Belly Button Rings

So you're hunting for a new belly ring and you're kinda over the cheap stuff that gets angry after two days—fair. Our implant-grade titanium belly button rings are the real deal. Not coated, not mystery metal. We're talking ASTM F136, literally the same grade they use for surgical implants. No nickel, no nonsense, just hypoallergenic and nickel-free jewelry that your skin won't even register as "foreign." If you're healing a fresh piercing or you've got that one friend who swears "everything makes me break out," point 'em here. We've got curved barbells, floating styles, navel chain jewelry, the works. And yeah, free shipping on all of it. No minimum. No catch. Just cute, safe titanium pieces that actually hold up.

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Frequently asked questions

Can I seriously use this in a healing belly button piercing?

No joke—this is basically the whole reason we exist. Implant-grade titanium belly button rings are what most legit piercers will tell you to use from day one. It's biocompatible, so your body doesn't try to fight it or freak out. These are nickel-free and hypoallergenic, and they meet ASTM F136 standard—meaning they're up to the same spec as medical implants. So yeah, fresh piercing, angry piercing, old piercing, doesn't matter. Just keep up with your saline and don't twist it obsessively and you'll be fine.

Will this turn my skin green or make me itchy?

Nah, that's the cheap metal talking. Our implant-grade titanium belly button rings are the opposite of that. No nickel, no brass, no mystery alloys hiding under a thin coating. It's solid titanium through and through, polished smooth so there's nothing to flake or react with your skin. If you've had a belly ring go green on you before, that's usually copper or some plated junk oxidizing. This won't do that. Like, at all.

What size do I need? I don't wanna buy the wrong one.

We feel you. Most standard navel piercings use a 14G barbell (that's 1.6mm thick), with a 3/8" or 7/16" length—8mm to 11mm if you're reading metric. If you're healing, sometimes going a touch longer helps while there's still some swelling, so a 7/16" or even 1/2" isn't a bad idea. Best bet is to measure the bar you're already wearing (just the shaft, not the balls) or ask the piercer who did it—they usually remember. Pick the closest match and you're golden.