Titanium is forgiving but not indestructible
Implant-grade titanium ASTM F136 is one of the most durable materials used in piercing jewellery. It doesn't tarnish, doesn't oxidise visibly, doesn't corrode under normal conditions, and resists most chemicals. This forgiving nature has produced a common misconception: that titanium piercing jewellery is essentially indestructible and can be cleaned however you like. It cannot. Several cleaning practices that work fine for stainless steel or fine gold actively damage titanium pieces.
This guide covers what genuinely works for cleaning titanium, what damages it, and the practical routine that keeps quality titanium pieces in excellent condition for years. The principles apply to both natural finish titanium and anodised titanium (where the colour comes from electrochemical oxidation of the surface). PVD-coated titanium has additional considerations covered briefly here and in more depth in the gold cleaning cluster.
The basic safe cleaning method
The single most effective and safest cleaning method for titanium piercing jewellery is also the simplest:
1. Fill a small container with warm water not hot, not boiling. Body temperature is ideal.
2. Add one or two drops of mild liquid hand soap or fragrance-free baby soap. Avoid antibacterial soaps, scented soaps, and any soap with abrasive particles.
3. Place the jewellery in the soapy water and let it soak for 3–5 minutes. This loosens any biological residue without aggressive scrubbing.
4. Use a soft toothbrush (children's size, soft bristles only) to gently brush the piece. Pay particular attention to threaded ends, joints, and any decorative recesses where residue accumulates.
5. Rinse thoroughly under warm running water. Make sure no soap residue remains.
6. Pat dry gently with a clean microfibre cloth. Do not rub vigorously. Do not use paper towels (they can leave lint that catches in threading).
7. Air-dry for a few minutes before storage. Storing damp pieces causes long-term issues even with corrosion-resistant titanium.
Cleaning frequency
For titanium pieces worn continuously in healed piercings, the practical schedule:
• Daily: gentle wipe with a soft microfibre cloth at end of day to remove sweat, skin oils, and product residue
• Every 2–4 weeks: full clean with the warm soapy water + soft brush method above
• Quarterly: more thorough inspection check threading, look for surface wear, evaluate whether any pieces need restoration
• After exposure to chemicals (chlorinated pool, saltwater, hair colouring, harsh cleaning products at work): clean as soon as practical, ideally same day
Pieces in active rotation but not currently worn don't need cleaning unless they were stored dirty. Pieces stored long-term should be cleaned when retrieved for wear, not before storage.
What damages titanium
Practices that actively damage titanium jewellery
Bleach and chlorine bleach-based cleaners cause surface degradation and discolouration. Hydrogen peroxide for prolonged soaking at high concentrations or over long exposure, causes surface oxidation that dulls the finish. Abrasive cloths or paste polishes create micro-scratches that gradually dull the mirror polish. Steel wool or abrasive sponges visibly scratch the surface. Acetone and nail polish remover can affect anodised titanium colours. Acidic solutions (lemon juice, strong vinegar) affect surface finish over repeated exposure. Toothpaste used as a polish contains abrasives that scratch titanium even though it works for some other metals. None of these cause immediate catastrophic damage but each accumulates wear that shortens the useful life of the piece.
Anodised titanium needs gentler care
Anodised titanium (where colours like blue, purple, gold, or rainbow are produced by controlled electrochemical oxidation of the surface rather than by coating) is more vulnerable to damage than natural titanium. The colour comes from a thin oxide layer; abrasive cleaning or harsh chemicals can wear through this layer and remove the colour.
• Use only mild soap and warm water no specialised jewellery cleaners
• Soft cloth wipes only no toothbrush brushing on the coloured surfaces
• Air dry thoroughly; don't rub vigorously
• Store separately from other pieces to avoid colour transfer or scratches
• Avoid prolonged soaking in soapy water quick clean and rinse is better than extended soaking
PVD-coated titanium: brief notes
Pieces with PVD coatings (gold, rose gold, black, blue, rainbow) have an atomic-level bonded coating over the underlying titanium. The coating is durable but can be scratched by abrasive methods that solid titanium would tolerate.
• Same basic method as plain titanium mild soap, warm water, soft cloth
• Avoid the soft toothbrush on PVD surfaces (the bristles, while soft on titanium, can dull PVD over time); use cotton swab tips or microfibre cloth instead
• Skip ultrasonic cleaning except in dedicated piercing-jewellery ultrasonic cleaners at the lowest intensity for short cycles
• Avoid any abrasive polishing there's nothing under the PVD to polish to, and abrasion removes the coating
Full PVD care is covered in the gold cleaning cluster guide.
Ultrasonic cleaning: yes or no?
Ultrasonic cleaners use high-frequency sound waves to dislodge dirt from jewellery surfaces. They work well for some piercing jewellery and badly for others.
Good candidates for ultrasonic cleaning
• Plain solid titanium pieces without coatings, gemstones, or decorative elements
• Pieces with stuck biological residue that resists conventional cleaning
• Pieces with intricate designs where soft brush bristles can't reach all surfaces
Avoid ultrasonic cleaning for
• PVD-coated pieces (the vibration can affect the coating over time)
• Pieces with glued-in gemstones (the vibration can loosen the adhesive)
• Anodised titanium with delicate colour finishes
• Pieces with hinged components (clickers) repeated ultrasonic cycles can stress the hinge mechanism
If you do use ultrasonic cleaning, use a dedicated piercing-jewellery cleaner at low intensity for short cycles (30 seconds to 2 minutes maximum). Industrial ultrasonic cleaners designed for cleaning surgical instruments are too aggressive for jewellery.
Cleaning threaded components
The threaded interfaces between jewellery components (where backs screw into posts) accumulate residue that affects threading function over time. Cleaning these requires specific attention:
1. Disassemble the piece if possible (unscrew backs from posts).
1. Use a cotton swab moistened with warm soapy water to clean the inside of the threading both the internal threads in the post and the male threads on the back.
2. Rinse the components separately under running water.
3. Dry thoroughly before reassembly moisture trapped in threading promotes long-term corrosion even in titanium.
4. If threading feels gritty or resistant during reassembly, the components may need more thorough cleaning or may be approaching end of life.
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Internal links
• How to clean gold piercing jewellery
• Storing piercing jewellery properly
• Titanium piercing jewellery: complete material guide
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the best way to clean titanium piercing jewellery?
The simplest and safest method: soak in warm water with a drop or two of mild liquid hand soap for 3–5 minutes, gently brush with a soft children's toothbrush, rinse thoroughly under warm running water, and pat dry with a microfibre cloth. This method works for natural finish titanium and most coated pieces. Avoid bleach, hydrogen peroxide for long soaks, abrasive cloths, and steel wool all of which damage titanium even though it's a tough material.
How often should I clean titanium piercing jewellery?
Daily: gentle wipe with a soft cloth at end of day. Every 2–4 weeks: full soap-and-water clean. Quarterly: thorough inspection of threading and surface wear. After chemical exposure (chlorinated pools, saltwater, hair colouring): clean as soon as practical. Pieces stored long-term don't need cleaning unless they were dirty when stored.
Can I use jewellery polish on titanium?
Not abrasive polishes they create micro-scratches that gradually dull the mirror finish. Soft polishing cloths (microfibre or specifically titanium-safe polishing cloths) are fine for a final polish after cleaning. If a piece has actual surface dulling, restoration may be possible through professional polishing rather than home methods. The restoration cluster guide covers this.
Is it safe to put titanium jewellery in an ultrasonic cleaner?
For plain solid titanium without coatings or gemstones, yes — but use a dedicated piercing-jewellery ultrasonic cleaner at low intensity for short cycles. Avoid ultrasonic cleaning for PVD-coated pieces (can affect coating), anodised titanium (can affect colour), pieces with glued gemstones (can loosen the glue), and pieces with hinged components (stresses the hinge over time). When in doubt, the soap-and-brush method is safer.
Why is my titanium piercing jewellery changing colour?
Several possibilities. Natural titanium can develop a slight golden or amber tint over years of body contact this is normal and reversible with proper cleaning. Anodised titanium can fade in places of repeated friction (the colour layer is thin). PVD coatings can dull but not 'change colour' in the conventional sense. If a piece is genuinely changing colour rapidly, check whether it's actually implant-grade titanium or whether it might be lower-quality material colour change can indicate a finish failure on cheap pieces.
Can I clean titanium piercing jewellery with hydrogen peroxide?
Brief use (under 3 minutes) is generally safe for plain solid titanium. Prolonged soaking causes surface oxidation that dulls the finish. For piercing jewellery cleaning, mild soap and warm water are safer and equally effective for removing biological residue. Hydrogen peroxide is more useful for disinfecting jewellery between users (jewellery sharing isn't recommended but does happen) than for routine cleaning.
What should I avoid completely when cleaning titanium?
Bleach and chlorine bleach-based cleaners (cause surface damage), abrasive cloths or paste polishes (create micro-scratches), steel wool or abrasive sponges (visible scratching), acetone and nail polish remover (can affect anodised colours), strong acidic solutions like undiluted lemon juice or vinegar (affect surface finish), and toothpaste used as a polish (the abrasives scratch titanium). These don't cause immediate catastrophic damage but accumulate wear that shortens the useful life of the piece.