It is a curious paradox that in a nation famed for its high-tech exports and K-pop idols, the simple act of getting a tattoo has until recently been a legal grey area. South Korea’s Supreme Court ruled in March 2023 that tattooists are not necessarily practising medicine, a decision that finally opened the door to legal licensing. Now, a UK trade body is examining that model as Britain’s own tattoo industry faces growing demand and regulatory chaos.
For years, South Korean tattoo artists operated in a legal twilight, often working from private studios or even inside vans. The law, dating from a 1992 Supreme Court case, classified tattooing as a medical procedure. Only doctors could legally wield the needle, though few did. The result was a vibrant but shadowy underground of skilled artists, some of whom gained international fame through social media. Now, with licensing frameworks being developed, the country is normalising what millions already accepted: tattooing is art, not surgery.
This shift has not gone unnoticed in the United Kingdom. The British Tattoo Artists Federation (BTAF) recently announced it is studying South Korea’s transition to a licensed model. The UK currently has no national licensing system for tattoos; rules vary by local council, leading to a patchwork of standards. Some areas require hygiene inspections, others do not. Meanwhile, the number of people getting tattoos has surged: a 2023 YouGov poll found that one in five British adults now has at least one tattoo, up from one in ten a decade ago. The industry, worth an estimated £500 million, is outgrowing its regulatory suit.
What can Britain learn from Seoul? The South Korean model emphasises formal training and certification. Artists must complete courses in skin biology, hygiene and equipment sterilisation. This is not unlike the Level 4 qualifications some UK artists voluntarily obtain, but in South Korea it will soon be mandatory. The BTAF hopes that a similar system could raise standards, reduce infection risks, and give the trade the professional status it deserves. There is also a cultural dimension. In South Korea, tattoos have long been stigmatised, associated with gangsters or rebellion. Legalisation is slowly changing that perception, a shift that mirrors Britain’s own evolving attitudes. Tattoos are no longer just for sailors and rock stars. They are for teachers, bankers and grandmothers.
But the human cost of the old system is worth noting. In Seoul, before the ruling, artists faced police raids and fines of up to 10 million won (£6,000). Some were even imprisoned. Clients too took risks, receiving tattoos in unregulated conditions. The new licensing aims to bring everyone into the light. For British artists watching from afar, the message is clear: regulation can protect both the artist and the customer without stifling creativity.
Yet the BTAF’s interest is not purely altruistic. There is a fear that if the UK does not act, we may face our own underground problems. Already, unlicensed artists operate from home kitchens, using cheap ink and ignoring cross-contamination protocols. As demand grows, so does the risk of a public health scandal. A national licensing system could head off this crisis, giving the police and councils a clear framework.
There are also economic incentives. A licensed trade can lobby for insurance, access high-street premises and attract foreign clients. South Korea’s artists already see tourism from China, Japan and the West, people who want a piece of the Hallyu wave. The UK’s own tattoo tourism could flourish with a standardised model.
Will the British public accept a government stamp on their body art? Tattoo culture has always prized individualism and rebellion. But perhaps that is a romantic notion from a bygone era. Today’s tattoo enthusiast is as likely to be a middle-aged accountant as a punk teenager. And they want safety. The South Korean example shows that licensing does not kill creativity. If anything, it encourages it by giving artists the freedom to work openly, without fear of police sirens.
The ink is still drying on South Korea’s new system. But as the BTAF pores over the details, one thing is clear: the globalisation of tattoo culture is now official. And London, with its own rich body art history, may be next in line for a change that will be written not in law books, but on skin.








