Workplace dress codes and piercings
In most European jurisdictions, employers can legally require staff to remove or conceal visible piercings as a condition of employment provided the rule is applied consistently and not as a proxy for discrimination on protected grounds.
Retainer types: what works where
| Retainer type | Appearance | Best for | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clear PTFE | Nearly invisible | Nose, helix, labret | Body-safe short-term; not for long-term wear |
| Flesh-toned acrylic | Skin-toned | Nose studs, labret | Colour may not match; not long-term body-safe |
| Glass retainer | Translucent | Septum, stretched lobes | Body-safe; fragile |
| Titanium flat-back labret (small) | Low-profile | Any healed ear piercing | Preferred — small but visible; fully body-safe |
| Septum flip (horseshoe rotated up) | Hidden inside nose | Septum only | Works once fully healed (3+ months) |
Industries and typical policies
| Industry | Typical policy | Practical approach |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare / clinical | Strict no facial piercings in most roles | PTFE retainer or removal during shifts |
| Food service | Often restricted for hygiene | Small flat-back or removal |
| Finance / legal / corporate | Conservative discreet jewellery only | Flesh-tone retainer or small flat-back titanium stud |
| Education | Varies usually tolerant | Small studs generally accepted |
| Retail / hospitality | Employer-dependent | Small studs usually tolerated |
| Creative / tech | Generally relaxed | Minimal restrictions common |
| Military / emergency services | Strictly regulated by service | Check service-specific regulations |
Your legal position
Employers can impose dress codes including jewellery restrictions. They cannot apply the rule selectively by sex or ethnicity, use it as a proxy for discrimination on protected grounds, or refuse without consideration to accommodate piercings with genuine religious significance. If you believe a policy is being applied unlawfully, consult a local employment advisory service.
Internal links
• Piercing by lifestyle: complete guide
• Internally threaded vs externally threaded jewellery
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my employer make me remove my piercings?
In most European countries, yes employers can require jewellery removal or concealment as a condition of employment, provided the policy is applied consistently across staff and not used as a proxy for discrimination. Piercings with genuine religious significance may have additional protection.
What is the best retainer to hide a piercing at work?
For healed piercings, a small implant-grade titanium flat-back labret is the most comfortable and body-safe option. For near-invisible concealment, a clear PTFE retainer is the standard choice. For healing piercings that must be concealed temporarily, PTFE is APP-approved for short-term use.
Can I flip my septum piercing up for work?
Yes, once fully healed (typically 3–6 months minimum). Rotating a horseshoe or circular barbell so both ends sit inside the nasal passage conceals it completely. Do not attempt this with a healing septum the rotation traumatises the healing channel.
Are piercings allowed in healthcare settings?
Most clinical environments restrict facial and hand jewellery for infection control. Small flat-back studs in healed lobes are often tolerated; facial piercings are generally not. Check your specific employer's or trust's policy.
Can I be fired for refusing to remove my piercing?
In most jurisdictions, refusing to comply with a lawful workplace dress code can be grounds for disciplinary action. Employment law varies significantly. If you believe the policy is being applied unfairly, seek advice from a local employment advisory service.