In this article
Welcome to tattooing
Tattoo artists create permanent designs on skin โ combining real drawing ability, technical machine skill, strict hygiene, and a lot of people skills. It's one of the few careers where artistic talent translates directly into a solid, self-employed living, and it has gone from the fringes to fully mainstream. Whether you can draw and dream of tattooing for a living or you're just curious how the job really works, this guide covers what it involves, what you'll earn, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A tattoo artist designs and applies permanent ink designs to clients' skin using a tattoo machine, working to a brief while ensuring safety and hygiene. In simple terms: they turn a person's idea into permanent art they'll carry for the rest of their life. The role blends fine art, a precise technical craft, medical-grade hygiene, and consultative customer service.
- Consult with clients and design custom artwork
- Prepare stencils, equipment, and a sterile station
- Apply the tattoo safely, accurately, and cleanly
- Advise on aftercare and healing
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Artistic eye โ composition, flow, and reading the body
- Steady hands & focus โ hours of precise, unbroken concentration
- People skills โ putting nervous clients at ease for hours
- Patience โ with the craft, the healing, and the customer
- Professionalism โ reliability and trust build a client base
- Business sense โ most artists run themselves as a brand
Education & background
There's no degree โ the route is an apprenticeship under an established artist, plus, in most places, mandatory hygiene/bloodborne-pathogen certification and a licensed, inspected studio. A strong art portfolio is what earns you an apprenticeship in the first place.
Typical daily responsibilities
- Consultations โ discussing ideas, placement, and price
- Designing โ drawing custom artwork and stencils
- Station setup โ sterilising and preparing equipment
- Tattooing โ the appointments themselves, often hours long
- Aftercare advice โ guiding clients through healing
- Admin & promotion โ bookings, deposits, and social media
Responsibilities by seniority
Apprentice
0โ3 years experience
- Cleaning and setting up the studio
- Drawing constantly
- Watching and learning
- First tattoos on fake skin / volunteers
- Often unpaid or low-paid
Tattoo Artist
3โ8 years experience
- A full book of own clients
- Custom designs across styles
- Renting a chair / station
- Building a reputation
- Growing a following
Resident / Studio Owner
8+ years experience
- A recognised name and style
- Premium rates and a waiting list
- Owning or running a studio
- Mentoring apprentices
- Guest spots and conventions
Where tattoo artists work
๐ช Tattoo studios
The norm โ renting a chair or working as a resident artist.
๐จ Own studio
Running your own shop, with the freedom and overheads that brings.
โ๏ธ Guest spots
Working at other studios around the world for a week or two.
๐ช Conventions
Tattoo shows โ exposure, competitions, and new clients.
โญ Specialist niches
Cover-ups, realism, fine-line, traditional, or medical/areola work.
๐ฑ Personal brand
Building a following online that fills the books.
A day in the life
๐จ Custom artist
- Fewer, bigger, original pieces
- Lots of design time
- Long multi-hour sessions
- Higher rates, loyal clients
- A recognisable personal style
โก Walk-in / street shop
- High volume, smaller pieces
- Flash designs and quick turnaround
- Lots of different clients
- Fast, versatile, busy
- Great for building speed
Open up, sterilise the station, and finish drawing a custom design for your first client โ a memorial piece that has to be exactly right.
Consultation and stencil placement. The client is nervous, so half the job right now is calm conversation and trust before the machine even starts.
A four-hour session โ total focus, steady hands, regular breaks for the client. The room is loud with the buzz of the machine and quiet with concentration.
Aftercare chat, photos for your portfolio, clean down. The client sees it finished in the mirror and lights up โ that reaction is the whole job. That's the appeal.
What this job gives you
- Art as a living โ your drawing skill pays the bills directly
- Independence โ set your rates, style, and schedule
- Deep client connection โ people trust you with something permanent and personal
- A personal brand โ build a name and a following that's yours
- Creative variety โ new designs, people, and challenges constantly
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Make a living from art
- Self-employed independence
- Strong income once established
- Creative and varied
- Loyal, appreciative clients
- Build your own brand
- Mainstream, growing acceptance
โ Disadvantages
- Tough, often unpaid apprenticeship
- Unstable income early on
- Permanent โ mistakes are serious
- Physically hard on hands, back, eyes
- No sick pay or benefits
- You must constantly self-promote
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Master your craft โ speed, consistency, and clean healed work
- Develop a signature style โ realism, fine-line, traditional, blackwork
- Build a following โ a strong portfolio and social presence fill the books
- Raise your rates โ demand lets you charge premium prices
- Open your own studio โ or become a sought-after resident
- Teach & travel โ apprentices, guest spots, conventions, seminars
Tattoo artist vs related roles
Tattooing sits where art, personal-care services, and self-employment meet. Here's how the neighbours compare.
| Role | Core focus | Key skills | Pay vs tattoo artist | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tattoo Artist You are here |
Permanent art on skin | Drawing, machine, hygiene | Baseline | Apprenticeship |
| Hairdresser | Cutting & styling hair | Cutting, styling, service | Similar | Accessible |
| Beautician | Beauty & skin treatments | Treatments, care, service | Similar | Accessible |
| Graphic Designer | Visual design (digital) | Design, software, brand | Similar | Medium |
| Illustrator | Art for print & media | Drawing, style, software | Variable | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Tattooing uniquely combines fine-art skill with a licensed, hands-on personal service.
Future outlook
Tattooing has never been more mainstream, and demand is steady โ it's a fundamentally human, hands-on craft that can't be automated or outsourced. AI can generate design ideas, but it can't tattoo skin, manage healing, run a sterile station, or build the personal trust a client needs to sit for hours. The main shifts are cultural and digital: social media now makes or breaks an artist's client base.
- Tattoos are mainstream and widely accepted
- The craft itself is automation-proof and hands-on
- AI assists with design concepts, not the tattooing
- Social media is now the key to building a client base
- Hygiene standards and regulation continue to professionalise the trade
Fun facts ๐ค
Tattooing is ancient โ รtzi the Iceman, over 5,000 years old, has 61 preserved tattoos, likely placed for therapeutic reasons.
Most pros say the apprenticeship, not talent, is the real filter โ many gifted artists never make it through the years of grunt work and drawing.
A huge part of the job is invisible: cross-contamination control and sterilisation rival a clinic's, because you're breaking skin every day.
Instagram changed the industry โ an artist's following can now matter as much as the studio they work in for filling the books.
Specialising pays: artists known for one style โ realism, fine-line, blackwork โ often command the highest rates and longest waiting lists.
Myths about tattooing
"If you can draw, you can tattoo."
โ False. Drawing is necessary but not enough โ machine technique, working on a curved living surface, hygiene, and healing are a separate craft learned through apprenticeship.
"You can learn it from a kit at home."
โ Dangerous and false. Tattooing without training and a licensed, sterile setup risks serious infection. A proper apprenticeship exists for good reason.
"It's not a real, respectable career."
โ Outdated. Tattooing is mainstream, regulated, and can be highly lucrative โ top artists run successful businesses and have global reputations.
"There's no money in it."
โ False. The apprenticeship is lean, but established artists earn a strong living and the top end charges premium rates with long waiting lists.
"It's all about the art."
โ Reality: Talent gets you noticed, but hygiene, reliability, client trust, and running yourself as a business are what build a lasting career.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Can genuinely draw and want to make a living from it
- Have patience and steady hands
- Are meticulous about hygiene and detail
- Enjoy people and putting them at ease
- Want to be your own boss
- Can handle a lean apprenticeship
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You can't commit to years of low-paid training
- The weight of "permanent" stresses you
- You need a steady, guaranteed salary
- You dislike self-promotion and admin
- Long, static, focused sessions drain you
- You're squeamish about skin and blood
Self-employment potential
Tattooing is almost entirely a self-employed craft โ most artists rent a chair or run their own studio, set their own rates, and build a personal brand. The independence is real, and so is the responsibility.
โ Self-employed advantages
- Set your own rates and hours
- Choose your clients and style
- Keep what you earn
- Build a brand and following
- Travel via guest spots and conventions
โ Self-employed challenges
- No salary, sick pay, or holiday pay
- You fill your own books
- Chair rent and supplies come first
- Income dips when you're not working
- Tax, licensing, and admin are on you
Recommended path: complete a solid apprenticeship, build a portfolio and following as a resident or chair-renter, then consider your own studio once your books are reliably full.
How to break into this field
- Build a strong art portfolio โ drawing is what earns you an apprenticeship.
- Find an apprenticeship โ under a reputable, licensed artist; this is the real route in.
- Get certified โ complete hygiene/bloodborne-pathogen training and any local licence.
- Practise relentlessly โ fake skin, then supervised real work, building speed and consistency.
- Build your name โ portfolio, social media, and a style that draws clients.
๐ธ What it actually costs to start
Realistic time and money to become a working tattoo artist. Figures are rough global guides and vary by country.
What to know before you start
- The apprenticeship is everything โ there's no shortcut and no legitimate kit-at-home route.
- Drawing gets you in; craft keeps you in โ machine skill and clean healed work are learned.
- Hygiene is non-negotiable โ you're breaking skin; treat it like a clinic.
- It's permanent โ the responsibility is real and never routine.
- You're a business โ branding, bookings, deposits, and tax are part of the job.
- Your body matters โ protect your hands, back, and eyes for a long career.
What tattoo artists wish they'd known
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job. A few worth hearing before you start:
I thought being a good artist was the hard part. It wasn't โ it was learning that a tattoo lives on a moving, healing, curved surface. The drawing is maybe a third of the skill.
Tattoo artist ยท 6 years in, custom studio
The apprenticeship nearly broke me โ two years of cleaning and drawing for almost nothing. But there's no other real way to learn it safely. Anyone promising a shortcut is lying.
Resident artist ยท 9 years in, street shop
Once I niched into fine-line and got serious about my Instagram, everything changed. Your following genuinely fills your book now. Talent plus visibility is the combination.
Studio owner ยท 12 years in, custom & cover-ups