Ratiometric optical sensor gas sensing continues to develop optical sensing techniques and materials used in various industrial and environmental applications. This research focuses on a new ratiometric optical sensor using the development of new material of FAPbI3 perovskite QDs and a simple method to detect oxygen (O2) gas. FAPbI3 perovskite QDs are used as an indicator of oxygen gas, and rhodamine 110 (Rh 110) is a reference material in a ratiometric optical sensor. All of the sensing and reference materials are embedded in an ethyl cellulose (EC) matrix and coated on the surface of the filter paper. Using a UV LED with a central wavelength of 380 nm as the excitation light source, the emission spectra results show that the emission wavelengths of the oxygen-sensitive dye (O2) FAPbI3 perovskite QDs do not overlap with the Rh 110 reference signal. Thus, oxygen concentration can be measured using a ratiometric fluorescence reference-based approach. The sensing signal will be obtained in the presence of analyte gas in the ratiometric sensitivity of R0/R100, where R0 and R100 represent the luminescence intensity detected in 100% nitrogen and 100% oxygen concentrations, respectively. The experimental results show the optical oxygen sensor's sensitivity as R0/R100 = 12.7. In addition, the response time and recovery of the oxygen gas sensor produced are 75 s and 93 s, respectively. The use of a new type of FAPbI3 perovskite QDs material has been successfully developed in the optical ratiometric sensor for oxygen gas. The sensor proposed in this study has a low cost and easy fabrication process. The effect of spurious fluctuations in the excitation source intensity can be suppressed by the ratiometric optical sensing method.