Where to buy an engagement ring in Zurich, 2026.

  1. Beyer Watches & Jewellery
  2. Bucherer Fine Jewellery
  3. Gübelin
  4. Les Ambassadeurs
  5. Meister 1881
  6. Galli Uhren Bijouterie
  7. Kurz Schmuck und Uhren
  8. La Serlas
  9. Péclard Juwelier
  10. Türler
  11. Celinni Zurich
  12. Stellini Diamonds
  13. Christ Uhren und Schmuck
  1. Cartier
  2. Tiffany & Co.
  3. Bvlgari
  4. Van Cleef & Arpels
  5. Chopard
  6. Graff
  7. Harry Winston
  8. Buccellati
  9. Piaget
  10. Wempe
  11. Boucheron
  12. Pomellato
  1. Diamond Online
  2. Celinni Zurich
  3. Whiteflash
  4. BAUNAT Zurich
  5. Blue Nile
  6. DiamAlps
  7. 123GOLD
  8. Adiamor
  9. Brilliant Earth
  10. Stellini Diamonds
  11. Green World Diamonds
  12. Do Diamond
  1. ELIZZA
  2. Ann Perica
  3. Giselle Jewelry
  4. IRALIS Jewelry
  5. EVELYNE-M
  6. LOEV
  7. La Serlas
  8. Lesunja Fine Jewellery
  9. VALQUÈRE
  10. Frank Darling
  11. Almog Swiss
  12. Oberturm
  13. Thaíz Jewellery
  1. Niessing
  2. Georg Jensen
  3. Capolavoro
  4. Marco Bicego
  5. Ole Lynggaard Copenhagen
  6. Tamara Comolli
  7. Vhernier
  8. Fope
  9. Gellner
  10. IsabelleFa
  11. Schullin Wien
  1. Messerer Juwelier
  2. Pérez Goldschmied
  3. cloud8 Claudia Stebler
  4. OBSESSION Goldschmiede
  5. Crafting Lab Zurich
  6. Feingold Zürich
  7. Goldschmiede Atelier Tessa
  8. Krösus Design
  9. Loco d'Oro
  10. AguaDeOro
  11. les Millionnaires
  12. Sahak Fine Swiss Jewellery
  13. Thaiz Jewellery
  14. Almog Swiss
  1. Furrer-Jacot
  2. mojo design
  3. August Gerstner
  4. Christian Bauer
  5. egf Manufaktur
  6. Fischer Trauringe
  7. LABHART Chronometrie and Goldschmiede
  8. Rauschmayer
  9. Linden Trauringe
  10. Saint Maurice
  11. Zenubia Trauringe
  12. Central Trauringe
  1. Koller Auktionen
  2. Régine Giroud
  3. Berganza
  4. Schuler Auktionen
  5. Sotheby's Zurich
  6. Vintage Diamonds
  7. Vintage Jewellery Zürich
  8. Dobiaschofsky Auktionen
  9. Harry Hofmann
  10. Iskenderian
  11. Lang Antiques
  12. Stephanie Bohm Antiken Schmuck
  1. VRAI
  2. COURBET
  3. Kimaï
  4. Novita Diamonds
  5. Clean Origin
  6. Labgrownlove
  7. Skydiamond
  8. Barry's Juwelier
  9. MiaDonna
  10. Tim and Co.
  11. With Clarity
  12. Dear Darling Berlin
  1. 77 Diamonds
  2. Taylor and Hart
  3. Angara
  4. Diamonds Factory
  5. Gemmyo
  6. Steven Stone
  7. Auronia
  8. Capucinne
  9. Diamondere
  10. Queensmith
  11. Frank Darling
  12. Glamira
  1. Gübelin
  2. Meister 1881
  3. Beyer Watches and Jewellery
  4. Giselle Jewelry
  5. La Serlas
  6. Celinni
  7. Lesunja Fine Jewellery
  8. Taylor and Hart
  9. 77 Diamonds
  10. Brilliant Earth
  11. Thaiz Jewellery
  12. Capucinne
  13. Angara
  14. Diamondere
  1. Gübelin
  2. Furrer Jacot
  3. La Serlas
  4. Iralis Jewelry
  5. Green World Diamonds
  6. Meister Schmuck
  7. Taylor and Hart
  8. Christian Bauer
  9. 77 Diamonds
  10. Angara
  11. Blue Nile
  12. Brilliant Earth
  1. Niessing
  2. Furrer Jacot
  3. Beyer Watches and Jewellery
  4. Bucherer
  5. Elizza
  6. Loev
  7. Meister 1881
  8. Queensmith
  9. Christian Bauer
  10. Almog Swiss
  11. Georg Jensen
  12. Blue Nile
  1. Signum Fair Jewels
  2. AGUAdeORO
  3. Brilliant Earth
  4. Green World Diamonds
  5. Iralis Jewelry
  6. Skydiamond
  7. Unique Eden
  8. VRAI
  9. Taylor and Hart
  10. Courbet
  11. Kimai
  12. Capucinne
  1. Beyer Watches and Jewellery
  2. Gübelin
  3. Meister 1881
  4. Ann Perica
  5. Juwelier Damken
  6. Goldschmiede Felicia Wettstein
  7. Messerer Juwelier
  8. Thaiz Jewellery
  9. Steinlin Zurich
  10. OBSESSION Goldschmiede
  11. Purajoya Jewelry
  1. Charles & Colvard
  2. Brilliant Earth
  3. MoissaniteCo
  4. My Moissanite
  5. Flawless Moissanite
  6. Capucinne
  7. With Clarity
  8. Angara
  9. Gema&Co
  10. Kobelli
  11. Glamira
  12. Diamonds Factory

A guide to Zurich's jewellers and ring makers, from the Bahnhofstrasse houses to independent bespoke studios. See what each one is known for and where to start.

Where to buy an engagement ring in Zurich

This is a directory of jewellers, diamond dealers, and small ring studios working in and around Zurich. We put it together for one job: helping you find a maker or shop you can actually trust with one of the more expensive and more personal purchases you’ll make. Every listing here was chosen by hand. The order reflects quality, judged from how each business performs plus our own editorial judgement.

How we choose and rank the listings

We list real businesses with a working website and a verifiable presence, whether that’s a shop on the Bahnhofstrasse, a workshop in Kreis 4, or an appointment-only studio. Each entry gets a short, honest summary written in our own words: what they make, who they tend to suit, and anything worth knowing before you visit. We don’t dress up a generalist chain as a specialist atelier, and we say so when a place is better for wedding bands than for a solitaire.

Ranking comes down to quality. We weigh how each business performs with readers against an editorial assessment we set ourselves, based on the quality and clarity of what a business offers. We recompute the order on a schedule from those signals, so it shifts slowly rather than being frozen.

The four Cs, in plain terms

If you’re buying a diamond, four things drive both how it looks and what it costs. Cut is how well the stone is shaped and polished, and it does the most for how much a diamond sparkles, so it’s the one worth prioritising. Colour is graded from D (no tint) down through the alphabet; most people can’t tell a G or H from a colourless stone once it’s set, which makes those grades good value. Clarity describes internal marks; many flaws are invisible without magnification, so “eye-clean” matters more than chasing a flawless grade. Carat is weight, not size, and price climbs steeply at round numbers like 1.0ct, so a 0.9ct stone can cost noticeably less and look almost identical.

Setting a budget and choosing where to buy

Decide your number before you walk in, and treat it as a ceiling rather than a target. Skipping a few colour or clarity grades that you can’t see with the naked eye is the easiest way to spend less without the ring looking cheaper.

Zurich gives you a few clear routes. Buying from stock on the Bahnhofstrasse is the quickest path: you see the finished ring, try it on, and take it home, though the range is whatever’s in the case that day. Going bespoke at a small studio takes longer, usually several weeks, and lets you shape the setting, metal, and stone around a specific idea or budget. A third option is to choose a loose diamond first, compare it against its grading report, then have a jeweller set it; this separates the stone decision from the design decision and often makes pricing easier to read. Lab-grown diamonds are worth considering too: they’re chemically the same as mined stones and cost less per carat, though resale value is uncertain, so think of them as something to wear rather than an investment. Whichever route you take, ask for the grading report on any diamond over roughly half a carat.

Suggest a listing

Know a Zurich jeweller or ring maker who belongs here, or run one yourself? You can submit a listing for us to review. We read every suggestion and add the ones that fit.

A quick note

We list and describe these businesses; we’re not affiliated with any of them and don’t take a cut of what you spend. Details like opening hours, stock, lead times, and prices change, so confirm anything that matters directly with the jeweller before you visit or buy.