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  • Home
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  • / Body Piercing Aftercare: The First 6 Weeks (and Beyond) from a Coquitlam Piercer

Body Piercing Aftercare: The First 6 Weeks (and Beyond) from a Coquitlam Piercer

Vanhess Team·May 08, 2026
A clean ceramic tray holding several pieces of titanium body piercing jewelry β€” labret studs, a curved barbell, and a small gold hoop

You just got a new piercing. The first few weeks are the part that decides whether you end up with a clean healed piercing or a swollen, irritated mess that has to come out. Aftercare is mostly about doing very little, very consistently, for a long time. This guide is what we tell our piercing clients at the Coquitlam shop, lined up against the published guidelines from the Association of Professional Piercers (APP). Nothing here is medical advice β€” for any sign of infection, see a doctor. This is the routine that gives a healthy piercing the best shot at healing cleanly.

Healing times by piercing type

The single most common mistake we see at the shop is people stopping aftercare too early. A piercing that looks healed from the outside is often still healing from the inside. The skin closes over the surface long before the channel underneath is stable. Pull the jewelry too early and the channel can collapse, force the piercing out, or trap bacteria.

These are the typical ranges based on APP published aftercare guidelines. Individual healing varies β€” some people heal faster, some slower, and certain medications, autoimmune conditions, and lifestyle factors all affect timing.

Piercing Typical healing time Notes
Earlobe 6–8 weeks The fastest healing piercing
Ear cartilage (helix, tragus, conch, rook, daith) 6–12 months Cartilage has poor blood supply and heals slowly
Nostril 6–12 months Constant exposure to skin oils and weather
Septum 6–8 months Inside the nose, less exposed
Eyebrow 6–8 weeks Surface piercing β€” higher migration risk
Lip / labret 6–8 weeks Inside contact with teeth and mouth
Tongue 4–6 weeks Heals fast because the mouth is highly vascular
Navel 6–12 months Constant clothing friction makes this one slow
Nipple 6–12 months Bras, sleeping positions, and friction extend timeline

Source: Association of Professional Piercers, Aftercare Guidelines. Individual healing varies.

The basic routine: simple and boring on purpose

Aftercare has gotten unnecessarily complicated by the internet. The actual APP-recommended routine is two steps:

  1. Saline rinse, twice a day. Use sterile saline solution from a pharmacy (look for sodium chloride 0.9% with no additives) or make your own with a quarter teaspoon of non-iodized sea salt dissolved in one cup of distilled water. Spray or soak the area for 5 minutes, then gently pat dry with a clean paper towel. Cloth towels harbour bacteria β€” use paper.
  2. Leave it alone the rest of the time. No twisting, no rotating the jewelry, no removing it to "check on it," no soap, no creams, no peroxide, no alcohol, no tea tree oil, no Bactine. Just hands off.

That's the entire routine. The boring version is the right version. Anything more complicated than this is either marketing or folklore.

What NOT to do (the real damage list)

The APP and most practicing piercers consistently warn against the same handful of products and habits. These are the things that actually slow down healing or cause complications:

  • Hydrogen peroxide. Kills new tissue along with bacteria. Slows healing significantly.
  • Rubbing alcohol. Same problem. Dries the area and damages cells.
  • Antibacterial soap (Dial, Hibiclens, etc.). Too harsh for an open wound. Strips the protective oils your body needs.
  • Tea tree oil. Despite the internet's enthusiasm, undiluted essential oils on open piercings cause chemical irritation. Skip it.
  • Bactine, Neosporin, Polysporin. Ointments trap moisture and bacteria against the wound. They're for closed cuts, not open piercings.
  • Twisting or rotating the jewelry. The internet myth that you need to "rotate to keep it from healing closed" is wrong. Rotating a healing piercing tears the new tissue forming in the channel.
  • Sleeping on it. Especially for ear piercings. Pressure shifts the angle and causes irritation bumps. Use a travel pillow to protect the area.
  • Pools, hot tubs, lakes, oceans. Avoid all submersion in non-sterile water for the first 4–6 weeks at minimum. Showers are fine.
  • Makeup, sunscreen, lotion, hairspray, perfume. Keep all cosmetics and personal-care products away from the area until fully healed.
  • Removing the jewelry. Don't take it out to "let it breathe" or change it before fully healed. The channel can close in hours and reinserting jewelry into a partially-closed channel reintroduces bacteria.

What's normal vs what's not

The first few weeks are uncomfortable. Distinguishing normal healing from a problem is the hardest part of aftercare for first-timers. Here's the difference:

Normal (do not panic)

  • Mild swelling and redness for the first 1–2 weeks. Localized to the piercing site.
  • Whitish-yellow fluid (lymph) crusting around the jewelry. This is the body's natural healing fluid, not pus. Saline rinse takes care of it.
  • Mild tenderness when touched or bumped, gradually decreasing over weeks.
  • Itching as the area heals. Don't scratch.
  • Small bumps that come and go around cartilage piercings β€” often irritation, not infection.

Not normal (see a piercer or doctor)

  • Spreading redness beyond the immediate area
  • Hot to the touch with throbbing pain that increases over time
  • Thick green or yellow pus (different from clear lymph fluid)
  • Strong odour
  • Fever or chills
  • The piercing visibly migrating (the entry and exit points moving toward the surface)
  • A growing bump that doesn't respond to saline

Infections are uncommon when aftercare is followed properly, but they happen. If you suspect an infection, do not remove the jewelry yourself β€” that can trap bacteria inside as the surface heals over. Come see your piercer or a doctor and let them assess.

The 6-week timeline

Here's roughly what to expect during the first 6 weeks of healing for a standard piercing. Cartilage and navel piercings have similar early phases but extend much longer overall.

Week What's happening What you should do
1 Swelling, tenderness, lymph crusting. Some bleeding possible in the first 24 hours. Saline rinse twice daily. Avoid pressure and submersion. Sleep on the opposite side.
2 Swelling reduces. Tenderness still present when touched. Crusting continues. Continue saline. Resist the urge to twist or check. Avoid all cosmetics on the area.
3–4 Outer skin starts to look healed. Internal channel is still raw. Keep the routine. Do NOT change the jewelry or stop aftercare.
5–6 Most surface symptoms gone. Mild itching as new tissue settles. Continue saline. For non-cartilage piercings, you may be approaching the end of active healing.

For ear cartilage, navel, nipple, and nostril piercings, this 6-week timeline is the beginning, not the whole story. Continue the saline routine for several months and don't change the jewelry until your piercer confirms it's safe.

Downsizing: when to come back

Most piercings are done with longer jewelry to accommodate initial swelling. Once swelling goes down (usually 4–8 weeks for surface piercings, 3–6 months for cartilage), the jewelry is too long and can move around in the channel. This causes irritation and slows long-term healing.

The fix is "downsizing" β€” replacing the long initial jewelry with a shorter piece that fits the now-healed channel snugly. This should be done by a piercer, not at home, and only when the area is healed enough that swapping jewelry is safe. We do downsizing as a complimentary service for piercings done at our shop, and at a small fee for piercings done elsewhere.

Jewelry quality matters more than aftercare

Most "infections" we see in walk-in customers are actually allergic reactions or irritation from cheap jewelry. The skin is reacting to nickel, low-quality plating, or rough surface finishes that scratch the inside of the channel.

For initial piercings and fresh healing, the APP recommends only these materials:

  • Implant-grade titanium (ASTM F-136) β€” gold standard for new piercings, hypoallergenic, biocompatible
  • Implant-grade steel (ASTM F-138) β€” also acceptable but slightly more reactive than titanium
  • Niobium β€” hypoallergenic, less common
  • 14K or 18K solid gold (yellow or white) β€” must be solid, not plated, and nickel-free
  • Platinum β€” expensive but excellent

What to avoid for healing piercings: gold-plated, gold-filled, sterling silver (tarnishes inside the channel), surgical steel of unknown grade, costume metal. These cause reactions far more often than people think.

Key Takeaways

  • Saline rinse twice a day, hands off the rest of the time. That's the entire routine.
  • Cartilage, nostril, navel, and nipple piercings take 6–12 months to fully heal. Don't stop aftercare just because the surface looks healed.
  • Skip hydrogen peroxide, alcohol, antibacterial soap, tea tree oil, and ointments. They damage tissue or trap bacteria.
  • Don't twist, rotate, or remove jewelry while healing. The "you need to rotate it" advice is wrong.
  • Whitish-yellow lymph fluid is normal. Spreading redness, throbbing pain, fever, or thick pus is not.
  • Use only implant-grade titanium, implant-grade steel, niobium, solid 14K/18K gold, or platinum during healing. Avoid plated or filled jewelry.
  • Come back for downsizing once swelling subsides. It prevents long-term irritation.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a piercing take to heal?

Healing time depends on the piercing location. Earlobes heal in 6–8 weeks. Tongues heal in 4–6 weeks because the mouth is highly vascular. Surface piercings like eyebrow, lip, and labret heal in 6–8 weeks. Cartilage piercings (helix, tragus, conch, rook, daith), nostril, navel, and nipple piercings take 6–12 months because of poor blood supply or constant friction. The Association of Professional Piercers publishes the standard ranges.

Can I clean my piercing with hydrogen peroxide?

No. Hydrogen peroxide kills new tissue along with bacteria and significantly slows piercing healing. The same applies to rubbing alcohol, antibacterial soaps, tea tree oil, Neosporin, and Bactine. The Association of Professional Piercers recommends only sterile saline solution (sodium chloride 0.9%) or a homemade solution of non-iodized sea salt and distilled water for piercing aftercare.

Should I rotate my piercing jewelry while it heals?

No. Rotating or twisting jewelry in a healing piercing tears the new tissue forming in the channel and significantly slows healing. This is a long-standing internet myth that the APP and professional piercers consistently warn against. Leave the jewelry completely alone except for gentle saline rinses twice a day.

Can I swim with a new piercing?

Avoid pools, hot tubs, lakes, and oceans for at least 4–6 weeks after a new piercing. Non-sterile water introduces bacteria into the open wound. Showers are fine β€” the running water and brief exposure are not the same risk. If you must swim, a waterproof transparent film dressing can protect the area, but skipping the swim is the safer option during active healing.

What does an infected piercing look like?

An infected piercing has spreading redness beyond the immediate area, hot skin with throbbing pain that increases over time, thick green or yellow pus (different from clear lymph fluid), strong odour, and sometimes fever or chills. Normal healing involves localized mild redness, swelling, and whitish-yellow lymph crusting β€” none of which indicates infection. If you suspect an infection, see a piercer or doctor and do NOT remove the jewelry yourself, which can trap bacteria as the surface closes.

When should I get my piercing downsized?

Downsizing replaces the longer initial jewelry with a shorter piece that fits the now-healed channel snugly, preventing long-term irritation. For surface piercings like ear lobes and labrets, downsize at 4–8 weeks once swelling subsides. For cartilage, nostril, and navel piercings, downsize at 3–6 months. Always have a piercer do this β€” never swap your own jewelry during active healing.

Sources

  • Association of Professional Piercers β€” Aftercare Guidelines
  • Association of Professional Piercers β€” Piercing FAQ

Sourced April 2026. APP guidelines are reviewed periodically β€” check safepiercing.org for the most current recommendations. This article is general guidance, not medical advice. For any sign of infection or unusual symptoms, see a doctor.

Visit Vanhess

If you got your piercing at Vanhess and want to ask a question about how it's healing, just come in. Aftercare follow-ups are free and we'll take a look at no charge. We're at 2929 Barnet Highway, Unit 2424, Coquitlam, open Monday to Saturday. Reach us at (604) 653-6449. Browse our implant-grade body jewelry collection or read our existing post-piercing care page for the quick-reference version of this guide.

Written by Mehran Rahbaran β€” Master Goldsmith & Founder, Vanhess Jewellery

Second-generation goldsmith with over 25 years of bench experience. Formally trained in gemology and jewellery design in India and Thailand. Canadian Jewellers Association member.

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