Walk into any reputable piercing studio in Europe and you will see both terms on the consent form: ASTM F-136 and ASTM F-1295. Both are titanium. Both are implant grade. Both are safe. So why are there two — and does it actually matter which one goes through your skin?
Both ASTM F-136 (Ti-6Al-4V ELI) and ASTM F-1295 (Ti-6Al-7Nb) are biocompatible, implant-grade titanium alloys approved for body piercing jewellery. F-136 is the global standard and most widely used; F-1295 replaces vanadium with niobium and is preferred in some European markets. For the vast majority of people, both are equally safe.
The Two Standards Explained
ASTM International publishes the technical specifications that define what "implant grade" actually means. For titanium piercing jewellery there are two standards that matter:
ASTM F-136 — Ti-6Al-4V ELI
Composition: roughly 90% titanium, 6% aluminium, 4% vanadium, with extra-low interstitial elements (ELI) — meaning very low carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and iron impurities. The ELI version is specifically optimised for medical implants.
Used in: hip and knee replacements, dental implants, spinal fixation devices, and the majority of high-end body jewellery worldwide.
ASTM F-1295 — Ti-6Al-7Nb
Composition: roughly 87% titanium, 6% aluminium, 7% niobium. Vanadium is replaced entirely by niobium, another biocompatible refractory metal.
Used in: orthopaedic implants in countries where regulatory bodies have moved away from vanadium-containing alloys, and in body jewellery from European manufacturers who prefer the vanadium-free profile.
| Element | F-136 (Ti-6Al-4V ELI) | F-1295 (Ti-6Al-7Nb) |
|---|---|---|
| Titanium | ~90% | ~87% |
| Aluminium | 6% | 6% |
| Vanadium | 4% | 0% |
| Niobium | 0% | 7% |
| Nickel | Trace impurity only | Trace impurity only |
The Vanadium Question
The main reason F-1295 exists at all is decades-old concern about vanadium. In its free metallic form, vanadium can cause cellular toxicity. In the bound alloy form used in F-136, however, vanadium is locked into the crystalline structure of the metal and does not leach in any biologically relevant amount.
Multiple long-term studies on patients with Ti-6Al-4V implants have shown no measurable adverse effects from vanadium release. The European Medicines Agency, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and ASTM International all continue to approve F-136 for permanent implants.
So Which Should You Choose?
For a standard piercing — earlobe, helix, nostril, navel — both alloys perform identically.
For clients with extreme metal sensitivities, a documented history of multiple allergic reactions, or who have had previous problems with F-136, F-1295 is a worthwhile alternative. Some piercers also recommend F-1295 for people with known vanadium concerns.
How to Verify the Standard on Jewellery You Buy
Reputable manufacturers will state the ASTM standard explicitly on the product page. Look for phrases like:
• "Implant Grade Titanium ASTM F-136"
• "Ti-6Al-4V ELI"
• "ASTM F-1295" or "Ti-6Al-7Nb"
Be wary of vague terms. "Surgical titanium", "medical-grade titanium", "G23 titanium" and "aerospace titanium" do not by themselves guarantee implant standards.
Read more: Implant Grade Titanium vs Surgical Steel: The Truth
Why This Matters for Healing
During the healing phase, the inner channel of your piercing is essentially an open wound. Any metal release into surrounding tissue prolongs inflammation, raises the risk of bumps, and can lead to pigmentation changes that last years.
Both F-136 and F-1295 release effectively zero corrosion products into the body under physiological conditions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is ASTM F-136 the same as Grade 23 titanium?
Grade 23 (G23) is a commercial term for Ti-6Al-4V ELI. ASTM F-136 is the medical implant standard for that same alloy with stricter quality requirements. All F-136 is G23, but not all G23 is sold as F-136.
Why is F-1295 sometimes more expensive?
Niobium is a rarer raw material than vanadium and the alloy is produced in smaller volumes for the medical industry, which raises costs.
Can I be allergic to either F-136 or F-1295?
True allergy to titanium itself is extremely rare — published case reports number in the dozens worldwide. Both standards contain no nickel as an intentional alloying element.
Is one stronger than the other?
Mechanical properties are very similar. F-136 has slightly higher fatigue strength on paper, but in piercing jewellery sizes and stresses, both perform identically.
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