How Many Ratti to Wear: Gemstone Weight Guide | Myra Gems

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If you have ever received a gemstone recommendation in ratti and felt lost, you are not alone. According to Vedic astrology, the weight of an astrological gemstone is traditionally prescribed in ratti, an old Indian unit, while modern jewellers and international sellers price stones in carats. That mismatch is where most buyers slip up. Knowing how many ratti to wear, and how that converts into carats, protects you from paying for the wrong size or buying a stone that does not match your prescription.

The two gemstones people ask about most are Blue Sapphire, known in Sanskrit as Neelam and ruled by the planet Shani (Saturn), and Yellow Sapphire, known as Pukhraj and ruled by Guru or Brihaspati (Jupiter). In Vedic tradition, Shani is associated with discipline and Saturn's slow lessons, while Guru is linked to wisdom and prosperity. The weight you wear, measured in ratti, is believed to influence how strongly the stone connects with its ruling planet.

Here is the short answer many readers come for: the traditional guidance is to wear roughly one ratti of gemstone for every ten to twelve kilograms of your body weight, which for most adults works out to a stone between four and seven ratti. The rest of this guide explains where that rule comes from, how ratti converts to carat, the typical weight range for each major gemstone, and why quality often matters more than weight.

What Ratti Means and Why It Decides Your Gemstone Weight in India

Ratti is a traditional Indian unit of weight used mainly for gemstones, and it is the unit most Vedic astrologers still use when they tell you how many ratti to wear. One ratti is slightly lighter than one carat, so a ratti figure and a carat figure are never quite the same number. Understanding this unit is the foundation of every gemstone weight decision in India.

The word ratti comes from the seed of the Gunja plant, known botanically as Abrus precatorius. These small red and black seeds were remarkably consistent in weight, which made them a practical natural measure for weighing gold and gemstones in ancient India, long before digital scales existed. Classical gemstone literature such as Buddha Bhatta's Ratnapariksha, and astrological texts in the tradition of the Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra, recorded gemstone prescriptions in these traditional units, which is why the ratti has survived for centuries.

Why Ratti Is Still Used in Vedic Astrology

The ratti endures for one simple reason: tradition. Most practising astrologers in India, particularly in the north, inherited their methods and their reference texts from teachers who measured stones in ratti. When an astrologer studies your birth chart and recommends a gemstone, the weight almost always comes back in ratti rather than carat, because that is the language of the shastras they were trained in.

This is why a buyer needs to be fluent in both units. You may receive a prescription in ratti from your astrologer and then shop from a jeweller who weighs everything in carat. At Myra Gems, our team regularly meets customers who arrive with a ratti figure and leave relieved once they understand the simple conversion.

Kachi Ratti and Pakki Ratti: The Two Versions You Should Know

There are actually two versions of the ratti in circulation, and confusing them is a frequent source of error. The older scientific value, sometimes called the kachi ratti, is around 0.1215 grams, which is the literal weight of the natural Gunja seed. The trade and astrology value, often called the pakki ratti, has been standardised at roughly 0.182 grams, which is the figure that gives the familiar one ratti to 0.91 carat ratio used in gemstone recommendations.

For practical purposes, when an astrologer or a jeweller in India quotes a gemstone weight in ratti, they almost always mean the standardised pakki ratti. This is the value we use throughout this guide, and it is the one that lines up cleanly with carats. If a seller appears to be using a different figure, ask them to confirm, because the gap between the two versions is large enough to affect both the size and the price of your stone.

One Important Catch: Ratti Is Not Perfectly Standard

There is a detail many buyers never hear. The ratti is not a perfectly uniform measure across India. Historically, the exact weight of a ratti varied slightly from region to region, so a ratti in one part of the country was not always identical to a ratti elsewhere. For everyday astrological purposes today, the trade has settled on a widely accepted standard value, which we cover in the next section, but it is always wise to confirm the exact conversion your seller is using.

The most important factor when choosing your gemstone weight is clarity on the unit itself. Once you know what a ratti is and how it relates to a carat, the rest of the decision becomes straightforward. You can explore the full range of natural stones in our collection of natural gemstone rings to see how different weights look once they are set.

Ratti to Carat Conversion: The Gemstone Weight Numbers Every Buyer Should Know

The single most useful number to memorise is that one ratti is approximately 0.91 carat. This means a gemstone weight given in ratti will always be a little less in carats, and a carat figure will always be a little more in ratti. Getting this conversion right is what stops buyers from accidentally purchasing a stone that is far larger and far more expensive than they were prescribed.

To put it in everyday terms, one carat equals 200 milligrams, while one standardised ratti is close to 182 milligrams. Working the other way, one carat is roughly 1.1 ratti. So if your astrologer recommends seven ratti and you walk into an international shop and ask for seven carats, you would end up with a noticeably heavier and pricier stone than intended. That small difference, multiplied by the price per carat of a fine gemstone, can mean a significant gap in cost.

Quick Ratti to Carat Conversion Chart

The table below converts common ratti weights into carats using the standard astrology ratio of one ratti to 0.91 carat. The grams column uses the international standard of one carat to 0.2 grams.

Ratti Approx. Carat Approx. Grams
Quick Answer 1 ratti is about 0.91 carat Use this row to read the rest of the table
1 ratti 0.91 carat 0.182 g
2 ratti 1.82 carat 0.364 g
3 ratti 2.73 carat 0.546 g
4 ratti 3.64 carat 0.728 g
5 ratti 4.55 carat 0.910 g
6 ratti 5.46 carat 1.092 g
7 ratti 6.37 carat 1.274 g
8 ratti 7.28 carat 1.456 g

How to Use the Conversion in Practice

When you receive a prescription, write down both numbers before you shop. If the recommendation is five ratti, note that this is about 4.55 carat, and ask any seller to quote the stone in both units. Gemologists recommend always confirming the carat weight in writing, because carat is the precise, internationally standardised unit, while ratti can carry small regional variations.

A simple habit protects you here. Always ask for the weight in carat, then convert back to ratti yourself to check it matches your prescription. This one step removes almost all the confusion that surrounds how many ratti to wear. It also gives you a clear basis for comparing two stones from two different sellers, since both can be measured against the same carat figure rather than against an uncertain ratti value.

Choose a Natural Stone in the Right Weight

Every natural gemstone at Myra Gems is listed with its weight so you can match your prescription with confidence, and our team can help you read ratti and carat side by side. Browse our naturally sourced gemstone rings to find a stone in your recommended weight.

How Many Ratti to Wear Based on Your Body Weight

The most widely used traditional rule is to wear roughly one ratti of gemstone for every ten to twelve kilograms of your body weight. According to Vedic astrology, a stone that is proportionate to the wearer is believed to connect more naturally with its ruling planet. For a large majority of adults, this rule produces a recommended weight somewhere between four and seven ratti.

This body-weight formula is a starting guideline, not a strict law. It gives astrologers and buyers a sensible baseline, after which the final figure is adjusted according to the individual birth chart, the strength of the relevant planet, and the purpose of wearing the stone. The traditional guidance is to treat this number as a floor rather than a ceiling, because a stone that is too small is believed to make weaker contact with the body.

A Simple Body-Weight Calculation

To estimate your weight in ratti, divide your body weight in kilograms by a number between ten and twelve. The lower the divisor, the heavier the recommended stone.

  1. This short list shows how the rule works for common body weights.
  2. A person weighing 50 kg falls in the range of about 4 to 5 ratti.
  3. A person weighing 60 kg falls in the range of about 5 to 6 ratti.
  4. A person weighing 72 kg falls in the range of about 6 to 7 ratti.
  5. A person weighing 84 kg falls in the range of about 7 to 8 ratti.

You will notice the ranges overlap, and that is intentional. The body-weight rule sets a sensible band rather than a single exact figure, leaving room for an astrologer to fine-tune the final weight.

Why Most People Land Between Four and Eight Ratti

In practice, the most commonly worn astrological gemstones sit in the four to eight ratti range. There is a traditional reason for this. A stone below roughly four ratti is often considered too small to sit prominently on a finger and make steady contact with the skin, while a stone much above eight ratti can become bulky, heavy, and harder to wear comfortably every day.

At Myra Gems, our gemologists regularly meet customers who assume bigger is always better, then change their minds once they see how a six or seven ratti stone actually looks on the hand. Comfort and daily wearability matter, because an astrological gemstone is traditionally meant to stay on the body, not sit in a drawer. If you are unsure about how a given weight will fit your finger, our ring size guide helps you get the band right before you choose a stone.

How Purpose and Planet Strength Change the Number

The body-weight rule gives you a band, but two other factors shift the final figure inside that band. The first is the strength of the relevant planet in your chart. According to Vedic astrology, a planet that sits weak or afflicted may call for a stone toward the heavier end of your range, while a planet that is already well placed may need only a modest weight to support it.

The second factor is the reason you are wearing the stone. A gemstone chosen during a specific planetary period, or mahadasha, is sometimes prescribed differently from one worn as a lifelong supportive stone. None of these adjustments can be read off a calculator, which is exactly why the body-weight formula is only the opening move. The traditional guidance is to use it to reach a sensible starting range, then let a qualified astrologer settle on the precise ratti for your chart and purpose.

How Many Ratti to Wear for Each Gemstone: Neelam, Pukhraj, Manik, Panna and Moti

Different gemstones are traditionally worn in slightly different weight ranges, because each stone has a different density and a different governing planet. As a general rule, most people wear the major astrological gemstones in the three to seven ratti range, adjusted to body weight and birth chart. Below is a practical guide to how many ratti to wear for the most popular stones in India.

Before the table, a quick note on density. Because gemstones vary in specific gravity, two stones of the same ratti weight will not be the same physical size. A pearl, for instance, is far less dense than a sapphire, so a five ratti pearl looks larger than a five ratti Neelam.

Typical Ratti Range by Gemstone

Gemstone Sanskrit Name Ruling Planet (Graha) Common Ratti Range
Quick Answer Most stones are worn at 1 ratti per 10 to 12 kg of body weight Adjust to your birth chart Usually 3 to 7 ratti
Blue Sapphire Neelam Shani (Saturn) 3 to 6 ratti
Yellow Sapphire Pukhraj Guru (Jupiter) 4 to 7 ratti
Ruby Manik Surya (Sun) 3 to 6 ratti
Emerald Panna Budh (Mercury) 4 to 7 ratti
Pearl Moti Chandra (Moon) 4 to 8 ratti

Why the Planet Matters as Much as the Number

In Vedic astrology, each gemstone is tied to a specific graha, and the weight is believed to strengthen the connection to that planet. Neelam is linked to Shani and is traditionally approached with care because Saturn's influence is considered powerful and fast acting. Pukhraj is linked to Guru, the planet of wisdom and growth, and is among the most commonly recommended stones for those under Jupiter's period. You can read more about individual stones in our guides to Blue Sapphire rings and Yellow Sapphire rings.

Manik, the ruby, is associated with Surya and is traditionally tied to confidence and authority, while Panna, the emerald, is linked to Budh and to communication. Moti, the pearl, is connected to Chandra and is one of the gentler stones in the tradition. The right weight for each is the one that suits your chart, which is why a qualified astrologer's input matters more than a generic number. For those exploring by planet and sign, our zodiac gemstone guide is a useful starting point.

Adjusting the Weight for Your Chart

Two people of the same body weight may receive different ratti recommendations for the same stone, because their birth charts differ. A weak or afflicted planet may call for a heavier stone to strengthen its influence, while a strong placement may need only a modest weight. This is the part of the decision that genuinely belongs to an astrologer rather than a calculator.

If you would like help understanding how the weight in your prescription translates into a real stone, our team has put together detailed gemstone guidance you can read at your own pace. Read our complete gemstone guidance resource before you finalise your choice.

Why Gemstone Quality Decides More Than How Many Ratti You Wear

A common mistake is to focus entirely on how many ratti to wear while ignoring the quality of the stone, when in truth quality often matters more than weight. A smaller, cleaner, well-coloured natural gemstone is widely regarded in the trade as preferable to a larger stone that is dull, heavily included, or poorly cut. Weight is only one of several factors that decide a gemstone's worth.

Quality in coloured stones rests on the familiar pillars of colour, clarity, and cut. Colour is usually the leading factor: a Neelam with an even, attractive Ceylon blue or a Manik with a rich red is prized far above a washed-out example of the same weight. Clarity refers to how clean the stone is to the eye, with eye-clean stones sitting at the top of the range. Cut governs how well the stone returns light and how balanced it looks once set.

Weight and Size Are Not the Same Thing

Because gemstones differ in density, ratti weight does not translate directly into visible size. Sapphire and ruby are both forms of corundum, which sits at 9 on the Mohs hardness scale and is relatively dense, so a five ratti sapphire looks compact. Emerald is softer, around 7.5 to 8 on the Mohs scale, and less dense, so it looks a touch larger for the same weight. A natural, untreated gemstone can be identified by its natural inclusions and growth features, which an experienced eye learns to read over many years of handling stones.

This is why two stones of identical ratti weight can look quite different on the hand. When you compare options, look at the stone itself, not just the number on the label.

A Note on Buying Wisely

When budget is a constraint, the traditional and practical advice is the same: choose a smaller stone of better quality rather than a larger stone of poor quality. A modest, clean, well-coloured gemstone in the right ratti range is a wiser purchase than a heavy stone that looks lifeless. Over our years of sourcing and setting stones at Myra Gems, we have seen far more satisfaction come from quality than from sheer size.

Quality also affects comfort and durability. A well-cut, well-set stone wears better day to day, and since astrological gemstones are meant to be worn continuously, that practical longevity is worth weighing alongside the ratti figure. To understand how treatment affects a stone's character, our guide on heated versus unheated gemstones is worth a read.

Where Quality Is Decided: Origin and the Indian Trade

Colour and character in coloured stones are shaped partly by where they form. Burmese rubies have long been admired for their deep red, sapphires from Sri Lanka, historically called Ceylon, are prized for their clean blue, and emeralds from sources such as Colombia and Zambia each carry their own colour signature. These origins are a matter of gemological education rather than a guarantee of quality, since a fine stone and a weak stone can come from the same mine.

India sits at the heart of the global coloured-stone trade. Jaipur in particular is one of the world's leading hubs for cutting and polishing coloured gemstones, and a great deal of the world's astrological stone supply passes through Indian hands. This is why an Indian buyer has an advantage: there is deep local expertise to draw on. A ratti figure tells you how much stone to buy, but the trade's eye for colour, clarity, and cut tells you how good that stone actually is. The two pieces of knowledge work together.

Common Myths About Ratti and Gemstone Weight in Vedic Astrology

There are several persistent myths about how many ratti to wear, and clearing them up saves buyers from costly mistakes. The biggest myth is that a heavier stone always produces a stronger result, when traditional guidance is that the right weight for your chart matters far more than maximum weight. Bigger is not automatically better in Vedic practice.

A second common myth is that ratti and carat are interchangeable. They are not. As we covered earlier, one ratti is about 0.91 carat, so treating the two as equal can lead you to buy a stone that is heavier and more expensive than prescribed. Always keep both numbers in front of you.

Myth: A Tiny Stone Below Two Ratti Works Just as Well

In traditional practice, very small stones are generally considered less suitable for astrological wear, because a stone that barely touches the skin is believed to make weaker contact. This is why most prescriptions land in the four to eight ratti band rather than at the very bottom of the scale. A stone needs enough presence to sit properly on the finger and rest against the skin.

That said, this is guidance, not a rigid rule. For certain stones, certain charts, or budget reasons, smaller weights are used, and an astrologer is the right person to make that call.

Myth: The Same Ratti Weight Suits Everyone

No single ratti figure suits every person, because body weight and birth chart both shape the recommendation. Two people may wear the same gemstone at very different weights, and both can be correct for their individual charts. This is exactly why the body-weight formula is a starting point rather than a final answer.

There is also a regional dimension that few buyers realise. Because the ratti was historically not perfectly uniform across India, a prescription written by an astrologer in one tradition may assume a slightly different ratti value than another. When in doubt, confirm the intended carat weight, which removes the ambiguity entirely.

Myth: You Should Round a Ratti Prescription Up to the Nearest Carat

Rounding a ratti figure up to a tidy carat number is a small habit that can quietly cost you. Because one ratti is about 0.91 carat, a five ratti prescription is roughly 4.55 carat, not five carat. Rounding that up to a full five carat means buying a heavier stone than your chart called for, and paying for the extra weight at the per-carat price of a fine gemstone. On an expensive stone, that difference is not trivial.

The cleaner approach is to convert your ratti prescription into its exact carat equivalent and shop to that figure, accepting that natural stones rarely land on a perfectly round number. A gemstone weighing 4.52 or 4.58 carat is perfectly in keeping with a five ratti recommendation. Chasing a round carat number is an aesthetic preference, not an astrological requirement.

Two Decades of Helping Indians Choose the Right Stone

For over twenty years, Myra Gems has guided more than 30,000 customers across India in choosing natural gemstones that suit both their charts and their lives. When you are ready to find a stone in your recommended weight, explore our full collection of natural gemstones.

What to Check Before Choosing Your Gemstone Ratti: Advice from Myra Gems' Gemologists

Choosing how many ratti to wear is easier when you know what to look for, and a few practical checks save most buyers from regret. The advice below comes from years of sourcing, setting, and handing over natural gemstones to customers across India. Each tip reflects something our gemologists have learned by working with stones day after day.

First, decide the weight before you fall in love with a particular stone. Buyers who shop emotionally often stretch their prescribed ratti upward to chase a more impressive piece, then find the stone heavy and unwieldy in daily wear. Fix your target range first, then choose within it.

Second, judge the colour in natural daylight, not under shop lights. Showroom lighting is often tuned to flatter stones, and a Pukhraj or Neelam that looks vivid under a spotlight can read quite differently by a window. We routinely walk customers to natural light before they decide, because colour is the factor that ages best.

Third, remember that density changes how a stone looks. A pearl and a sapphire of the same ratti weight will not look the same size, so do not judge weight by appearance alone. Ask for the weight in writing, in both ratti and carat, and trust the figure over your eye.

Fourth, think about the setting and the finger. A stone is traditionally worn so it can touch the skin, which influences how the ring is made. Getting your ring size right matters as much as the stone, so measure carefully before you order.

Fifth, when budget forces a trade-off, lean toward quality over size. A clean, well-coloured stone slightly below your maximum ratti will almost always please you more, over years of wear, than a larger stone with poor colour or visible flaws. This is the single piece of advice our team repeats most often.

Sixth, keep your astrologer's prescription and your seller's weight in the same units, side by side, when you finalise the purchase. The most common avoidable mistake we see is a buyer matching a ratti prescription against a carat weight without converting between them, then wondering later why the stone feels larger or smaller than expected. Write down the prescribed ratti, its carat equivalent, and the actual weight of the stone you are buying, and check that all three agree before you commit. This thirty-second habit settles almost every question a buyer has about how many ratti to wear.

Frequently Asked Questions About How Many Ratti to Wear

Q: How many ratti gemstone should I wear? A: Most people wear a gemstone between four and seven ratti, based on the traditional rule of roughly one ratti per ten to twelve kilograms of body weight. For example, a person weighing around 60 kg typically falls in the five to six ratti range. This is a starting guideline only. The final weight should be adjusted to your birth chart and the strength of the relevant planet, which is why a qualified Vedic astrologer's input matters. Once you have your figure in ratti, convert it to carat so you can shop accurately, since most sellers weigh stones in carat rather than ratti.

Q: How do I convert ratti to carat for my gemstone? A: To convert ratti to carat, multiply the ratti figure by 0.91, because one ratti is approximately 0.91 carat. For example, a five ratti stone is about 4.55 carat, and a seven ratti stone is about 6.37 carat. To go the other way, multiply carat by about 1.1 to get ratti. This conversion matters because Vedic astrologers prescribe in ratti while jewellers and international sellers price in carat. Always confirm the carat weight in writing and convert it back to ratti yourself to make sure it matches your prescription before you buy.

Q: Is a bigger ratti gemstone always more powerful? A: No, a bigger gemstone is not automatically more powerful in Vedic tradition. The traditional guidance is that the correct weight for your chart matters far more than maximum size, and most prescriptions land in the four to eight ratti range rather than at the heaviest end. A stone that is too large can also be uncomfortable to wear every day, which defeats the purpose, since astrological gemstones are meant to stay on the body. Quality of colour and clarity often influences a stone's worth more than sheer weight, so a smaller, cleaner stone is frequently the wiser choice.

Q: How many ratti of Blue Sapphire (Neelam) should I wear? A: Blue Sapphire, known as Neelam and ruled by Shani, is most commonly worn in the three to six ratti range, adjusted to your body weight and birth chart. Because Saturn's influence is considered powerful in Vedic astrology, many people approach Neelam carefully and start within this band rather than choosing a very heavy stone. As with any gemstone, the exact weight should be guided by a qualified astrologer who has studied your chart. Convert your prescribed ratti into carat before buying so you can match the weight precisely with any seller.

Q: How many ratti of Yellow Sapphire (Pukhraj) should I wear? A: Yellow Sapphire, known as Pukhraj and ruled by Guru or Jupiter, is most often worn in the four to seven ratti range, scaled to body weight and birth chart. Pukhraj is among the most commonly recommended stones in Vedic astrology, traditionally linked to wisdom and growth. A person of average build usually lands around five to six ratti, but this should be confirmed against your individual chart. Remember to convert the ratti figure to carat, since most jewellers will quote the stone's weight in carat.

Q: Why do astrologers use ratti instead of carat? A: Astrologers use ratti because it is the traditional Indian unit recorded in classical astrological and gemstone texts, and the system has been passed down through generations of practitioners. The ratti originally came from the seed of the Gunja plant, which had a consistent weight and was used to measure gold and gemstones in ancient India. Carat, by contrast, is the modern international standard. Because the two systems coexist, buyers in India often receive a prescription in ratti and then shop from a jeweller using carat, which makes knowing the conversion essential.

Q: Does the ratti weight mean the same thing everywhere in India? A: Not exactly, because the ratti was historically not a perfectly uniform measure across India, and its value varied slightly from region to region. For everyday astrological purposes today, the trade widely accepts that one ratti is about 0.91 carat, but small differences can still appear depending on local custom. This is why it is always safest to confirm the carat weight of a stone, since carat is precise and internationally standardised. Treat the carat figure as the reliable anchor and use it to check your ratti prescription.

Q: Should I choose a higher ratti weight or better quality if my budget is limited? A: Choose better quality over higher ratti weight when your budget is limited. A smaller natural gemstone with clean clarity and attractive colour is widely regarded in the trade as a wiser purchase than a larger stone that is dull or heavily flawed. Quality also affects how well a stone wears over years of daily use, which matters because astrological gemstones are worn continuously. A clean, well-coloured stone slightly below your maximum ratti will usually satisfy you far more than a heavy stone of poor quality.

Q: Where can I buy a natural gemstone in the correct ratti weight? A: You can buy natural gemstones in your recommended ratti weight from a trusted specialist that lists each stone's weight clearly. At Myra Gems, India's first natural gemstone jewellery brand, every stone is shown with its weight so you can match your prescription in both ratti and carat, and our team can help you read the two units side by side. We work only with natural, naturally sourced gemstones and have guided more than 30,000 customers across India. If you are unsure which weight suits you, our gemstone guidance resource explains the essentials before you decide.

Q: How many ratti of Pearl (Moti) should I wear? A: Pearl, known as Moti and ruled by Chandra or the Moon, is commonly worn in the four to eight ratti range, often slightly higher than denser stones because pearl is much lighter. Since pearl has a low density, a given ratti weight looks physically larger than the same weight in sapphire or ruby. As one of the gentler stones in Vedic tradition, Moti is frequently recommended for those connected to the Moon's influence. As always, confirm the exact weight with a qualified astrologer and convert your ratti figure to carat before buying.

Final Thoughts on Choosing How Many Ratti to Wear

Deciding how many ratti to wear comes down to three simple ideas working together. Start with the body-weight rule of roughly one ratti per ten to twelve kilograms, which places most people between four and eight ratti, then adjust that figure to your birth chart with the help of a qualified astrologer. Convert your ratti prescription into carat so you can shop accurately, and never let weight overshadow the quality of the stone, since a clean, well-coloured natural gemstone in the right range is worth more than a heavy but lifeless one.

For more than twenty years, Myra Gems has helped Indians move from a confusing slip of paper to a stone they wear with confidence, and the pattern is always the same: clarity on the unit, honesty about quality, and a weight that genuinely suits the wearer. The information here is for educational purposes, so do consult a qualified Vedic astrologer before wearing any gemstone.

When you are ready to see how your recommended weight looks as a finished piece, take your time and choose well. Explore the full Myra Gems collection of natural gemstones to find a stone that fits both your chart and your everyday life.

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