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Your Complete Guide to Buying a 22ct Gold Bracelet

Gold bracelets are one of the most misunderstood purchases in jewellery. Buyers often focus on how a piece looks in a photograph — not its weight, construction, or whether it will hold up to daily life. This guide explains what actually matters before you buy.

22ct Gold Bracelet Weight Guide

Gold bracelets are priced primarily by weight. A heavier bracelet contains more gold and costs more — but it also feels more substantial on the wrist and is generally more durable. Here is what to expect:

CategoryTypical WeightPrice Rangeİçin En İyisi
Hafif3 – 6gFrom ~£250Daily wear, office, gifting
Mid-weight7 – 12g~£580 – £1,000Regular wear, occasions, layering
Statement / Occasion13 – 25g+~£1,100 – £2,100+Shaadi, mehndi, special celebrations
Men’s bracelets10 – 30g+From ~£850Daily wear, wedding, statement

Gold Bracelet Styles for Women

The style of bracelet you choose affects how it wears day-to-day — not just how it looks. Here is a practical breakdown of the main styles in our ladies collection:

Ladies’ Bracelet Styles — What Each One Is
  • Chain bracelet (pattli): Flat or linked gold chain worn around the wrist. Lightweight, flexible, the most popular choice for daily wear. Available in figaro, foxtail, and box link styles.
  • Tennis bracelet: A single row of identical links — plain gold or stone-set. Lies flat against the wrist. Suitable for office wear and formal occasions.
  • Charm bracelet: A chain bracelet with decorative pendants or charms attached. Often personalised — initials, religious symbols, evil eye, or birthstones. Popular as a birthday or Eid gift.
  • Fancy / statement bracelet: Heavier, more decorative designs — wide gold panels, filigree work, or heavily embellished styles. Worn for weddings, receptions, and festive occasions. Not designed for daily use.
  • Paunchi / traditional bracelet: A broader, often rigid gold bracelet typically worn by brides as part of a full bridal set. Often gifted by the groom’s family at the wedding. Pairs with a matching necklace and earrings.

How to Choose the Right Bracelet Length

Bracelet length is measured around the wrist, with a small amount of allowance for comfortable movement. Most ready-made bracelets are 17–18cm for women and 19–21cm for men. Here is how to measure:

  • Measure wrist circumference with a tape
  • Women’s daily wear: wrist + 1–1.5cm
  • Women’s loose/dressy: wrist + 2–2.5cm
  • Men’s: wrist + 1.5–2cm
  • Standard ladies length: 17–18cm
  • Standard men’s length: 20–21cm

Not sure? Most PureJewels bracelets can be adjusted by one link either way. If you are between sizes, order the larger size — it is easier to remove a link than to add one.

What Is the Difference Between a Bangle and a Bracelet?

This question comes up constantly — and the answer is simpler than most people expect.

Bangle vs Bracelet — The Practical Difference
  • A bangle is a rigid circular piece — it does not flex or open. You slide it over the hand. It is a fixed diameter and makes a distinctive sound when worn in a stack. Traditional Indian and Asian jewellery is overwhelmingly bangle-form — kangan, churi, kada, pola.
  • A bracelet has a clasp or is flexible — it wraps and fastens. Chain bracelets, tennis bracelets, charm bracelets, and most Western-style wrist jewellery are bracelets.
  • The term is used interchangeably in everyday conversation. At PureJewels, we separate them clearly: rigid pieces are listed under Bangles and flexible pieces under Bracelets.
 

Gold Bracelet as a Gift — Occasions Guide

Gold Bracelet as Eidi

A lightweight chain bracelet (3–6g) is the most popular Eid gift for daughters, sisters, and nieces. Elegant, practical, and a real keepsake. A charm bracelet with a meaningful initial or religious symbol adds personalisation without extra cost.

Paunchi & Bridal Bracelets

At a South Asian wedding, the bride’s bracelets are part of the saat lakh — the traditional gold set gifted before the ceremony. A heavier gold paunchi or matched bracelet set (usually 15–25g per piece) is expected. These are coordinated with the bridal necklace and earrings.

Milestone Gifting

Gold bracelets are gifted across milestone birthdays (18th, 21st, 50th), new jobs, exam success, and new arrivals in the family. A 5–8g ladies chain bracelet hits the right balance of meaningful and not overly extravagant.

Festive & Pooja Gifts

Gifting gold during Diwali is considered auspicious — Dhanteras (the day before Diwali) is the single biggest day for gold purchases in the UK South Asian community. A bracelet is a practical and lasting gift that is worn long after the festival ends.

What People Are Searching For — Regional Names

Gold bracelets are known across UK communities as:

  • Paunchi Hindi / Punjabi — bridal bracelet
  • Kangan Hindi / Urdu — wrist ornament
  • Pathak Bengali
  • Valai Tamil
  • Kad Gujarati
  • Kara Punjabi — rigid band
  • Pola Bengali — bridal bangle/bracelet
  • Gold pattli Chain bracelet — common search term
  • 22ct gold kara UK
  • Asian gold bracelet UK
  • Indian bracelet for women UK
  • Sona paunchi

Frequently Asked Questions About Gold Bracelets

How many grams is a typical 22ct gold bracelet?

A typical ladies daily wear gold bracelet weighs 3–6g. Mid-weight bracelets for regular wear or gifting run 7–12g. Statement and bridal bracelets start at 13g and can reach 25g or more. Men’s bracelets are generally heavier — 10–30g depending on style. All our product listings show the exact gram weight so you can compare across the range.

Measure your wrist circumference and add 1–1.5cm for a snug daily wear fit, or 2–2.5cm for a looser, dressier feel. Most women’s wrists fall between 15–17cm, making a 17–18cm bracelet the right choice. Men’s wrists typically fall between 17–19cm — a 20–21cm bracelet sits comfortably. If you are unsure, order the longer size. We offer a free first-order exchange.

A bangle is a rigid, circular piece that you slide over the hand — it has no clasp. A bracelet has a clasp or is flexible, wrapping around the wrist and fastening. Bangles are the traditional form in South Asian jewellery (kangan, churi, kada); bracelets are the clasp-fastening Western form. Both are available at PureJewels, listed separately under their own categories.

Pure 22ct gold does not tarnish or rust in water, so an occasional shower will not damage it. However, prolonged exposure to shower gel, shampoo, and soap will dull the surface finish over time. Chlorine in swimming pools is more damaging and should be avoided. The safest habit is to remove the bracelet before showering, bathing, or swimming, and to rinse it monthly with clean warm water and mild soap to keep it looking its best.

Remove before vigorous exercise, gardening, or heavy manual work. Clean monthly with warm water and a few drops of mild washing-up liquid — use a soft toothbrush on textured or linked areas. Dry thoroughly before storing. Keep in the original box or a soft cloth pouch, separate from other pieces that could scratch it. A professional clean and polish every one to two years will restore the original finish.

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