Proper aftercare is the difference between a tattoo that looks sharp for 20 years and one that fades, blurs, or scars within a year. The work doesn’t end when you walk out of the shop — the first two weeks of healing are entirely on you. Here’s exactly how to take care of a fresh tattoo, what to avoid, and when to worry.
Day 0: The First Few Hours
Your artist will wrap your tattoo in either plastic wrap (Saniderm / Tegaderm) or a traditional bandage. Follow what they say about when to remove it — the two approaches have different timelines.
- Saniderm/Tegaderm wrap: Leave on 24 hours to 5 days depending on how it’s going.
- Traditional plastic wrap: Remove after 2–4 hours. Wash gently.
Either way, the first priority is keeping the fresh wound clean and protected.
Days 1–3: Washing and Oozing
A fresh tattoo is essentially an open wound. It will ooze plasma, ink, and sometimes a little blood for the first 24–48 hours. That’s normal.
How to wash
- Use lukewarm water (not hot).
- Use a gentle, unscented antibacterial soap — Dial Gold or similar.
- Wash with clean hands — never a washcloth or loofah.
- Pat dry with a clean paper towel. Don’t rub with a bath towel (too much bacteria).
- Wash 2–3 times per day.
After each wash, apply a thin layer of aftercare — Aquaphor, Hustle Butter, or whatever your artist recommended. Thin is the key word. A thick layer smothers the skin and actually slows healing.
Days 3–7: Peeling Phase
Around day 3 or 4, the tattoo starts to peel — like a sunburn. Flakes of dried ink and skin will come off. Do not pick at it. Picking pulls out healing ink and leaves patchy spots that need touch-ups later.
During this phase, the tattoo often looks dull, cloudy, or faded. That’s temporary. There’s a thin layer of healing skin over the tattoo — it’ll clear up once healing finishes.
Days 7–14: Itchy Stage
Around day 7, the peeling slows and the itching starts. Everything itches during healing. Do not scratch. Slap it lightly if you need relief, or moisturize with a fragrance-free lotion (Lubriderm, Aveeno, Eucerin).
By day 14, most of the healing is done on the surface. The skin underneath is still maturing — the deeper layers take 4–6 weeks to fully settle.
What to Avoid During Healing
- Sun exposure — UV light destroys fresh ink. Cover up or stay out of direct sun for the first 2–3 weeks.
- Swimming — pools, oceans, hot tubs, lakes. Bacteria plus chlorine is a recipe for infection and ink loss. Wait at least 2–3 weeks.
- Baths or long showers — soaking the tattoo pulls ink out. Keep showers short and don’t let water pound directly on the tattoo.
- Gym / heavy sweating — sweat and friction damage fresh work. Skip the gym for a few days, or at least cover the tattoo.
- Tight clothing that rubs the tattoo — especially on wrists, waistbands, and shoulders.
- Petroleum jelly (Vaseline) in thick amounts — it smothers the skin.
- Picking or scratching — pulls ink, causes scabbing, leads to patchy spots.
Long-Term: Protecting Your Tattoo for Life
Once fully healed (around week 4), the #1 thing you can do for your tattoo is sunscreen. UV light fades tattoos faster than anything else. A high-SPF, broad-spectrum sunscreen every time the tattoo is exposed will keep it looking sharp for decades. This is especially important in Florida.
Also: stay moisturized. Skin that’s dry and ashy makes tattoos look dull. A good daily lotion keeps the ink looking saturated.
When to Worry: Signs of Infection
Real infection is rare if you wash properly, but if you see any of these, call your doctor:
- Fever
- Excessive redness spreading beyond the tattoo
- Pus that’s yellow or green (clear ooze in the first 48 hours is normal)
- Severe pain that gets worse, not better, after day 3
- Red streaks spreading from the tattoo
Most “infection” scares are actually allergic reactions to aftercare products — switch to a plain, unscented lotion and it usually resolves.
Getting a Tattoo at Idle Hands
At Idle Hands Tattoo Co. in Jacksonville, we give every client a printed aftercare sheet and walk through it before you leave. Questions during healing? Call us anytime at (904) 647-5183.
If you’re considering a new piece and want to book a consultation, reach out. Jeff specializes in Japanese, American traditional, and black and grey tattoos.
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