The decision you wish you'd waited on
There's a particular kind of regret that piercing wearers describe: the realisation, sometimes weeks or months or years after closing a piercing, that the closure was a mistake. The piercing that didn't fit your circumstances at the time has come around to fitting them again. The job you closed the piercing for has ended. The relationship has changed. The phase has passed. And the piercing you let go of is gone, replaced by a faint scar.
Closure regret is common enough to deserve its own discussion. This guide covers why it happens, which piercings are most often regretted, what to do if you're currently feeling closure regret, and how to think about closure decisions to reduce the risk of regret in the first place. The goal isn't to make every closure feel like a mistake many closures are exactly the right call. But the regret is real and worth taking seriously, both before deciding to close and after.
Why closure regret happens
Several factors contribute to the surprising frequency of closure regret:
Decisions made under temporary conditions become permanent
Most closure decisions are made in response to specific life conditions a job, a relationship, a phase, a perceived expectation. Those conditions are often temporary. The closure is permanent (without going through re-piercing). The asymmetry produces regret when the conditions change but the closure is irreversible.
Anticipated relief doesn't materialise
Many people close piercings expecting to feel relief the piercing was complicated, draining, demanding, and removing it would simplify their life. Often the relief is real for the first few weeks. Then it fades, and the underlying complexity remains, but now without the piercing. The wearer realises the piercing wasn't actually causing the problem they thought it was.
The piercing was more part of identity than recognised
Some piercings are functionally part of how the wearer recognises themselves they look in the mirror and the piercing is part of the face they see. Closure changes that mirror image, sometimes in ways that the wearer didn't predict would matter as much as they do. The 'just a piercing' framing turns out to be wrong; it was actually 'a piece of self.'
Memory edits in favour of the piercing
Over time after closure, memory tends to soften the difficult aspects of the piercing (healing complications, dress code conflicts, partner objections) and intensify the positive aspects (the look, the feeling of having it, the identity it represented). The remembered piercing is better than the actual piercing was. The remembered absence is worse than the actual absence is. Both shifts increase regret.
Piercings most commonly regretted
Piercer surveys and online discussions consistently surface certain piercings as the ones people most commonly regret closing:
Septum piercings
Septum piercings often produce closure regret, particularly when closed because of a job or relationship preference. Septum piercings can be flipped up inside the nose for invisibility meaning closure is rarely the right answer for septum specifically. The retainer-style flip-up option means septum closures should almost never happen for visibility reasons.
Helix piercings
Particularly forward helix piercings and well-placed regular helix piercings. The position is generally subtle enough that workplace and dress code conflicts are rare; closure often happens because of a complication or because the wearer briefly tired of the piercing. The position is also good many wearers later realise the helix was one of their favourite piercings without recognising it at the time.
Belly button piercings
The 2010s saw widespread closure of belly button piercings as the aesthetic became dated. The 2020s revival of 2000s aesthetics has produced significant regret among people who let theirs close in the meantime. Re-piercing is possible but the scar from the original is often visible and the new piercing rarely sits identically.
Daith piercings closed for migraine reasons
People who got daith piercings specifically hoping for migraine relief sometimes close them when the relief didn't materialise only to later wish they'd kept the piercing as an aesthetic piece. The piercing has aesthetic value independent of any migraine claim; closing for migraine reasons alone can produce regret if the piercing was attractive on its own merit.
Multiple lobe piercings
Wearers who got multiple lobe piercings (second, third, fourth) and let some close 'because I wasn't using them' often regret it later when curated lobe stacks become aesthetically appealing again. The piercings that 'aren't being used' can become essential foundations of curated ear styling that wasn't planned at the time.
If you're currently experiencing closure regret
The first thing to recognise: closure regret is common, real, and not a sign that you made a permanently bad decision. Many people who feel regret in the months after closure ultimately re-pierce and integrate the new piercing into their life. The pattern is:
1. Recognise what you're feeling. Closure regret is a specific emotion — naming it as 'I regret closing this piercing' rather than diffuse dissatisfaction helps you act on it deliberately.
2. Determine whether the regret is durable. Regret felt immediately after closure (first few weeks) often fades as the wearer adjusts. Regret that persists or intensifies after several months is more durable and more likely to remain.
3. Wait the minimum healing period before re-piercing. The same minimum waits apply — 3–6 months for lobes, 6–12 months for cartilage. Re-piercing too early produces worse outcomes than waiting properly.
4. Consult a professional piercer about re-piercing options. They can assess whether the original position can be re-pierced through, whether a slightly different placement would produce better outcomes, and what to expect from the second healing.
5. Accept that the re-pierce won't be identical to the original. Memory tends to idealise the lost piercing; the re-pierce will be similar but not identical, and the difference is sometimes meaningful.
How to reduce closure regret risk before deciding
The pre-closure questions
Before closing any piercing, ask yourself: Have I been thinking about closure for at least three months consistently, or is this a recent decision? Have I tried alternative solutions (retainer, different jewellery, downsize)? Is the reason for closure permanent (settled aesthetic, definite career path) or temporary (current job, current relationship, current phase)? If I imagine myself in 5 years without this piercing, how do I feel? If you can answer these confidently in favour of closure, the risk of regret is lower. If any answer is uncertain, waiting longer before deciding is the right call.
The non-regretted closures
Not all closures produce regret. The pattern of closures that wearers consistently describe as 'good decisions' includes:
• Closures of piercings that genuinely caused ongoing problems (recurrent complications, migration, persistent irritation) where the closure simplified life
• Closures of piercings whose original aesthetic was tied to a specific phase that has definitively passed (teenage rebellion piercings closed in adulthood with clear hindsight)
• Closures of piercings done for someone else's preference (a partner who left, a community no longer relevant) where the wearer realises they never genuinely wanted the piercing
• Closures after exhausting alternatives the wearer tried retainers, tried different jewellery, tried downsizing, tried different aftercare, and concluded that closure was the only remaining option
• Closures of piercings that were medically inappropriate (rejected piercings, infected piercings that wouldn't heal, piercings in positions that just wouldn't work)
These closures tend to feel right both immediately and years later. The wearer doesn't experience the emotional gap between 'I closed this' and 'I wish I hadn't' that characterises regretted closures.
What if you closed and it's been years?
Long-after closure regret is its own situation. If you closed a piercing five years ago and have only recently realised you wish you'd kept it, the path forward depends on the piercing type and the tissue state. For lobes and other positions where channels can persist invisibly, the original channel might still be partially passable try the gentle reinsertion approach with a thinner post and warm soak. For most other positions after several years, the original channel is fully reabsorbed and re-piercing is the only path.
Re-piercing after years rather than months is essentially the same procedure as the original piercing. The scar tissue from the original has had years to remodel and is closer to fresh tissue than to recently-formed scar. Outcomes from years-later re-piercing are often closer to first-time piercing outcomes than from re-piercing soon after closure.
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Internal links
• Removing and closing piercings: complete guide
• Letting a piercing close intentionally
• Permanent retainers vs letting close
Frequently Asked Questions
How common is regret after closing a piercing?
Closure regret is common enough that piercers see it regularly surveys and informal piercer reports suggest some level of regret occurs in 20–40% of intentional closures, with the rate varying significantly by piercing type. Septum, helix, belly button, and multiple lobe piercings produce regret most frequently. Closures done in response to temporary conditions (current job, current relationship, current phase) produce more regret than closures done for genuinely permanent reasons.
What piercings do people most regret closing?
The most commonly regretted closures: septum piercings (which could have been hidden by flipping the jewellery rather than closed), helix piercings (where the wearer didn't recognise how aesthetically important the piercing was), belly button piercings closed during the 2010s now wanted again, daith piercings closed when migraine relief didn't materialise (but the piercing was attractive independently), and multiple lobe piercings that 'weren't being used' but later became essential to curated ear styling.
What should I do if I regret closing my piercing?
First, recognise that closure regret is common and not a sign of permanently bad decision-making. Determine whether the regret is durable (persisting for months after closure) or temporary (felt immediately after but fading). For durable regret, the path is professional re-piercing after the appropriate waiting period (3–6 months minimum for lobes, 6–12 months for cartilage). Consult a piercer about whether the original position can be re-pierced or whether slightly different placement would produce better outcomes. Accept that the re-pierce won't be identical to the original.
How can I avoid closure regret before closing a piercing?
Before closing, ask yourself: have I been considering closure for at least three months consistently, or is this recent? Have I tried alternative solutions (retainer, different jewellery, downsize)? Is the reason permanent or temporary? In 5 years without this piercing, how would I feel? If you can answer these confidently in favour of closure, regret risk is lower. If any answer is uncertain, waiting longer before deciding is appropriate. Many regretted closures happen because the decision was made faster than it should have been.
Why do people often regret closing helix piercings?
Helix piercings are typically subtle enough that workplace and dress code conflicts are rare meaning the most common reasons for closing other piercings don't apply to helix. Helix closures often happen due to a complication during healing or because the wearer briefly tired of the piercing. In both cases, the wearer often later recognises that the position was actually one of their most aesthetically valuable piercings. Once closed, the absence becomes visible in a way the presence wasn't.
Can I get a closed piercing back exactly the same?
Probably not exactly, no. Re-piercing through the same general position is often possible, but the new piercing differs from the original in subtle ways: the placement can drift slightly during the procedure (the needle finds the path of least resistance through scar tissue), the healing process is somewhat different from fresh tissue, and the final appearance has slight variations from the original. The re-pierce is usually 'similar to the original' rather than 'identical to the original.' Memory tends to idealise the lost piercing, which makes the inevitable differences feel more significant than they might be objectively.
Is it normal to feel emotional about closing a piercing?
Yes, very normal. Many wearers are surprised by how much closing a piercing affects them emotionally particularly for piercings that had been part of their visual identity for years. The piercing was part of how they recognised themselves in mirrors; its absence can feel like a small grief. This is a normal response to losing a part of how you look. Allowing the closure to be emotional, rather than dismissing the feelings, often helps process the decision and reduces both immediate distress and long-term regret risk.