Academy · Aftercare

A new tattoo is technically a wound. Treat it like one for the first month and you will end up with a piece that holds its sharpness, depth, and colour for decades. Treat it casually and you can compromise the work on the day it was finished. This is the complete dermatologist-informed guide to tattoo aftercare — the practices that make the difference between ink that ages well and ink that doesn't.

The Healing Timeline

The Science Why Tattoo Aftercare Actually Matters

When your artist deposits ink in the dermis, the needle creates thousands of micro-punctures in the epidermis above it. Your skin responds the same way it would to any other wound — with an inflammatory cascade, plasma exudate, and a four-stage healing process that runs through the first month.

Good aftercare does not "speed up" healing. Healing happens at a biological pace your daily routine can't change. What aftercare does is protect the work during that vulnerable window: keeping out bacteria, preventing scab formation that lifts pigment, supporting the skin's barrier function as it rebuilds, and giving the ink the cleanest possible environment to settle into the dermis.

The care instructions for a tattoo are simple in principle. Where people go wrong is consistency — missing washes, over-applying balm, sleeping on the area, exposing it to sun, or returning to the gym before the skin has formed a stable barrier.

The Routine Step-by-Step Tattoo Aftercare

Treating a new tattoo well comes down to a small number of correct moves, repeated consistently. Here is how to take care of a tattoo after getting it, from the studio chair through to fully settled skin.

Day One · The Wrap and First Wash

Your artist will send you home with the tattoo wrapped in cling film, an adhesive bandage, or a breathable film like Saniderm. Leave it on for the time they specified — typically two to four hours for cling film, several days for adhesive films. The wrap is doing critical work in the first hours: shielding raw skin from airborne bacteria while your immune system mounts its first response.

When the time is up, wash gently and once.

  1. Waschen Sie sich die Hände gründlich mit Seife, bevor Sie das Tattoo berühren.
  2. Use lukewarm water — never hot. Hot water increases blood flow and makes the tattoo weep more.
  3. Apply a small amount of fragrance-free, pH-balanced cleanser to your fingertips. No washcloth, no sponge.
  4. Work in gentle circular motions for 30 to 60 seconds, lifting away plasma, blood, and ointment residue.
  5. Rinse thoroughly and pat dry with a clean paper towel. Never rub.
  6. Allow the skin to air-dry completely — at least 15 minutes — before applying anything else.

Do not re-wrap the tattoo overnight. Trapped moisture is the single biggest enemy of healing in the first 48 hours.

Days Two to Seven · Active Healing

This is the work-horse phase of treating a new tattoo. Plasma production tapers, the skin begins forming its first protective film, and your habits in this window largely determine the quality of the heal.

Wash the tattoo two to three times a day using the same gentle technique. After each wash, allow the skin to fully dry, then apply a thin layer of a tattoo-specific recovery balm such as LOCK tattoo recovery balm. The skin should look lightly hydrated — a faint sheen — not greasy. If you can see the product sitting on the surface, you have applied too much.

Avoid swimming, baths, saunas, hot tubs, and direct sun completely. Showers are fine; just keep the spray off the tattoo and don't soak it.

Days Seven to Fourteen · Peeling and Itch

Around day five to seven, the tattoo will begin to flake and peel. This is the epidermis shedding the damaged surface layer, and it is normal and necessary. Do not pick, peel, or scratch. Pulling flakes off prematurely is one of the fastest ways to lift pigment and create patchy areas in the finished work.

The peeling phase is also when the itch begins. Dry skin intensifies it; consistent moisturising eases it. Continue applying recovery balm two to three times a day. If the itch becomes intolerable, slap the area gently through clean cotton fabric — never scratch.

Days Fourteen to Thirty · Settling

By the end of week two, the surface of the tattoo will look healed. The skin underneath is still remodelling and will continue to settle for several months, but the most vulnerable phase is over.

This is the point to transition from a dedicated recovery balm to a daily moisturiser, and crucially, to introduce SPF. SHIELD tattoo defence cream combines daily moisturisation with broad-spectrum UV protection in a single product, formulated specifically for tattooed skin so it does not destabilise the pigment. From here on, daily SPF over every tattoo is the single highest-impact thing you can do for long-term colour and clarity.

Healing happens at a biological pace. Your job is not to speed it up — it's to stay out of its way.

The Products What to Apply on Tattoo Aftercare

The right product changes by stage. Here is what to use, when.

The First Wash

A fragrance-free, alcohol-free, pH-balanced cleanser. No antibacterial soaps unless your artist specifically recommends one — the broad-spectrum antiseptics in many of them can irritate healing skin and slow the process.

Days One to Fourteen

LOCK tattoo recovery balm — a tattoo-specific recovery balm formulated for broken, healing skin. Applied in a very thin layer two to three times daily after washing.

Day Fourteen Onwards

Transition to SHIELD tattoo defence cream for daily moisturisation plus broad-spectrum SPF15 UV protection. For days of extended direct sun exposure, supplement with a dedicated broad-spectrum SPF30 or SPF50 from a reputable sunscreen brand.

Pre-Session Preparation

For your next tattoo, PRIME tattoo preparation serum conditions the skin in the days leading up to your session, supporting better ink retention and a cleaner heal from day one.

The Rules Aftercare Do's and Don'ts

Do

  • Wash your hands every time before touching the tattoo.
  • Wash the tattoo two to three times a day with a fragrance-free cleanser.
  • Apply a thin layer of tattoo-specific recovery balm after each wash.
  • Wear loose, breathable clothing over the tattoo for the first two weeks.
  • Sleep on clean bedding you do not mind staining.
  • Stay hydrated and well-rested — healing is metabolically demanding.
  • Apply daily broad-spectrum SPF from week three onwards, for life.

Don't

  • Pick, peel, or scratch the tattoo at any stage.
  • Re-wrap in cling film overnight after the first day.
  • Submerge in baths, hot tubs, pools, or the ocean for at least two weeks.
  • Apply petroleum jelly, scented body lotions, antibacterial ointments, or coconut oil.
  • Expose to direct sunlight during the first month — not even briefly.
  • Return to the gym for at least 48 hours, longer if the tattoo is in a high-friction area.
  • Shave over the tattoo until it has fully peeled and settled.
  • Apply ice directly — if the area is very swollen, use a clean cloth as a barrier.

For the full taxonomy of mistakes we see most often, read through the top 10 tattoo aftercare mistakes. For a deeper view of healing physiology and long-term care, the SKINGRAPHICA complete tattoo care guide is the central reference.

Fazit

Knowing how to heal a tattoo properly is mostly about consistency.

Wash gently two or three times daily. Moisturise sparingly. Stay out of the sun and water for the first two weeks. Don't pick, don't scratch, don't improvise. Take care of a fresh tattoo this way for the first month, and you give your skin every chance to settle the work cleanly — with sharpness, depth, and colour intact for decades to come.

Anmerkung der Redaktion

Dieser Artikel spiegelt die Grundsätze der dermatologischen Best Practice wider und dient als allgemeine Orientierungshilfe für die Nachsorge bei Tätowierungen. Er stellt keine medizinische Beratung dar und ersetzt nicht die Konsultation eines qualifizierten medizinischen Fachpersonals. Sollten Sie während des Heilungsprozesses Anzeichen einer Infektion, eine allergische Reaktion oder sonstige Symptome bemerken, die Ihnen Anlass zur Sorge geben, suchen Sie bitte einen zugelassenen Dermatologen oder Arzt auf.