It is the first question almost everyone asks, and the honest answer is "it depends," but that is not very helpful on its own. So let me actually break down what your money pays for, give you some real ballpark numbers, and tell you exactly how to get a quote you can count on.
What actually sets the price
- Size: the bigger the piece, the more time and ink it takes
- Detail and style: fine line, realism, and heavy shading take longer than bold simple work
- Placement: tricky spots like ribs, hands, and feet are slower to tattoo
- Color vs black: color and blends usually add time over solid blackwork
- Time: in the end most of the cost is the hours it takes to do it right
A general price guide
Every shop is different, but as a rough industry guide:
- Small simple piece: often a shop minimum, roughly $80 to $150
- Palm-sized custom piece: roughly $150 to $400 depending on detail
- Half and full sleeves: priced over multiple sessions, often well into four figures
Cheapest way in the door: the Candy Machine is a flat $80 for a mystery tattoo. Turn the knob, take what you get.
These are general numbers to set expectations, not a fixed price list. Your real quote depends on your exact design.
Why tattoos cost what they do
A tattoo is permanent custom art applied by hand, one time, with single-use sterile needles and supplies for every client. You are paying for years of skill and the hours it takes to do the piece properly. This is also why chasing the cheapest price is a trap: a bad cheap tattoo costs far more to fix or cover up later. Pick the artist whose work you love (take a look at mine), then talk price.
How to get your exact quote
Send me your idea, the rough size, and where on your body you want it. A reference photo helps a lot. I will give you a clear number before any needle touches skin, and the consultation is free with no pressure to book.
