Tattoos hurt least in areas with more fat, muscle, and thicker skin, and fewer nerve endings, such as the outer arm, outer thigh, calves, and forearm, making them great for beginners. Bony spots, thin skin, and areas with many nerves (like the ribs, spine, armpits, or inner joints) are generally the most painful.
Shoulder, bicep, calf, thigh, are all relatively low-pain areas. High-pain areas are tops of feet, inner arms, elbow/knee, and neck, so those aren't necessarily great places for your tattoo idea anyway.
Among the rest of the Stories & Ink team, the most painful places to get a tattoo include:
Your upper back, outer shoulders, and thighs have the fewest nerve endings. They also have thicker skin, so it's easier to sit through the sharp or stinging pain of a tattoo.
Your arms and forearms contain a lot of thick skin, muscle and have very few nerve endings! This makes it one of the best places to get a tattoo if you are looking for a spot without too much pain. This spot also offers a fantastic area for tattoos, with many beautiful and vibrant designs going perfectly.
Getting tattooed on the arm and upper back is only moderately painful compared to the head, armpit, and rib cage. While you should still expect to feel much discomfort, getting inked in these areas is tolerable for most people.
Yes, a $50 tip on a $300 tattoo is a good tip, falling slightly below the standard 20% ($60) but representing a solid 16.7%, showing appreciation, especially if you had a good experience; however, tipping $60-$75 (20-25%) is generally considered excellent for great service, so $50 is a respectable amount.
5 body parts where you should NOT get a tattoo
Many people turn to topical numbing agents to minimize pain before and during their tattoo session. These creams or gels contain lidocaine or benzocaine, which are local anesthetics that temporarily numb the skin. Apply the cream about 30 minutes to an hour before your appointment to give it time to take effect.
For a $500 tattoo, a standard tip is $75 to $100 (15-20%), but you can tip more, even $125 or higher (25%+), for exceptional work, a long session, or custom design, with factors like artist's expertise and your satisfaction influencing the amount. Tipping 20% ($100) is generally considered great service, but tipping less is also okay if you're on a tight budget, while tipping more shows extra appreciation.
A $500 tattoo is typically a medium-sized piece, often around palm-sized or slightly larger (roughly 4-6 inches), but the actual size heavily depends on the artist's hourly rate (usually $100-$200/hour), design complexity, color, and location, allowing for 2-5 hours of work, potentially resulting in a detailed forearm piece or a smaller chest/back design, rather than a full sleeve.
Here are some important things to avoid before a tattoo:
Some areas known to be especially painful include ribs, inner thighs, armpits, stomach, feet, and hands. These painful tattoo spots come with thin skin, extra nerve endings, and a whole lot more discomfort. If you are looking to minimize pain, stay clear of these.
With that said, don't take painkillers before getting a tattoo either. Painkillers like Advil and Ibuprofen also thin the blood, which will lead to similar issues that alcohol has. Acetaminophen may potentially be fine to take, but should be discussed with the artist beforehand.
Women vs Men: Who Feels It More? Some studies suggest women might feel tattoo pain more intensely due to hormonal sensitivity, especially near the spine and lower back.
Lidocaine can block pain signals, causing you to feel less discomfort when you get a tattoo. It won't be completely painless, but most people find that over-the-counter lidocaine tattoo prep gels and topical anesthetic creams can significantly reduce the pain they feel during a tattoo.
Line work is more intense concentrated pain while shading is much broader. Shading goes over already raw and worked skin multiple times. Because of this the constant penetration of the needle required for shading can intensify the discomfort, making color-heavy tattoos more challenging for some individuals.
How to Prepare for Your Tattoo Appointment
The Effects Aren't Long-Lasting Enough for Large Tattoos
Most numbing creams wear off after about 1.5 hours, and reapplying it on broken skin isn't usually recommended. Also, if the numbing cream wears off mid-tattoo, this can make the process more painful as the nerves come back to life.
Blood diseases: hemophilia, thrombocytopenia, fibrinopenia
These disorders of the circulatory system are associated with heavy bleeding. That is, any damage to the skin can lead to problems during the session. For example, severe bleeding will wash out the pigment, which will lead to uneven filling, uneven contours.
A $2000 tattoo can range from a detailed half-sleeve to a large, intricate thigh or chest piece, or even the beginning of a full back or sleeve, often taking multiple sessions and significant artist hours (8+ hours) for complex designs, but it depends heavily on the artist's skill, location, and the design's intricacy.
Gen Z is regretting tattoos due to impulsive decisions driven by social media trends (like fine-line or patchwork styles), getting inked during emotional highs or lows, a lack of personal meaning, and changing aesthetics (e.g., moving from WFH casual to needing to cover up for office jobs). The visibility of this regret on platforms like TikTok, combined with evolving personal identities and the desire to fit new trends, highlights a growing disillusionment with tattoos that once felt significant but now feel dated or embarrassing.
DAY RATE / HALF-DAY RATE
Most of the time it will be a range, such as 6-10 hours, and the rate can vary anywhere from $1,000 to sometimes $5,000 or more. Artists that do a half day rate will sometimes charge a little more than half their full day rate, again, to offset the time and supply cost of smaller pieces.
Like any tattoo session, tattoo touch-up costs can differ based on the size of your tattoo, the complexity of the tattoo and touch-up, and the reliability of the tattoo studio. Some studios offer a complimentary service for the first touch-up, while others may charge a reduced rate.
In short, yes. You should always strive to tip your tattoo artist. “Often, tattoo artists are renting a chair or space and give as much as 50% of their earnings to the shop owner,” Sinatra says.