Written by the Tattoo Numbing Cream Co. team — trusted by 600,000+ customers and used in professional studios worldwide.
Your appointment's booked. Excitement building. So is the anxiety about pain.
You reach for the medicine cabinet — because that's the natural thing to do. But here's what the packaging won't tell you: some painkillers can actively wreck your tattoo session. It comes down to one thing.
The One Rule That Governs Everything
Avoid anything that thins your blood.
When a tattoo needle hits skin, it creates thousands of tiny puncture wounds per minute. Controlled bleeding is part of the process. Your blood's clotting ability is what keeps that bleeding manageable — it's what lets your artist see their linework, and it's what allows ink to settle properly.
Blood thinners break that system. The result:
- Excess bleeding that obscures the stencil and linework
- Ink pushed out of the skin by blood flow
- Weaker colour saturation
- Slower healing with more bruising
Skip the blood thinners for at least 24 hours before your appointment.
Every Common Painkiller, Ranked
✅ Paracetamol / Acetaminophen (Tylenol, Panadol) — Safe
This is your go-to. Paracetamol doesn't thin blood — it works on pain and fever pathways in the brain without touching platelet function.
Take a standard dose (500–1000mg) 30–60 minutes before your appointment. Doubling up doesn't increase the effect; it just stresses your liver.
Important: Check it's pure paracetamol. Some combination products contain aspirin alongside it. Read the label.
❌ Ibuprofen (Advil, Nurofen, Motrin) — Avoid
Ibuprofen is an NSAID. It inhibits platelet aggregation, which slows clotting. Skip it for at least 24 hours before your tattoo.
Accidentally took some this morning? Tell your artist before they start. They won't cancel — they'll just be prepared for a slightly messier session.
After the tattoo? Ibuprofen is fine once the initial bleeding has stopped (usually a few hours post-session). It helps with inflammation during healing.
❌ Aspirin — Avoid
The strongest blood thinner of the OTC options. Aspirin irreversibly affects platelet function for the entire lifespan of each platelet — 7 to 10 days. A single standard dose can affect clotting for over a week.
Skip it for 48–72 hours minimum. If you're on daily prescribed aspirin for a cardiac condition, do not stop it without talking to your doctor — but do tell your artist when you book, not on the day.
❌ Naproxen (Aleve) — Avoid
Same family as ibuprofen, but lasts longer in your system — up to 12 hours per dose. Avoid for 24–48 hours before your appointment.
⚠️ Prescription Opioids (Codeine, Oxycodone) — Ask Your Doctor
These don't typically thin blood, but they interact with your body's adrenaline response during tattooing in unpredictable ways. If you're on prescribed pain medication, talk to your doctor and your artist before the session. Don't stop prescribed medication without medical guidance.
❌ Alcohol — Hard No
People think a few drinks will calm the nerves. Alcohol thins blood, dehydrates your skin, and lowers your judgment. Most reputable artists will refuse to work on anyone who's been drinking. Skip it for 24 hours minimum. No exceptions.
The Quick Reference Table
| Painkiller | Safe Before Tattoo? | Thins Blood? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paracetamol / Tylenol | ✅ Yes | No | Best OTC option pre-tattoo |
| Ibuprofen / Nurofen | ❌ No | Yes | Skip 24+ hours before |
| Aspirin | ❌ No | Yes (strong) | Skip 48–72 hours before |
| Naproxen / Aleve | ❌ No | Yes | Skip 24–48 hours before |
| Codeine / Opioids | ⚠️ Ask doctor | Usually no | Don't stop prescriptions without advice |
| Alcohol | ❌ Absolutely not | Yes | Skip 24 hours minimum |
The Honest Truth About Oral Painkillers and Tattoo Pain
They don't work that well.
Tattoo pain is localised and surface-level — your skin's nerve endings firing as the needle punctures the epidermis and dermis thousands of times per minute. Oral painkillers work systemically. They dull your overall pain perception slightly but don't target the sharp, specific sensation of a tattoo needle hitting skin.
Heavily tattooed people consistently report the same thing: oral painkillers barely make a noticeable difference during the actual session. They help more with the aching soreness afterwards.
What Actually Works
1. Topical Numbing Cream
This is the real solution. Unlike an oral painkiller working throughout your whole body, numbing cream works exactly where the needle is going. It blocks nerve signals right at the treatment site.
Apply a thick layer 60–90 minutes before your appointment, cover with cling film, and wipe clean before your artist starts. For longer sessions, a numbing spray can be applied to broken skin mid-session — something no oral painkiller can replicate.
Full instructions: How to Apply Numbing Cream Before a Tattoo.
2. Eat a Proper Meal
Blood sugar crashes during tattoo sessions are more common than people realise — and they make pain feel significantly worse. Eat protein and complex carbs 1–2 hours before your appointment. Eggs on toast, a chicken wrap, a solid bowl of oats. Skip the sugary energy drinks.
3. Hydrate the Day Before
Well-hydrated skin is suppler, easier to tattoo, and less sensitive. Dehydrated skin is tighter, more prone to irritation, and harder to work with. Drink plenty of water in the 24 hours leading up to your session.
4. Sleep
Sleep deprivation measurably lowers your pain threshold. If you've got a big session coming up, treat the night before like prep, not a celebration.
5. Distraction
Headphones, a podcast, something to watch on your phone. Distraction is genuinely one of the most effective pain management tools available. Your brain has limited bandwidth — give it something else to process and the sensation of the needle becomes much more manageable.
Bonus tip: If you're on daily prescription blood thinners (warfarin, heparin, etc.) — mention it when you book, not when you arrive on the day. Artists appreciate the heads-up. It helps them plan, and it means they're not hearing it cold when they're ready to start.
What If You Accidentally Took Ibuprofen?
Don't stress. One standard dose isn't dangerous — it means you might bleed a bit more than usual.
Tell your artist before they start. They won't cancel in most cases. Expect a slightly messier session — more wiping, maybe more breaks. Follow your aftercare diligently — extra cleanliness matters when there's been more bleeding.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I take Nurofen before a tattoo?
No. Nurofen contains ibuprofen — avoid it for at least 24 hours before your appointment. Take paracetamol instead, or use a topical numbing cream for targeted relief at the tattoo site.
Does paracetamol actually help with tattoo pain?
Somewhat — but not dramatically. It takes the edge off general discomfort. For the sharp, localised sensation of a needle, topical numbing cream is far more effective because it acts directly on the nerve endings being punctured. To understand why, read how numbing cream works.
Is it safe to take painkillers after a tattoo?
Yes. Once initial bleeding stops (usually 2–4 hours post-session), both paracetamol and ibuprofen are fine. Many artists actually recommend ibuprofen after a tattoo to reduce inflammation and swelling during early healing.
Can I combine numbing cream with paracetamol?
Yes. Topical numbing cream and oral paracetamol work through completely different pathways with no interaction. Using both is a solid strategy — particularly for sensitive areas or long sessions.
What about coffee — does it make pain worse?
High caffeine intake ramps up anxiety and makes you more jittery, which amplifies pain sensitivity. One coffee is usually fine. Four espressos before a 5-hour session? Different story.
If you want something that actually works before your session — not just a mild systemic dulling — our professional-strength numbing cream applies directly to the skin being tattooed, blocks pain right at the source, and has zero blood-thinning effects. Apply 60–90 minutes out and let it do the work.