Piercings as subcultural shorthand
Within any subculture punk, goth, alt, e-girl, soft grunge, dark academia, cottagecore piercings function as visual shorthand for identity, taste, and community membership. The specific piercings that signal belonging to each subculture aren't arbitrary; they emerge from each subculture's history, aesthetic principles, and references. Knowing what each subculture wears (and why) helps both insiders and observers read piercings more accurately.
This guide maps the major modern piercing subcultures what each one wears, what those choices signal, where the aesthetics come from, and how they overlap or differ. Subcultures evolve constantly, so this guide reflects current patterns rather than fixed rules. The boundaries are also genuinely porous many wearers blend elements from multiple subcultures and don't fit cleanly into one category.
Punk (and post-punk descendants)
Punk piercing aesthetics emerged in the late 1970s and remain remarkably consistent in their core elements. The defining principles: visible, confrontational, mechanical, anti-aesthetic relative to mainstream beauty standards.
Classic punk piercings
• Industrial barbells through the upper ear — the canonical punk piercing
• Multiple visible cartilage piercings, often in heavier styles
• Lip piercings, particularly snake bites (paired lower lip piercings)
• Septum piercings, especially in heavier styles (CBRs, large rings)
• Eyebrow piercings (more common in the 1990s post-punk wave than original 70s punk)
• Stretched lobes, sometimes with raw or industrial-aesthetic plugs
Modern punk styling
Modern punk piercings remain confrontational but have benefited from better material and technique. Implant-grade titanium has replaced the often-inadequate steel of original punk-era piercings. Modern punks frequently wear heavier-aesthetic versions of the same pieces: black PVD instead of bright steel, more substantial barbells, more visible hardware. The DIY ethic of original punk has partially migrated to professional piercing, but punk-adjacent home and unprofessional piercings remain present in some scenes.
Goth and post-goth aesthetics
Goth piercing aesthetics overlap with punk but with distinct emphases. Goth tends toward romantic, dark, and ornate rather than confrontational and mechanical. The piercings that signal goth specifically:
• Septum piercings, often with ornate or vintage-styled hardware
• Multiple decorative cartilage piercings with dark gemstones (black onyx, garnet, smoky quartz)
• Silver hardware predominantly, with the goth association of cool tones
• Crosses, daggers, or other gothic motifs in pendant or charm-style ear pieces
• Eyebrow piercings with darker gemstones
• Lip piercings, particularly side labrets
Goth has evolved into multiple sub-aesthetics trad goth, romantic goth, cyber goth, dark academia (adjacent rather than fully goth) each with somewhat different piercing patterns. Modern goth wearers often blend goth with elements from other subcultures: dark academia goth, goth-adjacent witchy aesthetics, post-emo goth descended from 2000s scene culture.
Alternative / alt aesthetic
'Alt' is a broader category that encompasses pieces of punk, goth, and various other subcultural signals without fully committing to any of them. Modern alt piercing styling tends toward:
• Multiple ear piercings as standard, with curated arrangements that lean toward asymmetry
• Septum piercings (now mainstream enough that they're more 'alt-adjacent' than purely alt)
• Cartilage piercings beyond just helix, daith, conch, tragus, rook all common
• Lip piercings, particularly medusa (philtrum), monroe (off-centre upper lip)
• Eyebrow piercings, sometimes paired (anti-eyebrow)
• Mix of materials and metals more deliberate than in classic punk/goth gold mixed with silver, deliberate metal contrast
The alt aesthetic is less about specific subcultural identity and more about visible departure from purely conventional styling. Many alt wearers don't claim membership in any specific subculture; the alt designation just signals 'not strictly mainstream.'
E-girl and TikTok aesthetics
The e-girl aesthetic emerged in the late 2010s on TikTok and adjacent platforms, with strong piercing components:
• Multiple delicate ear piercings, often in matched gold or rose gold
• Septum piercings — small, dainty, often with small CZ accents
• Nose stud and septum combinations
• Cartilage curation lean toward delicate rather than statement pieces
• Heart-shaped charms and small gemstone pieces
• Softer aesthetic overall compared to punk or goth — same piercings, smaller and more decorative jewellery
E-girl piercings differ from earlier subcultures less in piercing positions and more in jewellery selection. The same daith piercing reads as goth with a heavy silver ring or as e-girl with a tiny heart-shaped clicker. The aesthetic is style-of-jewellery driven more than piercing-position driven.
Soft grunge, indie sleaze, and 2000s revival
Recent revival of 2000s alt-pop aesthetics has brought specific piercing patterns into broader fashion currency:
• Belly button piercings — strongly associated with 2000s aesthetics, currently in revival
• Eyebrow piercings — another 2000s signature returning to visibility
• Multiple lobe piercings styled with mismatched dangly earrings
• Single-side lip piercings (one-sided snake bite descendants)
• Hardware mix that includes some bright steel and chrome alongside titanium — referencing 2000s materials
This revival aesthetic borrows from punk, goth, and emo without fully belonging to any of them, instead claiming a specifically nostalgic 2000s identity. The piercings function as period markers rather than pure subcultural signals.
Dark academia, cottagecore, and aesthetic-driven scenes
Recent platform-driven aesthetics dark academia, cottagecore, light academia, balletcore don't have traditional subcultural roots but have developed their own piercing patterns:
• Dark academia — minimalist single-metal curation, gold dominant, restrained, sometimes a single subtle septum
• Cottagecore — small floral or natural-themed pieces, gold dominant, deliberately understated
• Balletcore — extremely delicate pieces, mostly lobes, often featuring small pearls or pale stones
• Light academia — gold dominant, minimalist, similar to dark academia but with warmer overall palette
These aesthetics are less coded than older subcultures because they're younger and more fluid. The piercing patterns within them have not yet fully crystallised they're still emerging through platform-driven style cycles.
Overlap and blending
The honest reality of modern subcultures
Pure subcultural identification has weakened significantly in modern culture. Most wearers blend elements from multiple subcultures rather than committing to one — an alt-leaning punk who incorporates e-girl jewellery details, a dark academia enthusiast with goth-adjacent septum styling. The piercing patterns of each subculture are still recognisable but the boundaries are porous. Reading a piercing as 'purely punk' or 'purely goth' is increasingly inaccurate; reading it as 'punk-leaning' or 'e-girl-adjacent' is usually more accurate.
Shop the look
• Statement pieces (punk/goth styling)
• Delicate pieces (e-girl/dark academia)
Internal links
• Piercing symbolism & meaning: complete guide
• Ear curation: the complete guide
Frequently Asked Questions
What piercings do punks typically have?
Classic punk piercings include industrial barbells (the canonical punk piercing), multiple visible cartilage piercings, snake bites (paired lower lip piercings), septum piercings in heavier styles, eyebrow piercings, and stretched lobes. The aesthetic is visible, confrontational, and mechanical deliberately departing from mainstream beauty standards. Modern punk styling uses implant-grade titanium and benefits from better technique than original 1970s punk, but the core aesthetic remains remarkably consistent.
What's the difference between goth and punk piercings?
Goth and punk overlap significantly but with distinct emphases. Punk tends toward confrontational, mechanical, anti-aesthetic styling industrial barbells, heavy hardware, anti-beauty visibility. Goth tends toward romantic, dark, ornate septum piercings with ornate hardware, dark gemstones, silver predominantly, gothic motifs. The same piercing positions are common to both subcultures; the jewellery selection signals which subculture is being referenced.
What is the e-girl piercing aesthetic?
E-girl piercings emerged from the late-2010s TikTok aesthetic and emphasise delicate, decorative styling: multiple small ear piercings often in matched gold or rose gold, small septum piercings with dainty CZ accents, heart-shaped or sweet-themed charms, soft aesthetic overall. The e-girl aesthetic differs from earlier subcultures less in piercing positions and more in jewellery selection same daith piercing, different visual register depending on the jewellery chosen.
Are belly button piercings still associated with the 2000s?
Yes, strongly and that association has shifted from 'dated' to 'currently in revival' as part of broader 2000s aesthetic comebacks (indie sleaze, soft grunge, Y2K revival). Belly button piercings continued to be worn through the 2010s but with reduced cultural visibility; the recent revival has brought them back as part of nostalgically-coded styling. The piercing reads as 'period-aware' or 'nostalgic' more than as part of any specific contemporary subculture.
Do dark academia and cottagecore have specific piercing styles?
They're developing them, but the patterns aren't as crystallised as in older subcultures. Dark academia tends toward minimalist gold-dominant curation, restrained styling, sometimes a single subtle septum. Cottagecore favours small floral or natural-themed pieces in gold, deliberately understated. Both aesthetics are platform-driven (TikTok, Pinterest) and still evolving the piercing patterns within them haven't fully solidified the way punk or goth patterns have over decades.
Can I mix subcultural piercings?
Yes, and most modern wearers do. Pure subcultural commitment has weakened in modern culture, and blending elements from multiple subcultures is the norm rather than the exception. An alt-leaning wearer might combine punk-derived multiple cartilage piercings with e-girl-derived dainty jewellery selection; a goth wearer might incorporate cottagecore floral motifs. The boundaries are porous and the blending is generally read as personal styling rather than as inconsistency.
How do I tell what subculture someone's piercings belong to?
You usually can't reliably, especially in 2025. Modern wearers blend subcultural elements, and the same piercing positions appear across many subcultures with only jewellery selection signalling which is being referenced. The more accurate read is 'this person leans toward X subculture' rather than 'this person is in X subculture.' For most wearers, piercings reflect personal aesthetic preferences with subcultural influence rather than strict subcultural membership