Rings.com Research

AI gave you a list of jewelry brands. Here's what that list actually is.


May 24, 2026  ·  ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude  ·  30 queries  ·  1,192 responses

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You asked an AI where to buy an engagement ring. You got a confident, well-formatted answer. Here is what you did not get: a neutral one.

Rings.com is an independent research platform. We have no financial relationship with any brand in this study.

This page summarizes the key consumer findings. Full methodology and brand rankings are in the complete research report.

4x

Perplexity is 4 times more likely than Claude to send you to a mall chain like Zales or Kay Jewelers

4.5x

ChatGPT recommends heritage luxury brands like Cartier, Harry Winston, and De Beers 4.5 times more often than Perplexity does, across the same queries.

Jump to what you should do differently →

We ran 30 shopping questions through ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Claude across 1,192 responses. The same question asked to different models returned structurally different brand lists, in ways that would send you to entirely different types of stores, at entirely different price points, before you have looked at a single ring.

The AI model you happen to use first shapes your entire consideration set. That choice is invisible, and right now most consumers do not know they are making it.

What that looks like in practice

Four of the 30 queries from the study.

You searched: "best alternative to Tiffany for engagement rings"
Bold = consistently recommended|Gray = occasionally mentioned

ChatGPT

Cartier

Harry Winston

De Beers

Blue Nile

James Allen

Brilliant Earth

Gemini

Harry Winston

Cartier

Blue Nile

James Allen

Brilliant Earth

De Beers

Perplexity

Brilliant Earth

Frank Darling

Zales

Blue Nile

James Allen

Kay Jewelers

Claude

Cartier

Harry Winston

De Beers

Blue Nile

James Allen

Brilliant Earth

The sharpest split in the dataset. ChatGPT and Claude read "alternative to Tiffany" as "other luxury brands" and surface Cartier, Harry Winston, De Beers. Perplexity reads it as "lower-priced options" and surfaces Zales and Kay Jewelers. Same five words, opposite answers.

You searched: "best place to buy an engagement ring online"

ChatGPT

James Allen

Blue Nile

Brilliant Earth

Whiteflash

Ritani

VRAI

Gemini

Blue Nile

James Allen

Brilliant Earth

VRAI

Whiteflash

Zales

Perplexity

Blue Nile

Brilliant Earth

Whiteflash

VRAI

Shane Co.

James Allen

Claude

Blue Nile

James Allen

Brilliant Earth

Whiteflash

Rare Carat

Zales

The top brands mostly overlap, but Claude consistently includes Rare Carat, a diamond retailer. ChatGPT did not recommend it once across all ten runs.

Show two more examples
You searched: "ethical engagement ring brands"

ChatGPT

Brilliant Earth

VRAI

Blue Nile

Taylor & Hart

James Allen

Aurate

Gemini

Bario Neal

Brilliant Earth

Mejuri

Do Amore

VRAI

Aurate

Perplexity

Brilliant Earth

Mejuri

Bario Neal

Aurate

Claude

Brilliant Earth

VRAI

Taylor & Hart

Do Amore

Clean Origin

Bario Neal

Adding one word, "ethical," pulls in a completely different brand set. Bario Neal, a small Philadelphia jeweler with strong sourcing credentials, leads for Gemini and Perplexity here but barely registers on general queries. The most relevant brands for what you actually care about may only appear when you ask the right question.

You searched: "cheapest place to buy a real diamond ring"

ChatGPT

James Allen

Blue Nile

Brilliant Earth

Costco

Gemini

Blue Nile

James Allen

Rare Carat

Zales

Ritani

Brilliant Earth

Perplexity

Zales

Blue Nile

Jared

Kay Jewelers

James Allen

Rare Carat

Claude

James Allen

Blue Nile

Brilliant Earth

Costco

Rare Carat

Ritani

Perplexity leads with Zales on a budget query. ChatGPT and Claude both surface Costco, which genuinely sells diamonds at low markup but almost never appears on general queries. These are not subtle differences in ranking. They are different answers to the same question.

Check before you click: James Allen ranks third in this study. The site has been merged into Blue Nile. If you're researching it, you'll now be redirected to bluenile.com.


Three things to do differently

1

Ask two models, not one

Paste the same question into ChatGPT and Gemini. Two minutes, meaningfully different brand sets. The names that appear in both lists are worth prioritizing. The names that only appear in one are worth being curious about.

2

Phrase toward your actual priority

"Best engagement ring brands" returns a generic list. "Best lab-grown diamond rings under $3,000" or "most ethical place to buy a diamond" return answers shaped by your real constraint. The AI is matching your words to its training. Vague questions return the same brands everyone gets. Specific ones surface the brands that fit what you actually want.

3

Treat the list as names to research, not names to trust

There is no methodology behind AI recommendations. No consumer testing, no pricing analysis, no evaluation against your needs. The brands that appear most often do so because they are mentioned frequently in the content these models trained on. Use the list to build a research starting point, then check prices, reviews, and return policies yourself before deciding anything.

Canadian shoppers: you're getting a list of American stores

If you're shopping for a ring in Canada, no Canadian brand appeared in a single AI response. Not once, across any model, any query, or any of the ten runs we conducted from Vancouver, BC. Every model returned the same American brand list regardless of where the shopper was located.

We tracked four major Canadian retailers (Birks, Michael Hill, Spence Diamonds, and People's Jewellers) across all 30 queries. None appeared once.


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30 queries, 4 AI models, 10 collection runs, 1,192 responses, May 2026. Full methodology in the complete research report. Raw data available on request. Rings.com receives no compensation from any brand in this study. Questions: rodney@rings.com