Here’s What We Know About Zoë Kravitz’s Engagement Ring
Here, everything we know about the unique sparkler

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Zoë Kravitz is engaged. After less than a year of dating Harry Styles—the pair were first spotted together in Rome last August—the Blink Twice director has said yes. People confirmed the news, reporting that Kravitz has been quietly showing the ring to close friends while keeping it largely shielded from cameras. But in those rare glimpses, the jewelry tells its own story.
The ring itself reads almost defiantly traditional for someone known for gothic, biker-chic rebellion. It's a substantial oval or cushion-cut stone—somewhere in the six-to-eight-carat range—set in white metal with a halo and pavé band, according to Harper's Bazaar. Katie Liappas, Chief Merchandising Officer for Blue Nile, estimates the piece at around $500K. It's the kind of ring that announces itself without trying too hard: classic, expensive, unapologetically sparkly.
A Departure From Jessica McCormack
Here's where it gets interesting. Kravitz has been publicly devoted to British jewelry house Jessica McCormack—she's even the brand's first official ambassador. Her previous engagement ring, from her relationship with Channing Tatum (which dissolved in 2024), was designed by McCormack. This new piece, however, breaks that pattern. The designer remains unconfirmed, suggesting either a private pivot or simply a move toward discretion this time around. Either way, it signals something different.
The engagement itself marks a swift escalation in a relationship that's played out like a carefully edited Instagram feed: coordinated outfits in London, New York, and beyond, with Kravitz reportedly calling Styles her "soulmate." It's the kind of whirlwind that might seem reckless, except that both parties have spent enough time in the public eye to know exactly what they're signing up for—and to manage it accordingly. A small circle of friends gets the ring reveal. The paparazzi get shadows and angles. The rest of us get to wonder.
What matters: Kravitz has chosen something that works against type, which might be the most on-brand move of all.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


