Hailey Bieber's Engagement Ring | The Details Behind the Ring
When Justin Bieber proposed to Hailey Baldwin in the Bahamas in July 2018, the ring he placed on her finger quietly became one of the most referenced pieces of bridal jewelry of the decade. No flashy announcement. No over-the-top design. Just an oval diamond on a gold band — and somehow, it said everything.
Years later, the Hailey Bieber engagement ring is still one of the most searched styles in the category. Here's a full breakdown of what makes it work, what changed in 2024, and what to look for if you want a similar aesthetic.
The Original Ring: Simple, Intentional, Exceptional
The original ring was designed by a New York designer with a long history of working with high-profile clients. The piece came together in just a few weeks, with close involvement throughout the process. Diamonds were personally reviewed, examined through a jeweler’s loupe, and selected with a clear vision in mind — something that would complement Hailey’s hands with grace and proportion.

The result was an oval cut diamond estimated between 6 and 10 carats, set on a thin 18-karat yellow gold band. The design was a solitaire — one stone, clean lines, nothing competing for attention.
What most people didn't notice at first was a subtle hidden halo tucked beneath the center stone. It was so discreet that the vast majority of photographs never revealed it. The halo added dimension and a slight lift to the diamond without changing the ring's overall appearance. From most angles, it read as a pure solitaire.
The estimated value at the time was between $400,000 and $500,000. After the commission, Solow & Co. made a $5,000 donation to Hailey's grandmother's charity, the Carol M. Baldwin Breast Cancer Fund — a detail that speaks to the personal nature of the whole process.
What Makes the Oval Cut Work Here
The oval cut diamond was the defining choice. Ovals have always had a following in bridal jewelry, but Hailey's ring accelerated the trend considerably. By the early 2020s, oval diamonds were among the most requested shapes for engagement rings — and her ring is a significant reason why.
The oval's appeal is practical as much as aesthetic. An elongated oval shape creates a larger surface area than a round diamond of equivalent carat weight, which means the stone appears bigger than its weight suggests. It also tends to elongate the finger visually, a quality that many buyers value in a ring they'll wear every day.
The key spec to understand with ovals is the length-to-width ratio. Most oval diamonds fall between 1.34 and 1.42. Hailey's original ring sits within that range, giving it a balanced, classic oval silhouette. Her upgraded ring pushes that ratio higher — more on that below.
One risk with oval cuts is the bow-tie effect: a dark, shadow-like area across the center of the stone caused by how light interacts with the facets when the proportions aren't dialed in. Well-cut ovals avoid this entirely. Both of Hailey's rings do, which is a sign of exceptional diamond quality and cutting skill.
The 2024 Upgrade: Longer, More Elongated, Still Minimal
In May 2024, Hailey and Justin renewed their vows in Hawaii. Around the same time, she debuted a noticeably different ring — a new engagement ring designed by Lorraine Schwartz, whose client roster includes Beyoncé, Kim Kardashian, and Angelina Jolie.
The internet immediately speculated the new stone was 18 carats or more. Hailey corrected the record in W Magazine: the upgrade is just one carat larger than the original. The difference in appearance comes from the shape, not the size.
The new diamond is more elongated than the original — trending toward what jewelers call a "moval," a term for an oval with a noticeably higher length-to-width ratio, typically above 1.5. That higher ratio creates a longer, narrower silhouette that reads as dramatically larger on the hand, even at a modest carat increase. Jeweler Steph Mazuera illustrated the effect clearly: a 2.85-carat elongated oval can appear larger than a 3.08-carat standard oval simply because the elongated stone has more surface area facing upward.

The upgraded ring estimates place the diamond between 7 and 11 carats, with a value multiple experts put in the $1 million to $1.5 million range. The setting shifted from the original's corner prongs to compass-style prongs — a four-prong configuration aligned north, south, east, and west — which adds a subtle modern edge while keeping the overall design clean. The band is also slightly thicker than the original, which makes structural sense given the size of the diamond.
Hailey moved her original engagement ring to her right pinkie and paired the new ring with pavé diamond V-shaped wedding band. The V-band frames the oval beautifully, creating a stack that feels cohesive without being fussy.
Why This Style Has Lasted
The Hailey Bieber engagement ring has remained relevant for over six years because it's built on fundamentals that don't date. The oval cut diamond is flattering on the hand. The yellow gold band adds warmth without demanding attention. The solitaire setting keeps the focus entirely on the stone. There's nothing in the design that will look dated in ten years.

The hidden halo on the original ring is a good example of the design philosophy at work. It's an enhancement that you can barely see — but it adds just enough dimension to elevate the piece without tipping it into excess. That kind of restraint is harder to achieve than it looks.
The influence on bridal trends has been measurable. Elongated ovals and marquise cuts have both seen increased demand since 2024, with jewelers across the industry citing Hailey's upgrade as a contributing factor. Upgrade rings — where couples reset or replace an engagement ring to mark a milestone — have also become more normalized, in part because of the visibility of her ring evolution.
Key Elements to Look For
If the Hailey Bieber engagement ring aesthetic appeals to you, here are the design elements worth focusing on:
Oval cut diamond with attention to the length-to-width ratio. A standard oval (1.34–1.42) gives a classic look. A more elongated oval (above 1.5) gives the moval effect — a longer, slimmer silhouette with a larger face-up appearance relative to carat weight.
Minimal solitaire setting in four prongs. The prong configuration — whether corner or compass-style — affects the ring's character without changing its overall minimalism. Four prongs allow maximum light into the stone and keep the design uncluttered.
18-karat yellow gold band kept slim. Yellow gold is flattering across a wide range of skin tones and pairs naturally with the warmth of an oval diamond. The thin band keeps attention on the stone.
Eye-clean diamond quality. At this aesthetic, a stone with inclusions visible to the naked eye would undercut the entire effect. VS1 or VS2 clarity is the target range — eye-clean without paying flawless premiums.
No bow-tie effect. This isn't something that shows up on a grading report, which means it requires looking at the actual stone — in person or in high-quality video — before buying. It's one of the strongest arguments for working with a jeweler who can physically evaluate diamonds rather than simply listing specs from a datafeed.
Getting This Look Without the Seven-Figure Budget
The good news is that the design principles behind Hailey's ring — oval cut, minimal setting, yellow gold band — are accessible at a wide range of price points. The style doesn't require an 8-carat diamond to work. A 1.5 to 2-carat oval with excellent cut quality, VS2 clarity, and G or H color in a four-prong solitaire on a yellow gold band delivers the same aesthetic character at a fraction of the cost.

Lab grown oval diamonds in particular make this look highly achievable. A 2-carat oval lab grown diamond with the same cut quality and color/clarity specs as a natural stone of equivalent grade costs dramatically less — and looks identical. For buyers who want the Hailey Bieber aesthetic without the Lorraine Schwartz price tag, lab grown is worth serious consideration.
The elongated oval specifically — the moval look — is also available in lab grown material, though it requires more searching since the shape is less common in standard inventory. Working directly with a jeweler who has access to wholesale diamond sources makes that search considerably easier.
Want help finding an oval diamond that fits your style and budget? Tell us what you're looking for — we'll help you find the right stone.

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