The bridge piercing sits at the top of the nose — a horizontal barbell between the eyes across the nose bridge. It is one of the most visually dramatic facial piercings: you cannot miss it, and it changes the entire frame of the face. It is also one of the most anatomy-dependent and rejection-prone facial piercings, which is why it requires careful consideration and an experienced practitioner.
A bridge piercing is a surface piercing that passes horizontally through the skin across the nose bridge, between the eyes. It rates around 4/10 on pain, takes 9–12 months to heal, and has a higher rejection rate than cartilage piercings because it passes through surface skin only. Anatomy suitability is critical — your piercer must assess this before proceeding.
Is a Bridge Piercing Right for Your Anatomy?
The bridge piercing is a surface piercing the bar passes through a pinch of skin with no cartilage or structural tissue beneath. This makes anatomy assessment the single most important step before proceeding.
What your piercer will assess:
• Tissue depth — the bridge needs sufficient skin pinch (at least 6–8mm) to hold a barbell without being too shallow
• Nose shape — flat or low bridges have more tissue; very high, bony bridges may have insufficient pinch
• Glasses wear — if you wear glasses, the bridge sits exactly where frames rest. This creates constant pressure on the piercing and significantly increases rejection risk
• Skin type and history — keloid-prone individuals or those who have rejected surface piercings before should approach the bridge with extra caution
Bridge Piercing Rejection: The Main Risk
Surface piercings have higher rejection rates than traditional piercings because they have no structural anchor beyond the skin itself. The body gradually pushes the bar toward the surface over months this is migration, and if unchecked it leads to full rejection.
Early signs of rejection: the bar appears to be getting longer (the channel is getting shorter), the skin over the bar is becoming thin and shiny, or the placement has visibly shifted. See your piercer immediately if you notice these signs.
Read more: Piercing Rejection: Signs, Causes and Prevention
Bridge Piercing Pain
The bridge rates around 4/10 moderate, and often surprising people who expected worse. The skin across the nose bridge is thin and pinches relatively cleanly. The sensation is a sharp pressure followed by a brief sting. The area is sensitive due to proximity to the eyes, and mild tearing is common.
Bridge Piercing Healing Time
Bridge piercings take 9–12 months to heal fully one of the longer timelines for facial piercings. Surface piercings heal from outside in, and the shallow tissue depth means the channel is exposed to more movement and contact than a deeper piercing.
Bridge Piercing Jewellery
Starter Jewellery
A 16G straight titanium barbell, length measured precisely to your nose bridge by your piercer. Surface bars (with 90° bends at each end) are sometimes used as they reduce leverage on the skin. Your piercer will advise on the best construction for your anatomy.
Healed Jewellery
• Straight barbells — classic bridge look
• Surface bars — reduced rejection risk for some anatomies
• Curved barbells — used on some bridge placements to follow the nose's natural contour
Browse: Barbells
Bridge Piercing Aftercare
• Saline twice daily spray carefully to avoid getting it in the eyes
• Be extremely careful with glasses — avoid any frame that touches the piercing
• Sleep on your back if possible; avoid any pressure on the nose bridge
• Avoid makeup near the site during healing
• Monitor for migration signs from the first month onwards
Full guide: Body Piercing Aftercare
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a bridge piercing permanent?
No piercing is permanent. Bridge piercings have a higher rejection rate than most and many do not last more than 1–3 years, especially without careful aftercare. Those that are maintained well with correct jewellery can last many years.
Can I wear glasses with a bridge piercing?
Only if your frames do not contact the piercing site. Most standard glasses frames rest exactly where a bridge piercing sits, making them incompatible during healing. Contact lenses during healing, or frames that arch clearly above the piercing, are the alternatives.
Does the bridge piercing leave a scar?
Yes — all piercings leave some mark when retired. Bridge piercings can leave two small dots where the bar entered and exited. How visible the scar is depends on your skin type, how the rejection occurred, and how early you retired the piercing.
What gauge is a bridge piercing?
Most bridge piercings use 16G (1.2mm) straight barbells. The bar length is measured specifically for your nose bridge typically 16–22mm.
How do I know if my bridge piercing is rejecting?
Key signs: the visible bar length is increasing, the skin over the bar is becoming thin or transparent, or the placement has shifted from where it was pierced. See your piercer at the first sign.