothpaste: contains abrasive micro-particles that scratch gold and white gold settings. Never use it.
✗ Baking soda: mildly abrasive and can react with alloy metals in gold, causing surface dulling. Not safe for rings.
✗ Bleach and chlorine: react chemically with gold alloys causing stress corrosion cracking a structural weakening of the metal that can cause prongs to fail. Remove your ring before using bleach products, entering a swimming pool, or using a hot tub.
✗ Acetone (nail polish remover): can damage softer stones and strip finishes from certain metal treatments. Not suitable for fine jewellery.
✗ Boiling water: sudden temperature changes can crack some gemstones (particularly those with inclusions) and stress prong settings. Never use boiling water.
✗ Abrasive cloths or paper towels: can scratch gold and platinum surfaces. Always use lint-free or microfibre cloths.
✗ Hand sanitiser with daily wear: high-alcohol content sanitisers, used repeatedly while wearing a ring, can dull the finish of gold over time. Remove the ring or allow it to dry before putting it on.
Chlorine is the most commonly underestimated threat to diamond rings. The damage it causes — stress corrosion cracking — is invisible until a prong fails. Always remove your ring before swimming.
Cleaning by Metal Type — Tailoring Your Care Routine
The diamond is the most durable element of your ring. The metal setting requires more nuanced care, and different metals have different specific considerations.
18ct Yellow Gold
Yellow gold is the most forgiving metal for home cleaning. The warm soap-and-water method is completely safe for 18ct yellow gold and can be used as frequently as needed. Avoid abrasives and chlorine. Yellow gold develops a natural patina over time, a soft satin finish from micro-scratches accumulated through wear. Many owners prefer this to the fresh polish of a new ring; if you prefer the polished look, your jeweller can restore it professionally.
18ct White Gold
White gold requires slightly more care because it is typically rhodium-plated coated with a thin layer of rhodium to achieve its bright, silvery appearance. Rhodium is durable but is gradually worn away by everyday use, chemical exposure, and abrasive cleaning. To maximise the life of your rhodium plating, use only the warm soap-and-water method, avoid abrasives of any kind, and remove the ring before using cleaning products or entering chlorinated water. When rhodium plating wears through typically every one to three years depending on use the yellow gold beneath will show through as a warm tint. Re-plating is a quick and affordable jeweller service; TJ Diamond offers rhodium replating at our Auckland studio. Contact us about ring maintenance
18ct Rose Gold
Rose gold gets its distinctive pink tone from a higher copper content in the alloy. Copper is more reactive than gold, which means rose gold requires attentive care around chemicals. The warm soap-and-water method is perfectly safe. Avoid bleach, chlorine, and any acid-based cleaners. Rose gold does not require rhodium plating and its colour is stable over time — it will not change with normal wear and correct cleaning.
Platinum
Platinum is the most durable and chemically inert of all precious metals used in fine jewellery. It does not tarnish, does not require plating, and is not affected by chlorine in the way gold alloys are. The warm soap-and-water method is ideal. Platinum develops a natural patina, a gentle haziness over time through wear, which many owners value as evidence of age and use. A jeweller can restore the mirror finish with professional polishing if preferred.
A Note on Lab-Grown Diamonds — The Same Care Applies
Lab-grown diamonds are chemically and physically identical to natural diamonds, the same Mohs hardness of 10, the same chemical composition, the same optical properties. They respond identically to all cleaning methods. If you own a lab-grown diamond ring from TJ Diamond, every instruction in this guide applies in exactly the same way. There is no difference in care requirements between a natural and a lab-grown diamond. Learn more about lab-grown diamonds NZ
Storing Your Diamond Ring Between Cleans
How you store your ring between cleans affects how quickly it accumulates residue and whether other jewellery can damage it. Diamonds, the hardest substance on the Mohs scale, can scratch other gemstones and even other diamonds if stored in contact with them. Gold and platinum can be scratched by harder materials.
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Store your ring in a dedicated ring box, a fabric-lined ring dish, or a soft pouch separately from other jewellery
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Avoid storing rings in contact with other rings or bracelets that could cause scratching
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Remove your ring before applying hand cream, perfume, or hairspray these are the primary sources of residue accumulation
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Remove your ring before any activity involving heavy lifting, gardening, or manual work this protects both the metal and the diamond from impact
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Consider removing your ring before bed if you move significantly during sleep rolling onto a prong-set ring can bend the prongs over time
When to Visit Your Jeweller
Home cleaning maintains your ring's appearance between professional services; it does not replace them. Visit your jeweller for a professional clean and inspection:
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Every six to twelve months for rings worn daily
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If you notice any cloudiness that does not resolve after home cleaning (may indicate residue under the diamond requiring professional removal)
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If a prong feels sharp against the skin, appears bent, or if the diamond rocks or shifts even slightly
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After any impact dropping a ring on a hard surface, or knocking it against a hard edge, can damage prongs invisibly
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Before any period of extended storage clean the ring thoroughly and have it inspected before putting it away
TJ Diamond offers complimentary cleaning and inspection at our Auckland studio for all customers. We also offer prong tightening, rhodium replating, and stone resetting under our lifetime manufacturing warranty. Explore our engagement ring collection
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: How often should I clean my diamond ring at home? |
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Cleaning your diamond ring at home once a week is the ideal frequency for rings worn daily. Regular cleaning prevents the gradual build-up of body oils, hand creams, soap residue, and environmental particles that accumulate under the setting and between prongs — all of which reduce the diamond's brilliance over time. If you wear hand cream frequently or work in an environment with fine particles, cleaning every few days is reasonable. For rings worn occasionally, clean before each wear to restore full sparkle. Weekly home cleaning should be combined with a professional inspection and cleaning at your jeweller every six to twelve months. |
Q2: Can I use toothpaste to clean a diamond ring? |
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No. Toothpaste should never be used to clean a diamond ring. Most toothpastes contain abrasive micro-particles designed to polish tooth enamel — but those same particles will scratch softer metals like gold and white gold, dulling the surface over time. Toothpaste can also leave residue in fine prong settings that is difficult to remove without professional cleaning. The safe and effective alternative is warm water with a small amount of mild dish soap — it dissolves oils and residue without any risk to the metal or setting. |
Q3: Is it safe to clean a diamond ring with baking soda? |
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No. Baking soda is mildly abrasive and should not be used on diamond rings. While it is commonly suggested in home cleaning guides, baking soda can scratch 18ct gold, white gold, and rose gold surfaces with repeated use. It can also react with alloy metals in the ring, causing surface dulling over time. The only safe DIY cleaning solution for a diamond ring is warm water and a small amount of mild, pH-neutral dish soap — no abrasives, no harsh chemicals, no baking soda. |
Q4: Will bleach or chlorine damage my diamond ring? |
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Yes. Bleach, chlorine, and other harsh chemicals can cause significant and sometimes irreversible damage to diamond rings. Chlorine in particular reacts with the alloy metals in gold settings — including 18ct yellow gold, white gold, and rose gold — causing a process called stress corrosion cracking, which weakens the metal at a structural level. This damage is cumulative and may not be immediately visible but can ultimately cause prongs to fail and stones to fall out. Always remove your diamond ring before using bleach, cleaning products, entering a swimming pool, or using a hot tub. |
Q5: Can I use an ultrasonic cleaner on a diamond ring? |
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Ultrasonic cleaners can be used on solid diamond rings in secure prong settings, but with important caveats. The high-frequency vibrations these machines produce are excellent at dislodging accumulated dirt from tight spaces — but those same vibrations can loosen stones that are already slightly insecure in their settings, and can damage fragile settings such as pavé, channel set, or very fine filigree. Before using an ultrasonic cleaner, inspect the ring under magnification to confirm all stones are secure. If in any doubt, use the warm water and soap method instead, or bring the ring to a professional. |
Q6: How do I clean the underside of a diamond ring setting? |
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The underside of a diamond ring setting — directly beneath the stone — is the area most prone to oil and residue accumulation, because it is in constant contact with the skin. After soaking the ring in warm, soapy water for 20–30 minutes, use a soft-bristled toothbrush (kept specifically for jewellery) to gently brush in circular motions across the back of the setting, under the prongs, and between any gallery wires. Work gently — the goal is to dislodge residue, not to scrub. Rinse under warm running water with the drain closed, and dry with a lint-free cloth. |
Q7: Does cleaning affect lab-grown diamonds differently to natural diamonds? |
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No. Lab-grown diamonds are chemically and physically identical to natural diamonds — they have the same hardness (Mohs 10), the same refractive index, and the same resistance to cleaning agents. The exact same cleaning methods apply to both: warm water and mild dish soap, gentle brushing with a soft toothbrush, and avoidance of abrasives, bleach, and harsh chemicals. The metal setting (gold or platinum) is the component that varies in care requirements — not the diamond itself, regardless of whether it is natural or lab-grown. |
Q8: How do I clean a white gold diamond ring without dulling the rhodium plating? |
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White gold rings are rhodium-plated to achieve their bright, silvery appearance. Rhodium plating is durable but can be dulled by abrasive cleaning methods or harsh chemicals. To clean a white gold diamond ring safely, use only warm water and a very small amount of mild dish soap. Soak for 20–30 minutes, brush gently with a soft toothbrush, rinse thoroughly, and dry with a soft, lint-free cloth. Avoid any abrasive cleaners, ultrasonic cleaning unless the ring is newly plated and the setting is solid, and prolonged soaking in any soap solution. Rhodium plating naturally wears over time with daily use and can be re-applied by a jeweller — TJ Diamond offers this service at our Auckland studio. |
Q9: When should I take my diamond ring to a professional jeweller for cleaning? |
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A professional inspection and cleaning is recommended every six to twelve months for rings worn daily. A professional clean uses specialised equipment to remove accumulated deposits that home cleaning cannot address — particularly from under settings and inside pavé rows. More importantly, a professional inspection checks that all prongs are intact, stones are secure, and the setting shows no signs of wear that could lead to stone loss. TJ Diamond offers complimentary professional cleaning and inspection at our Auckland studio as part of our lifetime manufacturing warranty — no appointment needed for existing customers. |