Platinum vs White Gold
By Jared James · Last updated 18 May 2026
Quick answer
Both metals look very similar when polished, but they behave differently over decades. Platinum stays white forever, never needs plating and holds stones more securely. White gold is lighter, less expensive upfront and needs rhodium replating every two to three years for daily wear. Most of the decision comes down to maintenance, weight and budget.
The difference between platinum and white gold
Platinum is a denser, rarer precious metal used at 95 per cent purity. It is naturally white, stays white forever and holds stones more securely than gold over time. White gold is gold alloyed with palladium and silver, then plated with rhodium for the bright white finish. The plating wears off and needs redoing every two to three years for a ring worn daily.
Freshly polished, the two metals look almost identical. The differences show up over years of wear, in weight on the hand, and in price.
Platinum vs white gold side by side
| Feature | Platinum | White gold |
|---|---|---|
| Composition | 95% platinum with iridium or ruthenium | Gold alloyed with palladium and silver, plated with rhodium |
| Natural colour | White, permanent | Faint grey-yellow, plated white |
| Replating | Never needed | Every 2 to 3 years for daily wear |
| How it ages | Develops a soft satin patina, no metal lost | Plating wears, warm underlying alloy shows through |
| Weight | Around 60% heavier than 14k gold | Lighter, feels softer on the hand |
| Hypoallergenic | Yes, 95% pure | Usually yes with palladium alloys; older nickel-based alloys can react |
| Setting price (typical) | $800 to $3,000 more than the same setting in white gold | Reference price for comparison |
Does white gold turn yellow?
White gold can look warmer or slightly yellow over time. The underlying alloy is a faint grey-yellow, and white gold gets its bright white from a thin rhodium plating. As that plating wears, especially on the underside of the band where the ring rubs fingers, the warmer alloy starts to show through. A rhodium re-plate brings the bright finish back.
Platinum is naturally white and stays white forever. It does not need plating. With wear, it picks up microscopic scratches that build into a soft satin patina. Many buyers come to prefer the patina; others polish it back to a bright finish once or twice a year.
Is platinum stronger than white gold?
Both metals are very durable for daily wear. The key difference is how they handle scratches. Gold scratches lose tiny amounts of metal each time. Platinum scratches push metal aside without losing it. Over decades, that adds up. Platinum prongs hold stones more securely than white gold prongs because less metal has worn away.
In the first five to ten years, the difference is small. For an engagement ring meant to last generations, the platinum advantage matters more.
Is platinum heavier than white gold?
Yes. Platinum is denser than gold. The same ring made in platinum weighs around 60 per cent more than in 14k white gold. Some buyers love the weight on the hand, others find it less comfortable. If you can, try a ring in both metals before deciding.
Skin sensitivity and nickel
Platinum is naturally hypoallergenic at 95 per cent purity. It rarely causes reactions and is the safest choice for sensitive skin. Most modern white gold uses palladium-based alloys and is also safe for most people. Older or cheaper white gold may contain nickel, which is the most common cause of metal allergies. If you know you react to nickel, ask which alloy is used before buying.
Platinum vs white gold price
Platinum settings typically cost 30 to 50 per cent more than the same setting in white gold. The premium comes from platinum being denser (more metal by weight), rarer and harder to work.
Across decades of ownership, the gap narrows because platinum needs no replating. A white gold ring worn daily will likely need replating ten or more times across a lifetime, and that adds up. Total cost of ownership is closer to white gold than the headline price suggests, though platinum still costs more overall.
Platinum or white gold for an engagement ring
Choose platinum if you want a metal that stays white forever, holds the stone more securely over decades and is the safest choice for sensitive skin. Choose white gold if you prefer a lighter ring, want to keep the metal budget lower and do not mind a rhodium re-plate every two to three years.
The centre stone matters too. For a valuable diamond worn every day, platinum prongs are the more secure choice. For a moissanite or smaller diamond, white gold saves money for size or quality.
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Browse engagement ringsFrequently asked questions
- Is platinum better than white gold?
- For low maintenance, the most secure prongs over decades and a metal that stays white without plating, yes. For a lighter ring or for keeping more of the budget on the centre stone, white gold is a sensible alternative. Both are durable enough for daily wear.
- Does platinum tarnish?
- No. Platinum does not tarnish, rust or change colour. Worn daily, it develops a soft satin patina from microscopic surface scratches; this is not tarnish and can be polished out at any time.
- Does white gold turn yellow?
- White gold can look warmer or slightly yellow as the rhodium plating wears thin. The underlying gold alloy is a faint grey-yellow, so as the plating thins the warmer tone shows through. A rhodium re-plate restores the bright white finish.
- How often does white gold need replating?
- Every two to three years for a ring worn daily. Less often for pieces worn occasionally. You can wait longer between replating if you do not mind the warmer underlying tone showing through.
- Is platinum harder than white gold?
- Both are very durable. Platinum is denser and holds stones more securely over decades because it pushes aside rather than loses metal when scratched. 14k white gold has a harder surface but loses tiny amounts of metal with each scratch.
- Can you mix platinum and white gold in one stack?
- Yes. Many buyers wear a platinum engagement ring with a white gold wedding band, or the other way around. When both are freshly polished they read very similar; minor differences may show as they age differently.
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