Irritation Bumps vs Keloids: How to Tell the Difference

Learn the real difference between piercing irritation bumps and keloids. San Antonio's Platinum Tattoos & Piercings explains causes, treatments, and when to see a doctor.

Irritation Bumps vs Keloids: How to Tell the Difference

You notice a bump near your new piercing and immediately panic. "Is that a keloid?" You Google it, and suddenly every forum, TikTok, and Reddit thread has you convinced your ear is ruined forever.

Take a breath.

After 26 years of piercing in San Antonio, we can tell you with confidence: the vast majority of bumps people call "keloids" are actually irritation bumps — and they're completely treatable. The two conditions look similar at a glance, but they have very different causes, very different treatments, and very different outcomes.

Here's how to tell the difference, what to do about each, and when you actually need to worry.

What Is an Irritation Bump?

An irritation bump — sometimes called a piercing bump, hypertrophic scarring, or a "piercing pimple" — is your body's inflammatory response to something bothering the piercing site. It's not an infection. It's not a keloid. It's your skin saying, "Hey, something's off here."

What Causes Irritation Bumps?

Almost always, the culprit is one (or more) of these:

  • Touching your piercing. Your hands carry bacteria, oils, and debris. Every time you fiddle with your jewelry, you introduce irritants to a healing wound.
  • Sleeping on the piercing. Side sleepers with new ear piercings, this one's for you. Constant pressure compresses the healing tissue and disrupts the fistula (the tunnel of skin forming around the jewelry).
  • Wrong jewelry material. If your jewelry contains nickel or other reactive metals, your body may respond with inflammation. This is why we exclusively use implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136) and 14kt+ solid gold at Platinum Tattoos & Piercings.
  • Wrong jewelry size or style. A bar that's too short creates pressure. A ring in a fresh piercing moves too much. A post that's too long catches on everything. Proper fit matters enormously.
  • Harsh cleaning products. Using alcohol, hydrogen peroxide, Bactine, or homemade solutions on a healing piercing strips away the delicate tissue trying to form. Your piercing needs a gentle, isotonic environment — not chemical warfare.
  • Trauma or snagging. Caught your piercing on a towel, headphones, or a face mask? That physical trauma triggers an inflammatory response.
  • Premature jewelry changes. Swapping jewelry before the piercing is fully healed disrupts the fistula and introduces bacteria.

What Does an Irritation Bump Look Like?

  • Small, usually pea-sized or smaller
  • Appears right next to the piercing hole
  • Skin-colored, pink, or slightly red
  • May look fluid-filled or slightly shiny
  • Tender to the touch but not intensely painful
  • Developed weeks to months after the piercing (not immediately)

The key detail: irritation bumps are directly connected to a cause. If you can identify what's irritating the piercing and remove that irritant, the bump will resolve.

What Is a Keloid?

A keloid is a specific type of scar tissue overgrowth. Unlike normal scars that stay within the boundaries of a wound, keloids grow beyond the original injury site. They're caused by an overproduction of collagen during the healing process and are largely genetic.

Key Facts About Keloids

  • Keloids are genetic. If no one in your family has keloids, your risk is very low. They're most common in people of African, Asian, and Hispanic descent, though anyone can develop them.
  • Keloids don't go away on their own. Unlike irritation bumps, keloids persist and may continue growing even after the initial wound has healed.
  • Keloids can form from any skin injury — not just piercings. Surgical scars, acne, burns, and even minor scratches can trigger keloid formation in predisposed individuals.
  • Keloids require medical treatment. They typically need corticosteroid injections, cryotherapy, surgical removal, or other dermatological interventions.

What Does a Keloid Look Like?

  • Firm, rubbery, or hard to the touch
  • Grows beyond the boundaries of the original wound
  • Can be pink, red, skin-colored, or darker than surrounding skin
  • Often raised and dome-shaped or claw-like
  • May be itchy or tender
  • Continues to grow over time (months to years)
  • Does NOT resolve when the source of irritation is removed

Side-by-Side Comparison

Here's the quick breakdown:

Irritation Bump:

  • Size: Small, localized near the piercing
  • Texture: Soft, sometimes fluid-filled
  • Boundaries: Stays at the piercing site
  • Cause: External irritation (touching, sleeping, bad jewelry, harsh products)
  • Timeline: Appears during healing, often resolves in days to weeks
  • Family history: Not a factor
  • Treatment: Remove the irritant, proper aftercare
  • Goes away? Yes, once the cause is addressed

Keloid:

  • Size: Can grow larger than the original wound
  • Texture: Firm, rubbery, dense
  • Boundaries: Extends beyond the wound edges
  • Cause: Genetic predisposition to collagen overproduction
  • Timeline: May appear weeks to months after healing, continues to grow
  • Family history: Significant factor
  • Treatment: Medical intervention (dermatologist)
  • Goes away? Not on its own — requires treatment and may recur

Why Most "Keloids" Are Actually Irritation Bumps

We see this constantly at our San Antonio piercing studio. Someone comes in panicking about a "keloid" on their nostril piercing, septum piercing, or helix piercing. Nine times out of ten — honestly, closer to 99 out of 100 — it's an irritation bump.

Here's why the confusion exists:

  1. The internet is terrible at distinguishing them. Search "keloid on piercing" and you'll find thousands of results showing irritation bumps mislabeled as keloids.
  2. People don't know keloids are genetic. If you've never had a keloid anywhere on your body, and no one in your family has, the bump on your piercing is almost certainly not a keloid.
  3. Irritation bumps can look alarming. A big, angry, red bump on your ear looks scary. That doesn't make it a keloid.
  4. "Keloid" has become a catch-all term. People use it to describe any bump near a piercing, which muddies the waters and causes unnecessary panic.

The simplest test: Can you identify something irritating the piercing (sleeping on it, touching it, using tea tree oil, wearing low-quality jewelry)? If yes, it's almost certainly an irritation bump. Address the cause and give it time.

How to Treat an Irritation Bump

This is where a lot of people go wrong — and where the internet leads you wildly astray. The treatment for an irritation bump is shockingly simple:

Step 1: Identify and Remove the Irritant

This is the most important step. The bump is a symptom. You need to fix the cause.

  • Stop touching your piercing. Hands off. Completely.
  • Stop sleeping on it. Use a travel pillow or donut pillow to keep pressure off ear and facial piercings.
  • Check your jewelry. If you're wearing mystery-metal jewelry from a mall kiosk or Amazon, that's likely your problem. Come see us — we'll check your jewelry and swap it for implant-grade titanium if needed.
  • Check the fit. If your bar is too tight or too loose, it needs to be resized. Most piercings need a downsize around 5–7 weeks after the initial piercing, when the swelling goes down.
  • Stop using harsh products. No alcohol, no hydrogen peroxide, no Bactine, no homemade salt solutions. And for the love of your piercing, no tea tree oil (more on that below).

Step 2: Clean with NeilMed Piercing Aftercare Saline

Use NeilMed Piercing Aftercare Fine Mist — a sterile, isotonic saline wound wash. Spray it on the piercing 1–2 times per day. That's it. Don't soak it, don't make your own salt water, don't add anything to it.

NeilMed is what we recommend to every client at Platinum Tattoos & Piercings, and it's what the majority of professional piercers worldwide recommend. It's sterile, it's the correct salt concentration, and it won't irritate healing tissue.

Step 3: LITHA — Leave It the Hell Alone

LITHA stands for Leave It The Hell Alone, and it's the single best treatment protocol for irritation bumps. Once you've removed the irritant and established a simple saline cleaning routine:

  • Don't pick at the bump
  • Don't rotate or twist the jewelry
  • Don't apply pressure, ice, or heat
  • Don't add products (no oils, no creams, no ointments)
  • Just leave it alone and let your body do its job

Most irritation bumps resolve within 1–4 weeks once the cause is addressed. Some stubborn ones take longer, but if you're truly leaving it alone and the irritant is gone, your body will heal.

Common Mistakes That Make Bumps Worse

The internet is full of "home remedies" for piercing bumps. Almost all of them are terrible advice. Here's what NOT to do:

Tea Tree Oil

This is the biggest offender. Every piercing forum, every TikTok "hack," every well-meaning friend recommends tea tree oil. Do not put tea tree oil on your piercing.

Tea tree oil is a potent essential oil that can cause chemical burns, allergic reactions, and contact dermatitis. It's cytotoxic — meaning it kills cells, including the healthy cells trying to heal your piercing. It may temporarily shrink a bump by damaging the tissue, but it causes more inflammation in the long run.

Aspirin Paste

Crushing up aspirin and making a paste to apply to your piercing bump is another internet classic. Aspirin is a blood thinner and anti-inflammatory when taken orally, but smearing it on a wound does nothing beneficial. It introduces foreign particles into a healing piercing and irritates the tissue.

Chamomile Compresses / Tea Bag Soaks

Warm chamomile tea bags on a piercing bump won't hurt as badly as tea tree oil, but they're not helping either. You're adding unnecessary moisture, tannins, and plant material to a wound. Stick to sterile saline.

Hydrogen Peroxide and Rubbing Alcohol

Both are cytotoxic and will destroy the healthy tissue forming around your piercing. They were once standard wound care advice, but modern wound care science has moved well past them. They delay healing and increase the chance of scarring.

Removing the Jewelry

Pulling out the jewelry when you have an irritation bump is almost always the wrong move. Without the jewelry acting as a channel, the piercing can close over the surface while trapping irritation or bacteria underneath, potentially causing an abscess. Leave the jewelry in and address the root cause. If you need the piercing assessed, visit a professional piercer — don't DIY it.

When to See a Doctor

While most bumps are benign irritation bumps, there are situations where medical attention is warranted:

  • Signs of infection: Increasing pain, spreading redness, warmth, swelling that worsens over days, yellow or green discharge (not to be confused with normal lymph fluid, which is clear or slightly white), or fever. Infections require antibiotics — see a doctor.
  • The bump keeps growing beyond the piercing site. If tissue is expanding well past the boundaries of the wound, it may be a keloid or hypertrophic scar that needs dermatological evaluation.
  • You have a family history of keloids and a bump that isn't responding to conservative care. A dermatologist can evaluate whether it's truly a keloid and discuss treatment options.
  • The bump hasn't improved after 4–6 weeks of removing the irritant, proper aftercare, and LITHA. At this point, have a professional piercer assess the piercing first — but if they can't identify a cause, a medical evaluation may be the next step.

Keloid Treatment Options (From a Doctor)

If you do have an actual keloid, treatment options include:

  • Corticosteroid injections — The most common first-line treatment. Reduces collagen production and can flatten the keloid over multiple sessions.
  • Cryotherapy — Freezing the keloid tissue.
  • Surgical excision — Removing the keloid, often combined with steroid injections to prevent recurrence.
  • Silicone sheets or gel — Applied over the keloid to flatten and soften it over time.
  • Laser therapy — Can reduce redness and improve texture.

Note: Keloids have a high recurrence rate, even after treatment. This is another reason it's important to determine whether you're actually dealing with a keloid or just a stubborn irritation bump — the treatment paths are completely different.

Prevention: How to Avoid Irritation Bumps in the First Place

The best treatment is prevention. Here's how to give your piercing the best chance at a bump-free healing process:

  1. Get pierced with quality jewelry from the start. At Platinum Tattoos & Piercings, we use implant-grade titanium (NeoMetal, Anatometal) and 14kt solid gold (Junipurr) — materials that are biocompatible and won't trigger reactions.
  2. Follow your aftercare instructions. NeilMed saline, 1–2 times daily. That's the whole routine.
  3. Don't touch it. We cannot stress this enough.
  4. Come back for your downsize. Most piercings need a shorter post after 5–7 weeks once initial swelling subsides. A bar that's too long will snag and shift, causing irritation.
  5. Avoid sleeping on new piercings. Travel pillows are your friend.
  6. Be patient. Piercings take months to fully heal — some take a year or more. Don't rush the process.
  7. Come to a reputable piercer. Proper placement, proper technique, and proper jewelry selection from day one prevent the majority of complications. We've been piercing San Antonio for over 26 years — we know what we're doing.

Visit Us in San Antonio

If you've got a bump that's worrying you, come see us. We're happy to assess your piercing, check your jewelry, and give you a clear answer on what's going on and how to fix it. No judgment, no charge for a look — just honest, experienced advice.

Platinum Tattoos & Piercings has been San Antonio's trusted piercing studio since 2000. Whether you got pierced with us or somewhere else, our piercers can evaluate your situation and help you get back on track.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is the bump on my piercing a keloid?

Almost certainly not. True keloids are genetic and relatively rare. If you've never had a keloid from any other wound and no one in your family has them, the bump on your piercing is overwhelmingly likely to be an irritation bump. Remove the source of irritation, clean with NeilMed saline, and practice LITHA.

How long does it take for an irritation bump to go away?

Once you've identified and removed the cause of irritation, most bumps resolve within 1–4 weeks. Stubborn ones can take longer, but you should see gradual improvement. If there's no improvement after 4–6 weeks of proper care, visit your piercer for an assessment.

Can I pop an irritation bump?

No. Never pop, squeeze, or lance a piercing bump. You risk introducing bacteria, causing an abscess, and making the problem significantly worse. Leave it alone and let your body resolve it naturally.

Does tea tree oil work on piercing bumps?

No. Tea tree oil is cytotoxic and can cause chemical burns and allergic reactions on healing tissue. It may temporarily reduce a bump by damaging cells, but it causes more harm than good. Stick to sterile NeilMed saline — it's all you need.

Should I take out my piercing if I have a bump?

No. Removing jewelry can cause the surface of the piercing to close while trapping irritation or bacteria inside, potentially leading to an abscess. Leave the jewelry in, address the cause of the bump, and see a professional piercer if you're unsure.

I got pierced somewhere else and now I have a bump. Can you help?

Absolutely. We see clients from all over San Antonio — including folks who were pierced at other shops, mall kiosks, or even at home. We'll take a look at your piercing, assess the jewelry and placement, and recommend next steps. No judgment.

What gauge should my piercing jewelry be?

Proper gauge depends on the piercing location. We pierce nostrils and earlobes at 18g, ears, facial, oral, and septum piercings at 16g, and body piercings at 14g or 12g. We never use 20g — it's too thin and more prone to migration and irritation. If your jewelry is thinner than what's standard for your piercing type, that could be contributing to your bump.

When should I see a doctor instead of a piercer?

See a doctor if you have signs of infection (increasing pain, spreading redness, warmth, yellow/green discharge, fever), if the bump is growing beyond the piercing boundaries, if you have a family history of keloids, or if conservative care hasn't improved things after several weeks.

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Platinum Body Piercings Team
We write about content strategy, SEO, and marketing for tattoo shops and piercing studios. Our guides are built from real shop data and practitioner experience — not generic small business advice.