FADED PODCAST
Tattoo Removal Timeline: How Many Sessions for Best Results?
If you’re considering tattoo removal, it’s important to know that the process takes time and care. For most dark, saturated tattoos, nine to twelve sessions are typical for safe removal. While it might seem appealing to get rid of a tattoo quickly, aggressive laser treatments can leave scars or damage your skin, so a gradual approach is best.
The first sessions focus on gently breaking up the pigment, allowing your body to start clearing it away. As the tattoo fades, the laser settings can be increased, but patience is crucial. Many people who rush the process end up with skin issues or scarring, especially if they’ve had treatments elsewhere that were too intense.
Your body’s health and the tattoo’s location also play a big role. Healthier, active people tend to see faster results, and tattoos on areas with better blood flow, like the torso, usually fade more quickly than those on fingers or feet.
Overall, tattoo removal is a marathon, not a sprint. Expect the process to take a year or more, but the reward is clear, healthy skin without permanent marks. Choose a provider who prioritizes your skin’s health and is committed to a safe, effective process.
FULL TRANSCRIPT
[00:00:00] When you see a very saturated dark tattoo, it’s important to go slowly from the beginning. If you laser it so aggressively, you’re gonna remove the pigment, but you’re gonna leave a scar in the same shape of the tattoo that you had. A lot of it comes down to your body, so why does it take so long?
[00:00:21] Welcome to the Faded Podcast. In this episode, I’m going to address one question that we get all the time. The question is, how many sessions is it gonna take to remove my tattoo? Or the other question we get, which is kind of related, how long is it gonna take to remove this tattoo? We have clients coming in the studio every single day asking the same question.
[00:00:44] Usually they get the same answer. If it’s a dark, saturated tattoo, we usually give a general. Number between nine and 12 sessions, and that’s to safely remove the tattoo. And I always tell people, if you want that thing gone in one session, I can get it off in one session, but I don’t think you want that because what that would mean is that I would have to turn the laser all the way up and I would blow a hole in your skin.
[00:01:11] We could get the tattoo off, but you’re gonna be left with a scar. And there are some guys out there and some girls out there who are more concerned about speed and less concerned about the condition of the skin and how it’s left after the tattoo removal sessions when you see a very saturated. Dark tattoo.
[00:01:31] It’s important to go slowly from the beginning. So what we end up doing is we’ll treat it nice and gently in the first few sessions. What we’re trying to do is we’re trying to break that pigment up. Try to break that pigment up nice and gently. Get your body going on, breaking the pigment down, metabolizing that pigment, and then once the pigment starts fading a little bit, that’s when we turn it up.
[00:01:54] And we don’t do it right away. We don’t just start right off the bat with the laser jammed up and, you know, trying to be a hero right off the bat because that does not end well. We’ve seen it many, many times where clients come from other studios and they’ve been lasered and yeah, the tattoo is gone.
[00:02:13] Or it’s close to being gone, but there’s scar tissue there or there’s keloids, or there’s hyperpigmentation or hypopigmentation. We’ve seen it over and over and over again, and there are some, uh, repeat offenders. There’s some habitual offenders out there who are doing it over and over. That’s the way they treat tattoos, and if that’s what you’re looking for, that’s great.
[00:02:35] If you’re looking for getting rid of the tattoo in a hurry and not really caring about how your skin looks after the fact. Then we can tell you where to go. I don’t think that’s the goal. When you’re looking to get a tattoo removed, suppose you have a name on your arm or on your neck and you want to get it removed because obviously you don’t want that name on your body anymore.
[00:02:55] But if you laser it so aggressively, you’re gonna remove the pigment, but you’re gonna leave a scar in the same shape of the tattoo that you had. So. Instead of going aggressively, it’s very important to start off lightly, break that pigment down, let your body start working on it, and as the pigment fades, that’s when you increase the settings and as the pigment fades more, you increase the settings more.
[00:03:21] That’s how we like to do it here at Studio Kiku, and we’ve seen great results doing it that way. Yes, it may take you longer than the other place, but you will leave with clean. Intact skin, and that’s what we wanna do. We, we want your skin to be crispy, clean with no remnants of that tattoo whatsoever. So why does it take so long?
[00:03:43] And I always explain this to clients when they come in. I tell ’em about the laser and how the laser works, and then I talk about the process. So between how the laser works and the process of the removal, you should be able to kind of figure it out. The laser, as you probably already know, will penetrate the skin.
[00:04:02] Without damaging the skin, it penetrates the skin and it targets the pigment inside the skin. When the pigment shatters, then your body’s able to absorb it over time, and I always tell people the laser is very fast at breaking the pigment. The thing we’re waiting on is your body. If your body is healthy and if you’re a healthy, active person, you’re gonna see better results and quicker results than a person who’s not healthy and a person who’s not active.
[00:04:33] A lot of it comes down to your body, so the more healthy you are. The better results you’re gonna see. And that’s just a plain fact. The laser is fast with breaking down the pigment, but your body is slow with getting rid of that pigment. And depending on the location on your body, wherever there’s more flow going on, you’re gonna have better results.
[00:04:55] So anything on your torso or up upper body, you’re gonna have. Better results than you will on any of your fingers, toes, feet, that type of thing. The farther away on your appendages, the slower the removal process is gonna be. That’s just a fact. So when you go in to get your laser tattoo removal treatment and you ask.
[00:05:18] How many sessions it’s gonna take or how long it’s gonna take. Don’t be surprised if you’re told it’s gonna take a year or a year and a half or two years. And don’t be surprised if we tell you it’s gonna take nine to 12 sessions. That’s on average for a saturated tattoo to safely and effectively remove it.
[00:05:37] And if you’re looking to remove it quicker. Then you might be compromising the integrity of your skin. You might scar your skin. You might have some issues with the, you know, the remnants of the tattoo after the fact. So there you have it. That’s why it takes such a long time to remove tattoos, and that’s why it takes so many sessions to remove tattoos.
[00:06:00] Thanks for tuning in to The Faded podcast, and we’ll catch you again next time.