The details.

Titanium handles whatever you throw at it — farm work, rugby, the workshop, tramping. It's aircraft-grade light on your hand and doesn't pick up scratches from everyday gear and knocks. Hypoallergenic, so it works for blokes who react to cheaper metals. The curved interior fit is comfortable through a long day outside. Titanium won't corrode in harsh conditions and needs zero maintenance beyond a rinse. If you want something that just does the job without fuss, this is a solid option.

What 10 owners actually say.

Average 4.8 / 5 across 10 verified reviews.

Jordan D.★★★★★

Love the 2nd ring I received, the ease of returning and getting a refund on the extra cost was amazing. Great company to deal with, would highly recommend to anyone!

Apr 4
Chris D.★★★

This is a nice ring, but the Matt section in the middle is much darker than shown in the image.

Mar 19
James S.★★★★★

This is the second ring I’ve bought from mensringsonline and they’ve hit the nail on the head again, stunning ring with prompt delivery. Seriously impressed.

Jan 27
Paul N.★★★★★

Great quality ring. Great tool for resizing too.

Jan 7
Shannyn M.★★★★★

Prompt delivery and great service.

Jun 1
Cara★★★★★

i purchased the ring Wednesday night for our wedding and the speed it came to us was amazing and couldn't believe how smooth the process was and the ring itself looks so amazing its blown me away. I will always recommend Mens Rings Online to anyone who is looking at mens rings. i wish could give it more than a 5 star rating. AMAZING, BLOWN AWAY, COULDN'T FAULT IT

May 11

Caring for your Titanium ring

Titanium is about 45% lighter than steel but still corrosion-proof, so it shrugs off salt water, sweat, chlorine and household cleaners without tarnishing. Wash it once a week with warm water and a drop of dish soap, work a soft toothbrush around any inlays or grooves, then pat dry. The surface can pick up fine hairline scratches over time — these can be re-brushed with a green scotch-brite pad if you prefer the matte look, or polished out by any NZ jeweller for a small fee.

Remove the ring for heavy lifting, climbing or anything where the finger could be crushed, because titanium is harder to cut than gold and emergency staff will need bolt cutters or a diamond-tipped saw. Otherwise it is one of the most wearable metals — fully hypoallergenic, hypothermic-friendly (it warms to skin temperature quickly), and unaffected by the iodine-rich coastal air found across most of NZ.

Common questions about Titanium rings

Is titanium stronger than tungsten?

Titanium is tougher (it bends before it breaks) while tungsten is harder (it resists scratches but can shatter on impact). For a tradie or farmer who drops things, titanium is the safer choice; for someone chasing a permanent mirror polish, tungsten wins. Both outlast gold on a busy hand.

Can a titanium ring be resized in New Zealand?

Most NZ jewellers can resize a plain titanium band up or down by one half-size using a stretching mandrel, but rings with inlays, grooves or anodised colour generally cannot be resized. If you're between sizes, order the larger one — a sizing bead can always be added later.

Will titanium react with seawater or pool chlorine?

No. Titanium is the same alloy used in marine and surgical implants, so saltwater swimming, surf trips and chlorinated pools cause zero corrosion or discolouration. Just rinse with fresh water afterwards to stop salt crystals collecting under the band.

How heavy is a titanium ring compared to gold?

A typical 8mm titanium band weighs around 4–5 grams, versus 12–15 grams for the same shape in 9ct gold. Most NZ buyers describe it as feeling like "barely wearing a ring" — useful for office workers, gym-goers, and anyone not used to wearing jewellery.

Considering alternatives?

Titanium and tungsten rings are the two most-compared modern metals on this site. Titanium wins on weight, comfort and resizability; tungsten wins on shine retention and scratch resistance. Both are priced well below gold and ship free across NZ.