The only 3 things you really need
- Fragrance-free soap: a gentle antibacterial or plain unscented bar/liquid. Nothing antibacterial-scented or exfoliating.
- Thin fragrance-free moisturiser: the blandest lotion you can find (think ceramide or simple oat-based). A rice-grain amount, 2×/day.
- Paper towels: pat dry — reusable towels carry bacteria and snag scabs.
That's the whole routine for most tattoos. Balms are optional.
Balms & creams compared
| Product | Best for | Skin type | Note |
| Aquaphor | Early days (petrolatum barrier) | Normal | Use thin — traps heat if layered |
| Bepanthen | Soothing, widely available | Sensitive | Fragrance-free variant preferred |
| Hustle Butter | Mid/late heal, vegan | Normal–dry | Comfort, not medicine |
| Inktrox / studio balms | Artist-recommended | Varies | Follow your artist's call |
Second skin as a product
If your artist applied second skin, that is your primary aftercare for the first 24–48h — no soap or lotion until it comes off. It's a sealed film, not a cream.
Sensitive skin picks
Reactive skin? Skip fragrance and dye entirely, patch-test any balm on your inner arm first, and prefer the plain wash-and-lotion method over adhesive films. More in the sensitive-skin section of the main guide.
What to skip
- Petroleum overuse: a thin layer is fine early; thick petrolatum traps heat and bacteria.
- Scented lotions & "natural" mixes with alcohol: they irritate raw skin.
- DIY salves with essential oils: oils like tea tree are sensitizers on broken skin.
About this guide
Reviewed by Dr. Priya Anand, MD, board-certified dermatologist. Sources: American Academy of Dermatology and NHS. Part of the InkFlow tattoo aftercare guide. Published July 15, 2026.
FAQ
Does aftercare cream expire?
Yes — check the tube. Expired or separated product can harbor bacteria; toss it and open a fresh one for a new tattoo.
How much lotion should I apply?
A rice-grain amount, rubbed in until there's no shine. If it looks greasy, you used too much — blot the excess.
Can I use regular body lotion?
Only if it's fragrance-free and dye-free. Most everyday lotions have fragrance or actives (retinol, acids) that irritate healing skin.