In a landmark ruling that has sent tremors through the parallel universe where hygiene matters, South Korea’s constitutional court has finally legalised tattooing. Yes, after decades of treating professional ink-slingers as common criminals—you know, the sort who might accidentally give you hepatitis with a capital H—the country has seen the light. Or rather, it has seen Britain’s sparkling clean, regulatory-fetishised tattoo parlours and thought, “Ah yes, the land of the queue and the punctual bus has something to teach us.”
Let’s be clear. Until yesterday, getting a tattoo in Seoul required either a medical licence or a trip down a back alley where your artist was probably a disgruntled dermatologist moonlighting as a pirate. Now, thanks to the supreme wisdom of the Korean bench, tattooists can emerge from the shadows and into the fluorescent glare of proper salons. And who do they have to thank? Not themselves. Not the army of ink-crazed K-pop fans. No, it is the United Kingdom’s rigorous hygiene regulations that have become the global benchmark.
I can only imagine the scene in the constitutional court. A dusty tome of British health statutes being passed around like a sacred text. Judges nodding sagely at diagrams of sterilisation autoclaves. The ghost of Florence Nightingale looking on approvingly as they finally understood that a dirty needle is not a form of traditional art.
But let’s not get carried away with self-congratulatory drivel. The UK’s gold standard in tattoo hygiene is, let’s be honest, the result of our national obsession with bureaucracy and disinfectant. We have more rules about the temperature of the water in which you soak your needles than we do about the morality of your elected officials. Every single British tattoo parlour is a monument to paperwork. You think the artist is concentrating on your tribal armband? No, they’re worrying about whether they’ve filled out form HSE-14b correctly.
Still, it works. And now South Korea, home to some of the most breathtaking body art in the world, can finally offer its citizens the safety of a clean needle and a certificate of competence. The tattooists, who have been operating in a legal grey area—or should I say, grey ink—since the 1990s, are now legitimate. They can pay taxes. They can join trade unions. They can even, presumably, open a business bank account without being laughed out of the branch.
But the real story here is not South Korea’s legal awakening. It is the slow, creeping triumph of British sanity in a world gone mad. While we are busy wringing our hands over Brexit and the price of gin, our hygiene standards are being exported as cultural artefacts. Next thing you know, the Swiss will be adopting our train timetable. The French will start apologising for no reason. The Americans will finally figure out that tipping is not a constitutional right.
So let’s raise a glass of London dry gin—neat, because we have no ice (health and safety, you know)—to the tattoo artists of South Korea. Welcome to the clean, dull, unglamorous but supremely safe world of British regulation. Your art will now flourish under the watchful eye of a clipboard-armed inspector. And you will never again fear the sting of a dirty needle. Only the sting of VAT.








