preperation · medication · tattoos in manchester
Getting a Tattoo While on Medication
Most prescription medications are fine. Blood thinners, immunosuppressants, accutane and steroids need GP clearance and sometimes a temporary pause. Never stop a prescription without medical advice. Be honest with your artist about everything you take.
Most medications do not prevent getting a tattoo but some specific classes need careful planning. Blood thinners cause excessive bleeding during the session and slow healing afterwards. Immunosuppressants raise infection risk and slow healing. Accutane and related acne drugs make the skin fragile for months after stopping. Antibiotics signal an active infection that should be cleared first.
The rule is simple. Tell your tattoo artist everything you take, including supplements. Talk to your GP before booking if you are on anything from the higher risk categories. Never stop a prescription on your own to get a tattoo. The risks of stopping medication are usually worse than the risks of delaying the tattoo.
This is a question we are asked at consultation regularly. Long term medication is common, particularly in clients over 30. Most can be tattooed without issue but some require planning. This page covers the main medication categories that affect tattooing, what the issues are and what to do about them. The advice here is general. Always check with your GP or pharmacist about your specific prescriptions.
We are tattoo artists not doctors. Nothing on this page replaces medical advice. We can tell you what we see in studio and what the industry guidance says. The final clearance for tattooing while on any medication has to come from your GP.
Medications That Need Special Planning
Blood Thinners
Warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban, edoxaban, dabigatran, clopidogrel, aspirin at cardioprotective doses. All reduce blood clotting. Cause excessive bleeding during the tattoo session that washes ink out before it settles and leaves the area open to infection longer afterwards.
Most reputable studios will require a GP letter confirming it is safe to proceed. Some artists will decline regardless. Never stop blood thinners without medical advice.
Immunosuppressants and Steroids
Methotrexate, ciclosporin, biologics, oral steroids over 10mg prednisolone, organ rejection medication. All weaken the immune system, which slows healing and raises infection risk. Tattoos heal slowly and unpredictably.
Discuss with your specialist before booking. Some immunosuppressed patients can be tattooed safely with adjusted aftercare. Others should wait until off the medication.
The Medication Categories in Detail
Blood Thinners and Anticoagulants
The biggest medication concern for tattoos. Blood thinners include warfarin, the newer DOACs like apixaban and rivaroxaban, antiplatelet drugs like clopidogrel and cardioprotective aspirin. All make the blood less able to clot. During a tattoo this means significantly more bleeding, which dilutes the ink as it goes in, makes the artist’s job harder and produces a patchier healed result. After the session the open wound stays open longer, raising infection risk.
If you take blood thinners, talk to your prescribing GP before booking. Some doctors will approve tattoos on lower dose regimens with extra aftercare precautions. Some will recommend waiting until you are off the medication. A few will provide a letter the studio can keep on file. Never stop blood thinners independently because stroke and clot risk is far worse than tattoo bleeding.
NSAIDs and Aspirin
Ibuprofen, naproxen, diclofenac and aspirin all thin blood mildly. The effect is shorter than prescription blood thinners. The standard guidance is to stop for 24 to 48 hours before the session if medically possible. Aspirin’s effect lasts up to 7 days because it permanently affects platelets, so the wait is longer for chronic aspirin users.
If you take NSAIDs daily for pain or inflammation, talk to your GP about whether stopping for the tattoo window is safe given your reason for taking them. Often it is. Paracetamol is a safe substitute during the wait.
Antibiotics
Active antibiotic use signals an active infection somewhere. Getting a tattoo while fighting an infection is not a good idea. The immune system is already engaged. Adding a fresh wound stresses it further. Some antibiotics also cause photosensitivity which makes the healed tattoo more vulnerable to sun damage.
Wait until the antibiotic course is finished and the underlying infection is cleared. Usually 1 to 2 weeks after the last dose. Doxycycline and related tetracyclines may need a slightly longer gap due to their photosensitising effect.
Antidepressants and Anti-Anxiety Medications
SSRIs like sertraline, citalopram, fluoxetine and escitalopram are generally fine for tattoos. Some have a mild blood thinning effect but not enough to require stopping. Mirtazapine and other newer antidepressants are similar. Benzodiazepines like diazepam can cause drowsiness which is not ideal during a tattoo session but they do not interfere with healing.
Tell the artist what you take. No special precautions usually needed. Do not stop your medication for a tattoo. The mental health risks far outweigh any small tattoo benefit.
Acne Medications
Isotretinoin, sold as Roaccutane or Accutane, is the big one. This medication makes the skin extremely fragile, slow to heal and prone to scarring. Tattooing while on isotretinoin or in the 6 months following is strongly contraindicated. Most reputable studios will refuse and you should not push to override that.
Other acne medications like topical retinoids, antibiotics and benzoyl peroxide are less problematic but should not be applied directly to the planned tattoo area in the days before the session.
Diabetes Medication
Metformin, gliclazide, insulin and other diabetes medications are not a contraindication to tattoos in themselves. The bigger consideration is the underlying diabetes, which slows healing and raises infection risk when not well controlled. Well controlled diabetics with normal HbA1c can be tattooed safely. Poorly controlled diabetics should improve their control first.
Eat properly before the appointment. The tattoo stress can raise blood sugar so monitor more carefully on the day. Bring snacks for longer sessions.
Hormonal Medications
Contraceptive pills, HRT and hormone replacement therapies are generally fine for tattoos. Some can cause mild skin sensitivity that affects how reactive the area feels but they do not prevent tattooing. Mention them at consultation but no special precautions usually needed.
Heart and Blood Pressure Medications
Beta blockers, ACE inhibitors, calcium channel blockers, statins. Most are fine for tattoos. The exception is when they overlap with blood thinning, which some heart medications include as a secondary effect. Discuss at consultation and check with your GP if you are not sure.
Medication risk levels for tattoos
With getting a tattoo and being on certain medications like antibiotics, this can delay the healing process and lead to potential risk for more infections to enter.
Adapted from professional pharmacy guidance
Supplements and Over the Counter Products
Several common supplements thin blood and should be paused before a tattoo if your prescriber agrees. Fish oil and omega-3, vitamin E at high doses, ginkgo biloba, garlic capsules at therapeutic doses and turmeric supplements at higher doses all have mild blood thinning effects. Stop these 5 to 7 days before the session if you can.
Food sources of these substances at normal dietary levels are fine. The supplement question only applies to concentrated tablets or capsules.
What to Do Before You Book
List Everything You Take
Make a written list of every prescription, over the counter medication and supplement you take, including doses and how long you have been on each. Bring this to the consultation and to any GP appointment about the tattoo plan.
Speak to Your GP
For any medication in the higher risk categories, see your GP before booking the tattoo appointment. Explain what you want to do and ask for written confirmation that it is safe. Studios appreciate the documentation.
Be Honest With the Artist
Do not hide medications you think might cause refusal. The artist needs accurate information to plan the session safely and to recognise any abnormal bleeding or healing during and after. Studios that take your honesty seriously are studios you can trust with your skin.
GP
Always consult before tattoo on meds
6 mo
Wait after isotretinoin
NEVER
Stop a prescription on your own
Thinking It Through Before You Book
If you are on regular medication, plan the tattoo timeline accordingly. Book a GP appointment first to clear the plan. Get any required letters. Then book the tattoo consultation with all your documentation ready. Most clients on medication can be tattooed safely with the right planning. Our tattoo Manchester page covers booking and we are happy to discuss specific medications at consultation.
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Book a Consultation at Shallows Manchester
Walk in Monday to Saturday 12 to 7pm or book a longer consultation slot. We will talk through your medication, the specific risks for your piece and what GP clearance might be needed before we proceed.
Practical Questions That Come Up
Can I Get a Tattoo on Antidepressants?
Yes for almost all common antidepressants. SSRIs, SNRIs, tricyclics, mirtazapine and others are generally fine. Some have a mild blood thinning effect but not enough to prevent tattooing. Do not stop your medication for the tattoo. Mention it at consultation and the artist will adjust if needed.
How Long After Antibiotics Can I Get a Tattoo?
Wait 1 to 2 weeks after the last dose of antibiotics. The underlying infection should be fully cleared. Photosensitising antibiotics like doxycycline may need 2 to 4 weeks for the skin to return to baseline. Check with your GP if you are not sure.
What About HRT?
Hormone replacement therapy is generally fine for tattoos. Some clients notice slightly more skin sensitivity but no special precautions are needed. Mention it at consultation.
Can I Tattoo If I Take Insulin?
Yes if your diabetes is well controlled. Bring snacks. Monitor blood sugar before and after the session. Tattoo stress can raise blood sugar temporarily. Healing is normal for well controlled diabetics. Poorly controlled diabetes should be improved before tattooing.
tattoo preperation guide
Read the Full Guide
Medication is one of several health topics that affect tattooing. The full preperation guide covers blood thinners, pregnancy, breastfeeding, diabetes, allergies and the other medical considerations for safe tattooing.
The rest of our tattoo preperation guide covers related health questions. Blood thinners specifically, pregnancy, breastfeeding, diabetes, allergies. Each has its own page worth reading if it applies to you.
The summary in plain terms. Most medications are compatible with tattoos. Blood thinners, immunosuppressants, accutane and active antibiotic courses are the main exceptions and they need GP planning rather than outright refusal in most cases. Be honest. Talk to your GP. Talk to the artist. Plan ahead. The right preparation lets most people on long term medication get the tattoo they want safely.
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Got More Questions?
Pop in, give us a call or get a quote online. Happy to talk through specific medications and what planning might be needed before your appointment.
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