How to Wash Your Hair With a New Piercing | Shallows Manchester

hair washing · ear piercings · technique

How to Wash Your Hair With a New Piercing

Washing your hair with a fresh ear or face piercing is one of the small daily challenges of healing. Here is how to do it without irritating the piercing, snagging on jewellery or letting shampoo run where it should not.

In short

Tip your head forward and to the side away from the piercing so shampoo runs away rather than over the area. Use mild unscented shampoo. Rinse the piercing with clean water after washing your hair. Dry the piercing area with disposable paper towel rather than your hair towel. Tie long hair back or up to keep it away from the piercing while it air dries.

The whole routine adds a couple of minutes to washing your hair. Once you get used to it, the habit becomes invisible.

Of all the small everyday challenges of having a fresh piercing, washing your hair is the one most people figure out by trial and error. A few tweaks to the routine make a real difference. This page covers the technique, the products to skip and what to do when something goes wrong.

Why Hair Washing Matters

Three specific issues come up with hair washing and fresh piercings, particularly ear piercings.

Shampoo Running Over the Piercing

Shampoo contains surfactants, fragrances and preservatives designed for hair rather than healing piercings. When it runs over a fresh piercing, the chemicals irritate the channel. Most clients notice mild stinging at the piercing during shampooing if they have not adjusted their technique.

Hair Catching on the Jewellery

Wet hair clumps and catches on piercing jewellery much more than dry hair does. The mechanical pull on the piercing is a real source of irritation, particularly for helix, conch and other cartilage piercings near the hairline.

Towel Drying Catastrophes

The standard hair-tousling motion with a towel grabs piercing jewellery and yanks. We see clients come in for jewellery checks every few weeks because something has been pulled hard during towel drying.

Good technique

Protect the Piercing

Head tipped forward and away. Mild unscented shampoo. Rinse the piercing with clean water afterwards. Pat dry with disposable paper. Tie hair back.

Common mistakes

Disturb the Piercing

Head tipped back so shampoo runs straight over the piercing. Strong-scented shampoo. Vigorous towel drying. Letting wet hair drape over the area while drying.

The Right Technique

Step 1: Position Your Head

Tip your head forward (so water runs down towards your face rather than your ears) or to the side opposite the piercing. The aim is for water and shampoo to flow away from the piercing rather than across it.

Step 2: Wet Your Hair Carefully

The initial water spray is the first risk. Direct the showerhead at the back or top of your head rather than the side with the piercing. Let the water flow downward through your hair rather than spraying at the ear directly.

Step 3: Apply Shampoo Away From the Piercing

Apply shampoo to the back and top of your scalp rather than near the piercing. Work the lather through your hair using your hands rather than directing shampoo onto the side of your head closest to the piercing.

Step 4: Rinse Carefully

Keep your head positioned so water flows away from the piercing. Lather running down towards a fresh piercing area is exactly what you want to avoid.

Step 5: Rinse the Piercing With Clean Water

After the shampoo is out, deliberately rinse the piercing area with clean water for thirty seconds or so to clear any residue that has reached it.

Step 6: Apply Conditioner Carefully

Same principles as shampoo. Apply to the ends of your hair away from the scalp area near the piercing. Rinse with the same head position.

Step 7: Pat Dry the Piercing

Step out of the shower and immediately pat the piercing area dry with disposable paper towel. Do this before you touch your hair towel.

Step 8: Towel Your Hair Carefully

Gently squeeze water from your hair with the towel rather than rubbing or tousling. Particularly avoid bringing the towel close to the piercing.

Products to Use

Mild Unscented Shampoo

Sulphate-free options are gentler if shampoo does reach the piercing. Brands marketed for sensitive scalps are usually appropriate. Specific recommendations: Faith in Nature unscented, Body Shop fragrance-free options, Cetaphil cleansing bar (which works as a gentle shampoo too).

What to Avoid in Shampoo

  • Strong fragrance (irritates piercings)
  • Tea tree oil (commonly added to “scalp care” shampoos, irritates piercings)
  • Anti-dandruff active ingredients (some are irritants on healing wounds)
  • “Clarifying” or “deep cleansing” shampoos with harsh surfactants
  • Anything that visibly stings if a drop reaches your eye

Dry Shampoo for Healing Windows

Useful for stretching out the time between proper washes. Apply to roots away from the piercing area. Avoid the aerosol propellants drifting onto the piercing.

2-3m

Time the routine adds per wash

30s

Rinse the piercing with clean water after

0

Towel rubbing near a fresh piercing

Hair Length and Style Considerations

Short Hair

The easiest situation. The hair is unlikely to reach the piercing and washing is straightforward. Just be careful about shampoo running down past the ears.

Medium Hair

The most common challenge. The hair sits at a length where it brushes against ear piercings during normal movement, and washing requires more deliberate positioning.

Long Hair

The trickiest situation. Long wet hair drapes heavily over ear piercings, catches on jewellery and presses into the piercing area during drying. The technique matters most here.

Curly or Textured Hair

Catches on jewellery more than straight hair due to the texture. Be particularly careful during towel drying and air drying. Consider plait-drying rather than towel-drying.

Tied-Up Hair

For longer hair, tying it up out of the way during the healing window helps significantly. A loose top knot, a low ponytail behind the head, a satin scrunchie. Anything that keeps the hair away from the piercing during the day and night.

The Towel Drying Challenge

This is where most piercing snagging happens. The towel catches on the jewellery during a vigorous head rub and pulls hard. The piercing can be partially yanked out, the channel disturbed and healing set back significantly.

The Squeeze Method

Rather than rubbing your hair with the towel, gently squeeze sections of hair to absorb water. Section by section, working away from the piercing area. Slower than tousling but far safer.

Avoid Tousling at the Side of the Piercing

The tousling motion is exactly what catches on jewellery. Keep tousling to the back and top of the head, away from any ear piercings.

Cotton T-Shirt Method

Some people swap their hair towel for a cotton T-shirt during the healing window. Less friction, gentler on the hair and less likely to catch on jewellery. Just patting and gentle squeezing.

Microfibre Hair Towels

The wraps and turbans designed for hair drying are useful here. They sit away from the piercing area, dry hair effectively through wicking rather than friction, and reduce the temptation to rub.

Air Drying

Tie Hair Back

While hair air-dries, keep it tied back so it does not lie against the piercing. Even slightly damp hair touching the piercing for hours is an irritation source.

Avoid Hair Dryers Directed at the Piercing

The hot air can dry out healing tissue and the jet can blow hair into the piercing. Direct the hairdryer away from the piercing area.

Pat the Piercing Again

Once your hair is dry, give the piercing one more pat with disposable paper to remove any residual moisture that has accumulated.

manchester · live with the piercing

Book a Piercing

Walk in any day Monday to Saturday twelve to seven. We will brief you on hair washing, sleep, swimming and the practical details of living with a fresh piercing.

Specific Piercings, Specific Tips

Lobe

Easy. Tip the head, gentle squeeze drying, pat with disposable paper. Almost no risk to the piercing.

Helix and Outer Cartilage

More care needed. Wet hair sits directly over the piercing in many hairstyles. Tie hair back as it dries. Pat thoroughly with paper. Watch for hair strands wrapping around the jewellery.

Tragus and Inner Ear Piercings

Water can pool in the ear during washing. Tip your head deliberately to drain water from the ear canal after washing. Pat the inner ear area dry carefully.

Conch and Daith

Similar to inner ear. Make sure water drains rather than sitting against the piercing. The deep position of these piercings means residual water can sit there for hours if not actively drained.

Industrial Bar

Long bar across the top of the ear catches hair easily. Particularly careful with long hair. Keep it tied back during the healing window.

Eyebrow

Shampoo running down forehead reaches eyebrow piercings easily. Tip head back deliberately or to the side opposite the piercing. Rinse the eyebrow area with clean water after washing.

Face Piercings (Nostril, Septum, Lip)

Less affected by hair washing because they are away from where hair sits. The main concern is keeping strong-scented products away from the area.

Common Hair Washing Mistakes

Rinsing Backwards

Tipping the head back so shampoo flows directly over the ears is the most common mistake. Front-facing wash is the fix.

Vigorous Towel Drying

The classic snag-the-jewellery moment. Gentle squeezing replaces tousling.

Hair Up Wet

Wet hair piled on top of the head can drape over ear piercings as it dries. Better to keep hair tied back lower on the head or in a low ponytail.

Ignoring Conditioner Residue

Conditioner can leave a film on the piercing area that irritates. Make sure to rinse the piercing specifically after conditioning.

Strong Hair Products

Hairspray, dry shampoo, leave-in conditioners, hair masks. All have potential to drift or run onto the piercing area. Be careful where you apply them and keep them well away from fresh piercings.

Hair washing during piercing healing is mostly about being more deliberate than usual. The motion you do without thinking is what catches on jewellery. Slowing down by two minutes per wash saves weeks of irritation.
Shallows piercing team

Hair and Sleeping

Worth mentioning briefly here. Long hair can wrap around jewellery overnight in ways that pull on the piercing for hours. The same tie-it-back approach for daytime applies at night.

Plait or Low Ponytail

For long hair sleepers, plaiting or tying the hair in a low ponytail keeps it away from ear piercings overnight.

Silk or Satin Pillowcase

Hair slides more easily on silk and satin than on cotton, reducing the chance of it wrapping around jewellery during sleep. Optional but useful.

Bonnet or Hair Wrap

For some hair types, sleeping with a hair wrap is normal. During piercing healing this also keeps hair away from the piercing.

The First Wash After a Piercing

The first hair wash after a piercing is the moment to establish the new routine. A few tips for this specific wash:

  • Wait at least 24 hours after the piercing before washing hair
  • Use particularly mild shampoo for the first few washes
  • Be extra careful with positioning and technique
  • Spend extra time on the rinse-the-piercing step
  • Pat dry thoroughly with multiple sheets of disposable paper

After the first few washes the routine becomes second nature.

aftercare preperation

Back to the Hub

Hair washing is one part of the aftercare hub. The hub covers sleep, cleaning, swimming, products and the wider practical care during healing.

Back to Aftercare

The Habit Forms Quickly

The hair washing routine described above sounds elaborate written down. In practice it adds two or three minutes to a wash and becomes invisible within a week. By the end of the first month, you barely notice the adjusted technique.

The investment pays off in healing speed and reduced irritation. Clients who have ignored hair washing technique are some of the most common cases of recurring irritation we see. The fix is straightforward once they switch to a more deliberate approach.

Hair washing is one of those everyday tasks that becomes a small piercing challenge. The fix is just being more deliberate about positioning, product choice and drying technique for the few months of healing. Once you build the habit, it disappears. Until then, slow down and the piercing thanks you for it.

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Got More Questions?

Walk in, give us a call or book online. The team is happy to talk through aftercare, do a quick check on a piercing you are worried about or answer anything before you commit.

74 PRINCESS STREET, MANCHESTER, M1 6JD