I want to be careful here, because Ink Nurse is genuinely a good cream. It applies cleanly, it doesn't sting on open ink, and the packaging is the most beautiful thing on any pharmacy-adjacent shelf in Australia. The cult is earned.
What it is not, and what the formulation does not support, is a premium-priced product. I knew this. I bought it anyway. Forty-eight hours after a tattoo session, served an Instagram ad, in roughly nine seconds.
The reason I did this is the reason most aftercare mistakes happen: the algorithm got me at the exact moment I was most suggestible. I had a fresh 12cm forearm piece, I was scrolling Instagram, and Meta served me a video of a tattoo healing under Ink Nurse with cinematography that should be illegal. I added to cart. I did not compare. I bought a 100ml tube for $39.99 — three times what a 50g tube of Bepanthen Tattoo Care costs at Chemist Warehouse. Resellers on marketplaces will happily charge you up to $98.99 for the same tube.
Here is what happens when you use Ink Nurse. The cream goes on like a slightly thicker Bepanthen — soft, absorbs cleanly, no tackiness. Week one healed exactly as I'd expect from any quality aftercare. Week two — the scab phase, the one where aftercare actually earns its keep — was light, even, and lifted without pulling. Week three the itch was manageable, peel was soft. Week four the colour settled strong and saturated. Nothing wrong. Nothing exceptional.
The piece healed beautifully. So did the test piece I did the year before with a $13 Bepanthen tube. So did the one I did with Dr Pickles Tattoo Balm at $24.99. Same artist, same ink, same body location. Three creams. One outcome.
I have a small theory, which is that tattoo aftercare is the perfect category for a premium-priced, brand-led product. You buy it once, panicked, immediately after spending hundreds of dollars on the tattoo itself. The marginal $60 feels rational. The Instagram ad is professionally shot. The packaging is beautiful enough that you keep it visible on the bathroom shelf. The premium is bought through advertising, not through formulation chemistry. Ink Nurse has not done anything proprietary — the ingredient list is essentially panthenol plus vitamin E plus a balm base, comparable to Bepanthen and Dr Pickles.
Use Bepanthen if you want the pharmacy-classic, clinically-backed option. Use Dr Pickles if you want vegan, lanolin-free, and an Australian brand artists actually recommend on the chair. Do not, regardless of how good the Instagram ad is, pay $39.99 — or a reseller's $98.99 — for a tube that performs the same as the $13 one.
The comparison.
| Product | Price | Size | Glow Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ink Nurse Remedy Cream | $39.99 | 100ml | 6.2/10 |
| Dr Pickles Tattoo Balm | $24.99 | 75g | 8.7/10 |
| Bepanthen Tattoo Care | $13.00 | 50g | 8.5/10 |
| Hustle Butter Deluxe | $39.95 | 150ml | 8.8/10 |
| Aquaphor Healing Ointment | $13.00 | 50g | 8.6/10 |
Questions readers ask.
Is Ink Nurse worth $39.99?
Ink Nurse vs Bepanthen — which is better?
Ink Nurse vs Dr Pickles — which one?
What's the best tattoo aftercare in Australia?
How long does Ink Nurse last?
Tested under the Glow Standard 2026. Product purchased at retail — no PR sample accepted. Glow does not accept paid placement in Confessions essays.
