Closure deserves care too
Most piercing content treats removal as an afterthought you take the jewellery out and the channel closes. The reality is that letting a piercing close cleanly takes deliberate care, in some ways similar to healing one. The closing channel is still a wound. The decision to let it close deserves consideration. And the small scar that remains can be minimised significantly if you handle the closure period properly.
This guide is for anyone who has decided to let a piercing close, or who is seriously considering it. It covers how to make the decision well, how to remove jewellery cleanly, how to care for the closing wound, and how to manage the scar that will remain afterward. The goal is to close a piercing in a way you'll be at peace with not regretful long-term.
Before you remove: the decision audit
Before committing to closure, work through these questions deliberately. The point isn't to talk you out of removal closure is a legitimate choice but to make sure you're closing for reasons you'll endorse later.
1. Is the reason for removal permanent or temporary? Temporary reasons (a short job stint with a strict dress code, a current relationship preference, a current phase of life) often don't warrant full closure. A retainer or a hiatus might serve you better.
2. If you closed and then in a year wanted to re-pierce, would you go ahead and re-pierce? If yes, the closure is roughly the same commitment as the original piercing. If no, you're confident the closure is durable.
3. Have you considered alternative jewellery before deciding the piercing itself is the problem? Sometimes 'I don't like this piercing anymore' really means 'I don't like this jewellery anymore.' Smaller, simpler, different-metal jewellery sometimes solves the dissatisfaction without removal.
4. Are you closing for someone else's preference, or for yours? Piercings closed because a partner or family member objects often produce regret later. Closing for your own genuine preference produces fewer regrets.
5. If the answer to all of the above lands on 'closure is genuinely the right call,' proceed. If any answer is uncertain, wait a few weeks before committing — the urgency to remove usually fades enough to reveal whether you actually want this.
The clean removal
Once you've decided, the actual removal should be careful rather than casual. The closure process starts with how you take the jewellery out.
If the piercing is fully healed
Wash your hands thoroughly. Examine the jewellery to identify the threading or closure mechanism. Remove gently most flat-back labrets unscrew at the back; clickers and rings open via small hinges or seam separations; barbells unscrew at the ends. Don't use excessive force; if jewellery feels stuck, soak in warm saline for 10 minutes to loosen any crust before trying again.
If the piercing is still healing
Healing piercings shouldn't typically be removed at all the channel is still forming, and removal can cause complications. If you must remove a still-healing piercing for any reason, consult your piercer rather than doing it yourself. They can often advise on whether a downsize or material change might address the underlying issue without full removal.
If the jewellery won't come out
Don't force. Stuck jewellery is sometimes a sign of an issue with the piercing (swelling, scar tissue compression, or even minor infection). A professional piercer can usually remove stuck jewellery safely; trying to force it yourself can damage the channel and increase the scar that remains after closure.
The closure period
Once the jewellery is out, the piercing channel begins closing immediately. The first 2–4 weeks are the period that most affects the final scar appearance. During this time:
• Continue gentle saline rinses, just like during healing. The closing wound benefits from cleanliness in the same way the healing one did
• Avoid touching, picking, or otherwise disturbing the position. The tissue is rebuilding itself; interference slows the process
• Don't apply scar creams, oils, or topical treatments until the surface has fully sealed (typically 2–4 weeks). Applying anything to an open wound can interfere with closure
• Avoid jewellery in adjacent piercings touching the closing channel. If you have multiple ear piercings and one is closing, choose jewellery in the others that doesn't press against or move into the closing piercing's position
• Avoid sun exposure on the closing position. UV during closure increases the risk of permanent pigment change in the final scar
Scar management after surface closure
Once the surface has fully sealed typically 2–4 weeks after removal for most piercings you can begin scar management to minimise the remaining mark. The goal is to support tissue remodelling and reduce visible scar formation.
Silicone gel or silicone sheets
The most evidence-supported scar treatment for fresh scars. Silicone gel applied as a thin layer twice daily, or silicone sheets worn for several hours daily, support proper collagen remodelling and reduce hypertrophic scar formation. Continue for 8–12 weeks after surface closure for best results. Available at most pharmacies.
Vitamin E oil
Widely recommended in popular sources, with mixed evidence in clinical literature. Some people find it helps; controlled studies have not consistently demonstrated effect beyond what could be attributed to general moisturisation. Not harmful if used on properly closed wounds; not a miracle treatment.
Sunscreen on the closed position
Once the wound is fully closed (typically 4–6 weeks), regular sunscreen application on the scar position significantly reduces the risk of long-term pigment changes. Even if the scar looks settled, the tissue remains photo-sensitive for months. Apply SPF 30+ whenever the position will be sun-exposed.
Professional treatment for stubborn scars
If a scar remains raised, discoloured, or visibly different from surrounding tissue after 6 months, a dermatologist can offer additional treatments corticosteroid injections for hypertrophic scars, laser treatments for pigmentation, or surgical revision in extreme cases. Most piercing closure scars don't reach the threshold for professional treatment, but the option exists for outliers.
What different piercings leave behind
| Piercing location | Typical scar after closure | Visibility after 1 year |
|---|---|---|
| Earlobe | Small darker dot or tiny indent | Often barely visible |
| Helix / cartilage | Slightly more visible scar; sometimes raised | Visible on close inspection |
| Nose / nostril | Small mark; pigment change common | Usually subtle but visible |
| Septum | Internal scar; externally usually invisible | Invisible externally |
| Lip / labret | Small mark; can be more visible due to lip mobility | Visible if known where to look |
| Navel | Small scar on the rim; healing well usually | Often barely visible |
| Nipple | Small marks at entry and exit | Often barely visible |
| Surface / dermal | Larger scar more likely; tissue disruption | Usually visible long-term |
Emotional dimensions of intentional closure
Closure can be more emotional than expected
Many people are surprised by the emotional weight of intentionally closing a piercing they've had for years. The piercing was part of how they recognised themselves in mirrors; its absence can feel like a small grief. This is normal and worth naming. If you've decided to close a piercing that had meaning to you, allow the closure to be a small ritual taking the jewellery out deliberately, keeping the piece even if you don't wear it, marking the date if it matters to you. The closure deserves the dignity the piercing itself had.
Common closure mistakes to avoid
• Removing on impulse during emotional moments — bad days produce removal decisions that often get reversed within weeks. If you're emotionally activated, wait at least 72 hours before removing
• Closing one of a pair without considering the other — if you have matching piercings on left and right ears, closing one without the other often produces an asymmetry you didn't intend
• Skipping the saline rinses during closure — the closing wound benefits from gentle cleaning just like a healing one
• Applying scar creams to an open wound — wait for full surface closure before any topical treatments
• Forgetting sun protection the closing and recently-closed position is photo-sensitive for months; sun exposure during this period locks in pigment changes
Shop the look
Internal links
• Removing and closing piercings: complete guide
• How long until your piercing closes
• Permanent retainers vs letting close
• Closure regret: piercings people wish they had kept
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I let my piercing close cleanly?
Remove the jewellery gently after a warm soak to loosen any crust. Continue gentle saline rinses twice daily during the first 2–4 weeks while the wound closes at the surface. Avoid touching, picking, or applying topical treatments until the surface has fully sealed. After full surface closure, begin scar management with silicone gel or sheets for 8–12 weeks to minimise the final scar appearance. Use sunscreen on the position whenever sun-exposed for several months.
Should I see a piercer before removing a piercing I want to close?
Not strictly necessary for closure, but worth doing if you're uncertain about the decision. A piercer can confirm that closure is the right call, sometimes identify whether a retainer or different jewellery might address your concerns instead, and remove stuck jewellery safely if you've struggled to get it out yourself. The consultation is usually free or low-cost, and the input can prevent regret.
Will I have a scar after letting my piercing close?
Almost always, yes though scars range from barely visible to clearly visible depending on piercing location, how the piercing healed originally, and your individual scar-forming tendencies. Earlobes typically leave very subtle marks; cartilage piercings leave more visible scars; surface and dermal piercings leave the most visible scars. With proper closure care and scar management, most piercing closure scars fade significantly over 6–12 months.
Can I close a piercing if it's currently infected?
No — don't remove jewellery from an infected piercing without consulting a healthcare provider or professional piercer first. Removing jewellery from an active infection can close the surface over the infection and trap it inside, leading to more serious complications. The infection needs to be treated first, then removal can be considered. This is one of the few absolute rules in piercing care.
How long should I wait before deciding to close a piercing?
If the decision feels impulsive or emotionally activated, wait at least 72 hours before removing. Bad days produce removal decisions that often get reversed within weeks. If you've been considering removal for several weeks or months and the conviction has remained steady, the decision is more durable. Closure is reversible only through re-piercing, which is its own commitment so making the decision when you're in a settled state matters.
Can I get the same piercing back if I change my mind after closure?
Often yes, but it requires waiting for full closure of the original channel (typically 6–12 months minimum, sometimes longer) and then re-piercing through the position. The new piercing won't be identical to the original scar tissue from the previous channel can affect placement, healing time, and final appearance. A professional piercer can assess whether re-piercing through the same position is feasible or whether slightly different placement would produce better results.
What scar treatment works best for piercing closure scars?
Silicone gel or silicone sheets have the strongest evidence base for fresh scar improvement apply once the wound has fully closed (2–4 weeks post-removal) and continue for 8–12 weeks. Vitamin E oil is widely recommended but has mixed evidence. Sunscreen during the first several months after closure is one of the most important protective measures — sun exposure on healing scars locks in long-term pigment changes. For stubborn scars after 6 months, a dermatologist can offer additional treatments (corticosteroid injections, laser, surgical revision in extreme cases).