Different piercings have different healing times. Let's break it down.
Earlobe piercings are the speediest healers, usually taking 6-8 weeks to be fully healed. The lobe is soft, fleshy tissue with good blood flow, which helps it heal faster than other areas. Some people with great aftercare and no complications can safely change lobe piercings closer to 6 weeks, but 8 weeks is safer if you want to be cautious. If this is your first time getting ears pierced, stick to the longer end of that range.
Upper lobe piercings sit where the lobe starts to get firmer. They typically need 8-12 weeks to heal. Even though they're technically still "lobe" piercings, the tissue is slightly denser here, which means these take longer to heal than standard low-lobe placements.
Cartilage (including piercings like a helix, conch, or tragus) is the slowpoke of the ear piercing world. These piercings need 3-6 months minimum, and sometimes up to a year for complete healing. Why do they take longer to heal? Cartilage has less blood flow than soft tissue, so the healing times are way slower. Plus, cartilage piercings are more prone to irritation bumps if you mess with them too early.
(By the way, if you’re wanting to pierce your cartilage some day, we have a guide to tragus piercings and a breakdown of helix piercings on our blog!)
Other ear piercings like daith piercings, rook, and industrial can be even more high-maintenance. Daith and rook piercings often need 6-9 months, while industrials can take up to a year or more. These placements are in awkward spots that get bumped easily, which extends the healing period and makes them more painful if disturbed.