The question almost everyone asks at some point
'How long until my piercing closes?' is one of the most common questions piercers receive usually from someone who either has had to remove jewellery and is wondering how long they have, or who is considering letting a piercing close and wants to plan for it. The answer is more variable than you'd expect, because piercing closure depends on multiple factors that change the timeline significantly.
This guide gives realistic timelines for the most common piercing locations, split by the age of the piercing. The numbers are based on piercer-reported patterns, body modification literature, and individual case reports rather than controlled studies closure timelines haven't been systematically researched in clinical literature. Use these as guidelines, not guarantees. Individual variation is significant.
The three closure stages, recapped
Quick recap of the framework, because closure happens in stages:
• Stage 1 — Channel shrinkage: the diameter contracts but the channel still exists. Reinsertion possible with effort
• Stage 2 — Surface healing: the entry and exit points seal over with skin. Reinsertion requires re-piercing the surface
• Stage 3 — Channel reabsorption: the internal tract gradually fills in. The piercing position becomes structurally indistinguishable from unpierced tissue
When the timelines below say 'closes in X', they typically refer to Stage 2 — the point where reinsertion without re-piercing is no longer practical.
Earlobe piercings
Lobe piercings are the slowest to close of any common piercing, because they're in soft fleshy tissue with relatively low vascularisation and minimal mechanical pressure on the channel.
| Piercing age | Stage 2 closure (surface sealed) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh (under 6 weeks) | 24–48 hours empty | Closure can be very fast in healing tissue |
| Recently healed (6 weeks–6 months) | Days to 1 week empty | Channel still vulnerable; reinserting becomes hard quickly |
| Established (6 months–2 years) | 1–3 weeks empty | Most reliable reinsertion window if recently emptied |
| Long-established (2+ years) | Weeks to months empty | Many people can reinsert in healed lobes after a year empty |
| Very long-established (5+ years) | Months to years | Some lobes never fully close even after a decade empty |
Notable point about lobes: they're famously forgiving. People who had ear piercings as children often discover they can still insert earrings decades later, even after years of not wearing them. This is unusual among piercing types most piercings don't have this kind of persistence.
Cartilage piercings — helix, forward helix, tragus
Cartilage piercings close significantly faster than lobes because cartilage tissue doesn't regenerate the same way soft tissue does, and the channel through cartilage tends to contract more aggressively when jewellery is removed.
| Piercing age | Stage 2 closure (surface sealed) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh (under 3 months) | 12–24 hours empty | Cartilage closes faster than lobes at the same age |
| Recently healed (3–6 months) | 1–3 days empty | Reinsertion often difficult after 24 hours |
| Established (6 months–1 year) | Several days to 1 week | Window narrows quickly |
| Long-established (1–3 years) | 1–2 weeks | Often the most forgiving range |
| Very long-established (3+ years) | Weeks | Cartilage rarely persists indefinitely like lobes can |
Helix and other rim cartilage piercings close at roughly similar rates. Tragus piercings (in the small triangular cartilage at the entrance to the ear canal) sometimes close slightly faster due to the position and the constant low-grade movement from jaw motion.
Daith, rook, conch — inner ear cartilage
Inner ear cartilage piercings (daith, rook, snug, conch) generally close at similar rates to other cartilage piercings, with some position-specific variations:
• Daith — closes slightly faster than helix in some people because of the deep inner fold position and the pressure from the surrounding cartilage
• Rook — typically similar to helix closure rates
• Conch — large flat cartilage area; closure rates similar to helix but the position-specific anatomy varies
• Snug — fastest-closing of common ear cartilage piercings; the snug is in a narrow ridge with significant tissue tension
All inner ear cartilage piercings should be assumed to close within days of jewellery removal unless they're very well-established (2+ years). The grace period is shorter than for lobes or even outer ear cartilage.
Nostril and septum piercings
Nostril piercing
Nostril piercings have famously variable closure rates. The position has constant low-grade movement (breathing, facial expression) and the cartilage is thin, both of which contribute to faster closure than ear cartilage. Realistic ranges:
• Fresh nostril (under 3 months): 12–24 hours empty often closes the channel
• Healed nostril (3 months–1 year): 1–3 days empty typically closes
• Long-established nostril (1+ years): 1–2 weeks for most people; some can reinsert after a month
Septum piercing
Septum piercings close faster than nostril piercings for most people, because the septum tissue is more reactive and the position has more constant movement. Even well-established septum piercings can close within days of jewellery removal.
• Fresh septum (under 6 weeks): hours to a day
• Healed septum (6 weeks–6 months): 1–3 days
• Long-established septum (6+ months): 3–10 days for most people
Lip and oral piercings
Lip piercings, including labrets, monroes, medusas, and snake bites, close at variable rates depending on position. The lip tissue is well-vascularised and heals rapidly, which paradoxically also means closure is rapid the body actively closes the wound.
• Fresh lip piercings (under 6 weeks): 12–24 hours can close the channel
• Healed lip piercings (6 weeks–1 year): 1–5 days
• Long-established lip piercings (1+ years): typically 1–2 weeks before reinsertion becomes very difficult
Tongue piercings are the fastest-closing common piercing the tongue's healing capacity is extraordinary, and tongue piercings can close within hours of jewellery removal even after years of being worn.
Navel, nipple, and surface piercings
Navel piercings close at variable rates depending on the depth and angle. Most navel piercings:
• Fresh (under 6 months): closure begins within 1–3 days of empty time
• Healed (6 months–2 years): 1–3 weeks
• Long-established (2+ years): can take months to fully close in some people
Nipple piercings tend to close faster than navels and at rates similar to lobes when well-established. Surface piercings (anti-eyebrow, surface clavicle, etc.) close rapidly because they're already vulnerable to migration during their lifetime the body's tendency to reject surface piercings translates to rapid closure once jewellery is removed.
Genital piercings
Genital piercing closure rates vary substantially by specific piercing type and tissue. Generally:
• Fresh genital piercings (under 3 months): 12–48 hours often closes the channel
• Healed genital piercings (3 months–1 year): 1–7 days
• Long-established genital piercings (1+ years): days to weeks, with substantial individual variation
Genital tissue is highly vascularised and heals rapidly, which means genital piercings both heal quickly and close quickly relative to other piercings. Consult a professional piercer for piercing-specific closure considerations.
Why your closure might be faster or slower than the averages
Faster closure: piercings that had complications during healing (bumps, migration, rejection), positions with constant tissue pressure (lobes worn with heavy hoops, navels in tight clothing), recent illness or stress (lowered immune function can paradoxically accelerate wound closure), and individuals with naturally aggressive scar-forming tissue. Slower closure: piercings that healed exceptionally smoothly, positions with minimal pressure, very well-established channels (5+ years), and individuals whose tissue retains piercing channels for years. None of these factors is predictable in advance your individual closure rate may not match the averages.
The empty piercing test
If you need to determine whether a specific piercing has closed or is still passable without going to a piercer, try the following:
1. Clean your hands thoroughly with soap and warm water.
2. Examine the position in good light. Can you see a small dimple, indent, or visible channel?
3. If yes, gently try to thread a properly-sized post (the same gauge you previously wore, or one size smaller) through the channel. Do not force gentle pressure only.
4. If the post passes through with mild resistance: the channel is still patent and you can reinsert with care. Consider using a small amount of water-based lubricant to ease the post through.
5. If the post does not pass: the channel has closed at the surface. Do not force. A piercer would need to assess whether re-piercing is possible.
Shop the look
Internal links
• Removing and closing piercings: complete guide
• Reopening a partially closed piercing
• Letting a piercing close intentionally
• Permanent retainers vs letting close
Frequently Asked Questions
How long can I leave my piercing without jewellery?
For fresh piercings (under 6 weeks), even a few hours empty can lead to closure. For recently healed piercings (6 weeks to 1 year), expect closure within days. For well-established piercings (1+ years), you have more flexibility typically a few days to a week is safe for most positions. Lobes are the most forgiving; cartilage, septum, and tongue piercings close the fastest. When in doubt, don't risk it wear a retainer or reinsert quickly.
Will my old earlobe piercing close after years without earrings?
Often not fully. Earlobe piercings are famously forgiving many people can reinsert earrings into lobes that have been empty for years, sometimes decades. The channel diameter shrinks, but the tract often persists in lobe tissue much longer than in other positions. If you previously had lobe piercings and want to try reinserting, gentle attempts with a thin post in a warm environment (after a shower) often succeed. If the channel doesn't accept the post easily, don't force — re-piercing is straightforward.
How long does a daith piercing take to close?
Daith piercings close at similar rates to other inner ear cartilage piercings. Fresh daiths (under 3 months) can close within 12–24 hours of jewellery removal. Healed daiths (3 months to 1 year) typically close within 1–3 days. Well-established daiths (1+ years) close within roughly a week for most people. The daith position has constant pressure from surrounding cartilage which can accelerate closure compared to some other cartilage piercings.
Does a septum piercing close quickly?
Yes, septum piercings close faster than most other piercings, even when well-established. The septum tissue is reactive and the position has constant movement (breathing, facial expression). Fresh septum piercings can close within hours; healed septum piercings close within 1–3 days; long-established septum piercings close within 3–10 days for most people. If you need to remove septum jewellery temporarily, plan for the closure timeline carefully.
How fast does a tongue piercing close?
Tongue piercings are the fastest-closing common piercing. The tongue's exceptional healing capacity translates to rapid closure when jewellery is removed. Fresh tongue piercings can close within hours; even years-old tongue piercings can close within 24 hours empty. If you need to remove tongue jewellery temporarily (medical procedures, dental work), plan for the reinsertion as quickly as possible many tongue piercings close in less than 12 hours empty.
What's the slowest-closing piercing?
Well-established earlobe piercings (5+ years old, fully healed without complications) are the slowest to close. Many lobe piercings remain passable even after years of being empty, and some lobe piercings effectively never fully close the channel persists as scar tissue indefinitely. This is why people who got ear piercings as children often discover they can still insert earrings decades later without re-piercing.
How can I tell if my piercing has closed?
Visual inspection helps fully closed piercings typically show no visible channel, only a scar mark or pigment change. Partially closed piercings may still show a small dimple at the entry point. The practical test: clean your hands, examine in good light, and gently attempt to thread a properly-sized post (same gauge or one smaller) through the position with no force. If the post passes through with mild resistance, the channel is still patent. If it doesn't pass, the channel has closed at the surface and a piercer would need to assess whether re-piercing through the position is possible.