Semicolon & Mental Health Tattoo Designs





The semicolon tattoo has become a powerful symbol of mental health awareness and suicide prevention, representing a story that could have ended but didn't. Beyond semicolons, the mental health tattoo space includes awareness ribbons, heartbeat lines, lotus flowers (growth through adversity), and custom symbols of personal resilience. These tattoos carry deep personal significance and connect a growing community.
Related Styles
Popular Placements
TatScout Insights
Semicolon & Mental Health Tattoo Tattoo, Data & Pricing
Pain level
Low
Session time
0.5-1h
Typical range per session
Ages well
Moderate
Artist level
Simple enough for most artists
Average price by country
Based on verified artist rates. Small = palm-sized · Medium = A5 · Large = A4+
| Country | Per hour | Small | Medium | Large |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇳🇱Netherlands | €85-135 | €170-275 | €295-480 | €505-820 |
| 🇬🇧United Kingdom | £75-120 | £145-235 | £255-415 | £435-710 |
| 🇺🇸United States | $110-180 | $225-365 | $390-635 | $670-1090 |
| 🇩🇪Germany | €75-120 | €145-235 | €255-415 | €435-710 |
| 🇪🇸Spain | €50-80 | €100-165 | €175-285 | €300-490 |
| 🇦🇺Australia | A$100-165 | A$200-330 | A$355-575 | A$605-985 |
💡 Many studios offer minimum-fee pricing for semicolons. Some artists donate a portion of proceeds to mental health charities.
Estimates based on TatScout market data. Always get a personalised quote from your artist.
Best placements
Frequently Asked Questions
What does a semicolon tattoo mean?
The semicolon represents a sentence the author chose not to end, symbolising choosing to continue living. It's associated with Project Semicolon and mental health awareness.
Where should I place a semicolon tattoo?
The wrist is the most common and visible placement. Behind the ear, on a finger, or on the ankle are also popular. Some choose places that are personally meaningful.
Are mental health tattoos meaningful?
Deeply so. For many, they serve as permanent reminders of survival, resilience, and the commitment to continue. They also help normalise mental health conversations.









