If you have ever wondered why some piercings heal beautifully and others do not, the answer is almost always in the metal touching your skin. Choosing the right piercing jewellery is not a style decision — it is a medical one.
In this guide, we explain everything you need to know about titanium piercing jewellery: which grade is truly safe, how it compares to surgical steel and gold, what PVD coating actually means, and how to read the specifications on every piece you buy.
The safest material for piercing jewellery is implant-grade titanium ASTM F-136, a medical-grade alloy used in surgical implants worldwide. It contains 6% aluminium and 4% vanadium, releases no measurable nickel, and is approved by the Association of Professional Piercers (APP) for fresh piercings. Healing times are shorter, irritation is rare, and it is suitable for almost every skin type.
Why the Material Matters More Than the Design
A piercing is an open wound for weeks — sometimes months. During that time, the metal you wear is in direct, continuous contact with raw tissue. Even tiny amounts of nickel, lead or cadmium can leach into the skin and trigger inflammation, prolonged healing, scarring, or full rejection.
This is why professional piercers across Europe and the United States have moved away from generic stainless steel and gold-plated bijouterie. The standard today is implant-grade titanium — and once you understand why, you will not go back.
What "Implant Grade" Actually Means
"Implant grade" is not a marketing term. It refers to materials that meet the strict requirements of ASTM International (American Society for Testing and Materials) for use inside the human body — in joint replacements, bone screws, dental implants and pacemakers.
For titanium, the two relevant standards are:
• ASTM F-136 — Ti-6Al-4V ELI (Extra Low Interstitials). The gold standard for body jewellery.
• ASTM F-1295 — Ti-6Al-7Nb. A nickel-free alternative used in some European markets.
If a piece of jewellery does not specify one of these standards, assume it is not implant grade. "Surgical titanium" is a meaningless term with no regulated definition.
Read more: [ASTM F-136 vs F-1295: Which Titanium is Safer?]
Titanium vs the Alternatives
Most jewellery sold in fashion shops, online marketplaces and even some piercing studios is made from materials that should never go near a fresh piercing. Here is how titanium compares to what you will find on the market.
Material comparison at a glance
| Material | Nickel content | Safe for fresh piercings? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Titanium ASTM F-136 | Effectively zero | Yes — APP approved | Lightweight, biocompatible, accepts PVD |
| Titanium ASTM F-1295 | Effectively zero | Yes — APP approved | Vanadium-free alternative |
| Niobium (pure) | Effectively zero | Yes — APP approved | Heavier, vivid anodised colours |
| Solid 14k+ gold (nickel-free) | Zero (verify alloy) | Yes — APP approved | Premium price, classic look |
| Surgical steel 316L | 10–14% | No | Common but causes reactions |
| Sterling silver | Variable | No | Tarnishes in body fluids |
| Gold-plated | High (in base metal) | No | Plating wears off in weeks |
Titanium ASTM F-136
Lightweight, biocompatible, nickel-free in any biologically meaningful sense, and exceptionally resistant to corrosion. It is the only material the APP recommends for initial piercings without reservations. It also accepts PVD coating extremely well, which is how we produce our gold, rose gold and black finishes without compromising safety.
Surgical Steel (316L / 316LVM)
Often marketed as "hypoallergenic", but 316L stainless steel contains around 10–14% nickel. The nickel is bound in the alloy structure and only leaches in trace amounts under normal conditions, but for the roughly 17% of European women with nickel sensitivity, even those traces can cause persistent irritation and slow healing. We do not recommend stainless steel for fresh piercings.
Read more: Implant Grade Titanium vs Surgical Steel: The Truth
Solid Gold (14k–18k)
Real solid gold of 14k or higher, nickel-free, is safe for healed piercings and many professionals consider 14k the only acceptable gold grade for fresh piercings. The catch: most "gold" jewellery sold online is gold-plated over brass or low-grade alloy. The plating wears off in weeks, exposing the raw base metal directly to your wound.
Read more: Are Gold Piercings Safe During Healing?
Niobium
Pure niobium is biocompatible, naturally hypoallergenic, and a respected alternative to titanium in the body jewellery world. It is denser and slightly more expensive, but for some piercers it is the preferred material.
Read more: Niobium vs Titanium: Which is Right for You?
Sterling Silver, Brass, Copper and Plated Metals
None of these belong in a fresh — or healing — piercing. Silver tarnishes when it meets bodily fluids, leaving black residue inside the channel. Brass and copper oxidise. Plated metals fail at the worst possible moment.
How to Read a Titanium Piercing Specification
When you look at a high-quality piercing product page, you should see specifications like:
• Material: Implant Grade Titanium ASTM F-136
• Gauge: 16G (1.2 mm)
• Length: 8 mm
• Threading: Internally threaded
• Finish: PVD Gold
Each of these matters. We have written separate, in-depth guides for the three most confusing parts of that list:
• Piercing Sizes Guide: Gauges, Lengths and Diameters
• Internally Threaded vs Externally Threaded Jewellery
• What is PVD Gold Coating? Everything You Need to Know
PVD Coating: The Smart Way to Wear Coloured Titanium
PVD stands for Physical Vapour Deposition. It is a process where titanium nitride or zirconium nitride is bonded to the titanium base at the molecular level inside a vacuum chamber. The result is a thin, extremely durable coloured layer — gold, rose gold or black — that does not chip, peel or wear off the way traditional plating does.
Crucially, PVD coatings are biocompatible. The titanium underneath is unchanged, and the coating itself is inert. This is how we offer beautiful coloured finishes that are still safe for fresh piercings.
Internally Threaded vs Externally Threaded vs Threadless
This single specification — how the bar connects to the decorative top — is one of the biggest differences between professional and amateur jewellery. With externally threaded jewellery, the threads (the spiral grooves on the bar) drag through your piercing channel every time you change tops. Imagine pulling a screw through an open wound. That is what cheap externally threaded barbells do to your skin.
Internally threaded and threadless designs put a smooth bar through the channel, with the threading or pin held inside the decorative top. This is the only acceptable construction for fresh piercings.
Read more: Internally Threaded vs Externally Threaded and Threadless Piercing Jewellery Explained
Nickel Allergy and Why Titanium is the Answer
Nickel allergy is the most common contact allergy in Europe. According to the European Centre for Allergy Research Foundation, between 12% and 17% of women and around 5% of men have a documented nickel sensitivity. The EU Nickel Directive (REACH Annex XVII, entry 27) limits nickel release in jewellery sold in Europe, but enforcement on imported fast-fashion pieces is patchy.
Implant-grade titanium contains zero nickel as an intentional alloying element. Trace amounts from manufacturing impurities fall well below any allergy threshold.
Read more: Nickel Allergy & Piercings: The Complete Guide
Caring for Titanium Piercing Jewellery
Titanium does not tarnish, does not rust, and does not react to sweat, water or saline. You can clean it with the same neutral soap you use for your skin and dry it gently with a clean cloth.
Where to Buy Safe Titanium Piercing Jewellery in Europe
Every piece in the Piercepective collection is made from implant-grade titanium ASTM F-136, internally threaded or threadless, and CE-compliant for the European market.
Browse by jewellery type:
• Labrets
• Barbells
• Tops
Browse by piercing location:
• Ear
• Nostril
• Septum
• Lips
• Helix
Frequently Asked Questions
Is titanium piercing jewellery safe for sensitive skin?
Yes. Implant-grade titanium ASTM F-136 is the recommended material for sensitive skin and people with nickel allergies. It is the same material used in medical implants and contains no biologically reactive nickel.
Can I wear titanium jewellery in a fresh piercing?
Implant-grade titanium ASTM F-136 is one of only three materials approved by the Association of Professional Piercers for fresh piercings (the others are implant-grade steel ASTM F-138 and solid 14k+ nickel-free gold).
How can I tell if jewellery is really implant-grade titanium?
Look for an explicit specification: ASTM F-136 or ASTM F-1295. Generic terms like surgical titanium or medical titanium are not regulated and do not guarantee implant-grade quality.
Does PVD gold coating wear off?
High-quality PVD coatings on titanium are extremely durable and bond at the molecular level, lasting years with normal wear. Unlike traditional gold plating on cheap base metals, PVD does not flake or peel under normal conditions.
Is titanium heavier than gold?
No. Titanium is approximately four times lighter than gold for the same volume, which is one reason it is so comfortable for daily wear, especially in larger pieces or stretched piercings.
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