The decision between closure and concealment
When a piercing is no longer working for your current lif a new job, a new relationship, a new aesthetic, a new phase the immediate question is whether to close it or keep it but conceal it. Most people default to closure because retainers are less discussed and less understood. This guide makes the case that for many situations, a retainer is the genuinely better answer.
Retainers preserve options. Closure forecloses them. If the reason for removal is anything less than permanent and most reasons are less than permanent a retainer keeps the piercing accessible to you if circumstances change. The cost is small. The benefit, in cases of regret avoidance, can be substantial.
What a retainer actually is
A retainer is jewellery designed primarily to maintain the piercing channel rather than to be visible. The goal is to keep the channel open without drawing attention, often making the piercing effectively invisible to casual observation. Common retainer types:
Clear PTFE retainers
Polytetrafluoroethylene the same material as Teflon, in body-safe medical-grade formulation. PTFE retainers are nearly invisible (clear with a slight haze), bend slightly to accommodate movement, and are gentle on tissue. Excellent for cartilage piercings, lip piercings, and any position where visibility needs to be minimised. PTFE is APP-approved for use during healing as well, which means it can serve double duty concealment now, healing-compatible if you need to remove and reinsert later.
Clear glass retainers
Borosilicate glass retainers are body-safe, completely smooth (no surface for bacteria), and have a slight translucency that makes them less visible than metal. Glass is heavier than PTFE and more brittle, but for some positions (septum, stretched lobes) it works very well. Quality glass retainers are appropriate for permanent wear in fully healed piercings.
Flesh-toned acrylic retainers
Acrylic retainers in flesh tones are designed to blend with skin. Quality varies significantly body-safe medical-grade acrylic is fine for short-term wear in healed piercings but is not recommended for long-term or healing-stage use. Avoid acrylic retainers for fresh piercings.
Tiny implant-grade titanium pieces
Sometimes the best 'retainer' isn't designed as a retainer at all it's just a very small piece of regular jewellery. A 2mm flat-back titanium labret in a helix or lobe is visible but minimal, body-safe, and works as a permanent solution. This is often the best choice for any position where the piercing is going to be more or less always present, just visually quiet.
When retainer is the better choice
A retainer makes more sense than closure in these scenarios:
• Temporary professional requirements a new job with a strict dress code, a current role that's incompatible with the piercing, a contracted period of strict appearance standards
• Healing complications you want to give time to resolve the piercing has had problems, you want to lighten the load on the tissue while keeping the channel open for the future
• Current relationship preference but uncertainty about whether the preference is durable — partner doesn't like the piercing, but you're not sure the relationship/preference will outlast the channel closure timeline
• Healing piercings you need to temporarily conceal sports tournaments, family events, religious ceremonies
• Aesthetic uncertainty — you're not sure if you want the piercing anymore but you're not sure you don't either; a retainer buys you time to decide without committing
• Multiple piercings where you want to mute some of them while keeping others retainers in some positions reduce the overall visual density without removing piercings
• Activities where the regular jewellery is impractical extreme sports, certain medical procedures, environments where catching jewellery is a real risk
When closure is the better choice
Some situations actually warrant full closure rather than a retainer:
• Permanent professional change with no foreseeable reversal (e.g. entering a career path with strict no-visible-piercing rules for the duration)
• Genuine aesthetic preference change you've been considering closure for months, the conviction has remained steady, you're confident this isn't a phase
• Failed piercing that won't heal regardless of jewellery choice sometimes the right call is to let the position fully close and either re-pierce later in slightly different placement or accept the absence
• Piercing that has migrated or rejected to the point where the original position is no longer recoverable — closure is just acknowledging what's already happened
• Medical recommendation from a healthcare provider that the piercing should be removed permanently
The default should be retainer, not closure
Unless you have specific certainty that the removal is permanent and you'll never want the piercing back, a retainer is the smarter default. Closure is irreversible (well, reversible only by re-piercing, which is its own commitment). Retainer keeps your options open. The cost of using a retainer for a year and then deciding to close is essentially the cost of a piece of PTFE. The cost of closing and then deciding you wanted it back is months of waiting, the difficulty of re-piercing scar tissue, and the risk that re-piercing produces a different outcome than the original.
Long-term retainer considerations
If you're using a retainer as a long-term or permanent solution, there are practical considerations beyond just choosing the right material:
Replacement frequency
PTFE retainers should be replaced every 6–12 months even when worn permanently. The material is body-safe but slowly degrades with constant tissue contact, body chemistry, and physical wear. Glass retainers can be worn indefinitely if they don't break. Acrylic retainers should be replaced every 3–6 months even with light wear.
Cleaning during long-term wear
Long-term retainer wear benefits from periodic cleaning. Remove the retainer once every 1–2 weeks, clean it with mild soap and warm water, allow the channel to breathe briefly (15–30 minutes), then reinsert. This prevents buildup of skin oils, bacteria, and dead skin cells around the retainer that can cause irritation over months and years.
When to swap from retainer to active jewellery
If your circumstances change and you want to wear visible jewellery again, the transition is straightforward remove the retainer, reinsert a regular piece of implant-grade titanium jewellery. The channel that's been maintained by the retainer is fully ready for active jewellery. No additional healing needed.
Retainers for different piercing positions
| Piercing | Best retainer type | Visibility level |
|---|---|---|
| Lobe | Tiny flat-back titanium (2–3mm) | Visible but minimal |
| Helix | Clear PTFE labret | Nearly invisible |
| Forward helix | Clear PTFE labret | Nearly invisible |
| Tragus | Clear PTFE labret | Nearly invisible |
| Daith / rook | Small titanium ring or PTFE | Visible but unobtrusive |
| Nostril | Clear PTFE post or flesh-tone acrylic | Nearly invisible |
| Septum | PTFE or clear glass retainer (or flip up existing horseshoe) | Invisible if flipped |
| Lip / labret | Clear PTFE | Nearly invisible |
| Navel | Clear PTFE curved bar | Hidden under clothing |
| Tongue | PTFE barbell | Visible but minimal |
Shop the look
Internal links
• Removing and closing piercings: complete guide
• Letting a piercing close intentionally
• Piercings at work: dress codes and retainers
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between a piercing retainer and regular jewellery?
A retainer is jewellery designed primarily to maintain the channel rather than to be visible. Common retainers are clear or flesh-toned, made from PTFE or glass, and shaped to be as inconspicuous as possible. Regular jewellery is designed to be seen even if it's small. The boundary blurs at the small end (a tiny 2mm titanium stud can serve as a retainer in a healed position). The functional distinction is intent: retainers preserve the channel; regular jewellery is part of how you display the piercing.
Can I wear a retainer permanently?
Yes, quality retainers in PTFE or glass can be worn as permanent solutions for fully healed piercings. PTFE should be replaced every 6–12 months due to slow material degradation; glass can be worn indefinitely if not broken; acrylic should be replaced more frequently (3–6 months). Long-term retainer wear benefits from periodic cleaning remove every 1–2 weeks, clean with mild soap and warm water, briefly air the channel, reinsert.
Are PTFE retainers safe for healing piercings?
Yes, PTFE is APP-approved for use during healing as well as after. This is one of the few non-metal materials specifically recommended for healing piercings. The flexibility helps reduce irritation during the healing process, and the body-safety profile is established. PTFE for healing should still be properly fitted (correct length and gauge) and replaced if the surface becomes scuffed or damaged.
Should I get a retainer instead of closing my piercing?
Usually yes, if there's any chance your circumstances might change. Retainers preserve the option to return to regular jewellery; closure forecloses that option. The exception is when the reason for removal is genuinely permanent a definite career path change, a settled aesthetic decision after months of consideration, a medical recommendation. For anything that might be temporary, a retainer is the smarter default.
How visible is a PTFE retainer?
Quality PTFE retainers are nearly invisible to casual observation in most positions. The material is clear with a slight haze, and the small flat backs sit close to the skin. In professional settings, photographs, and casual interactions, PTFE retainers typically pass without notice. They become visible on close inspection, particularly in good light but the practical concealment is excellent. For positions that need to be completely invisible, glass retainers are slightly less visible than PTFE; flesh-toned acrylic can match skin tone but is less body-safe long-term.
Can I sleep, exercise, and swim with a retainer?
Yes, retainers function as normal jewellery for daily activities once the original piercing is fully healed. PTFE retainers are particularly good for active wear because they flex with movement. Glass retainers are slightly more vulnerable to breaking during impact. For sleeping, retainers are typically more comfortable than regular jewellery because they're smoother and lower-profile. For swimming, the same considerations apply as for any jewellery pool chemicals and saltwater don't damage PTFE or glass.
How do I know if my piercing is ready for a retainer instead of regular jewellery?
The piercing should be fully healed typically 6 months minimum for lobes, 12 months minimum for cartilage piercings. If you're switching from active jewellery to a retainer for concealment, the piercing should be completely healed and stable, with no recent complications. If you're using PTFE during healing (which is APP-approved), this is a different scenario the PTFE is part of the healing process rather than a long-term retainer choice. Consult your piercer if unsure whether your piercing is ready for retainer wear.