Victoria Beckham, Dua Lipa, and Rihanna Are Repping This Surprising Ring Trend

Dua Lipa and her pink ring
Photo: Instagram (@dualipa)

We’ve seen King Charles wear his faithfully since 1969, but pinky rings have long since outgrown the aristocratic associations. Once a marker of lineage and tradition, a pinky ring is now the perfect platform on which its wearer signals their personal style—a tiny stage for diamonds, stacks, or just a single, simple gold band.

Though pinky rings were once reserved for men, today, women are some of their biggest buyers. We need only look at Retrouvaí’s modern talisman signets, Cece Jewellery’s hand-painted enamel miniatures, or Shola Branson’s mélange pavé setting to see how the pinky has become a playground for personal expression. At Michael Rider’s debut Celine collection for spring 2026, signets and stacks featured heavily. Rings were piled on every finger, with golden signets anchoring hands in the midst of layered bracelets and chunky jewelry.

Michael Riders debut Celine collection for spring 2026 was heavy on the jewelry—pinky rings included.

Michael Rider’s debut Celine collection for spring 2026 was heavy on the jewelry—pinky rings included.

Celine spring 2026.

Celine spring 2026.

Pop culture has only amplified the allure. Tony Soprano, Marlon Brando, and countless other on-screen antiheroes wore theirs like a badge of toughness—even when worn by historical female figures, the pinky ring existed as a sort of talisman of masculinity. Today, that symbolism still exists, but there are newer messages a modern pinky can send. Case in point: Victoria Beckham’s recent Netflix documentary portrait, featuring a dainty heart-shaped diamond pinky ring. Unlike the traditional signet which consumes the majority of the finger’s circumference, Beckham’s prong-set pinky ring sat delicately perched, sealing the diamond pinky’s status as a more feminine power play. Emily Ratajkowski famously turned her pinky ring into a divorce declaration, stacking her “self-marriage” ring on her little finger post-split. Hailey Bieber can usually be seen sporting a delicate pinky stack, and then there’s Rihanna’s various diamond clusters, which she seems to place wherever she can find space—toes and pinkies included.

Hailey Bieber pinky ring
Photo: Instagram (@haileybieber)

Designer Jean Prounis thinks of the pinky as “the final punctuation in a person’s ensemble, like an anchor of truth.” She keeps five different pinky rings on rotation, and chooses them based on mood: “Garnet is for serious—big conversations, meetings, intention-setting—while star sapphire is for welcoming in good vibes, and faceted pink sapphire is for feeling dressy and a little bit out on the town.”

Dua Lipa and her pink ring

Dua Lipa with a fistful of rings, including diamonds on her pinky finger.

Photo: Instagram (@dualipa)

For Prounis, the pinky is also the best ring to pair with a watch. I agree, It’s a good balance, perhaps a little tomboyish, but refined. She’s also a fan of diamond pinky rings, particularly for men. “Certain shapes are nice for a diamond pinky, emerald cut, east-west settings, things that feel unexpected but classic,” Prounis says.

Perfect Magazine  Burberry Celebrate Kate Moss  Ray Winstone For Launch Of Issue 8.5 At The Lavery pinky ring

Supermodel Kate Moss wearing a pinky ring.

Photo: Getty Images

The pinky ring has long been more than just an accessory—it’s a signifier. In Black culture, gold pinky rings have been a quiet but potent symbol of success and self-definition for decades, especially in music. Rappers in the ’80s and ’90s used them as markers of having “made it,” a visible reminder that wealth could be worn proudly. In Latinx communities, gold pinkies are tied to Chicano style and lowrider culture—a part of a larger, deliberate aesthetic. They’re worn as markers of loyalty, family and self-respect. In queer history, the pinky ring served as a subtle way to signal community when overt displays weren’t safe.

And then there’s the pinky-ring bachelor lore. As my friend Thom Bettridge, creative director and editor-in-chief of i-D, puts it: “A pinky ring is a must-have accessory for any bachelor, until you’re ready for the ring on the next finger over. There’s something very effete about wearing a ring on your little finger. For men, I suggest leaning into that and getting something that’s normally made for women, but in a large size. My only don’t: please don’t wear a signet unless it’s actually from your school or family.”

Historically, the signet was the ultimate everyday object, worn constantly, used to stamp letters, and passed down through generations. The diamond pinky is its glamorous foil: impractical, unnecessary, and all the better for it.

Maybe that’s the pinky ring’s real power: it’s the smallest finger but insists on a starring role. In an era when fashion is piling it on—from Celine’s gold-anchored hands to Rihanna’s diamond-encrusted stacks—the diamond pinky might be the most subtle, indifferently effortless, way to wear precious stones. Oh this? I just had one lying around.