Festival season is temporary. Your tattoo doesn't have to disappear on day one.
If you've ever worn a sticker tattoo to a festival, you already know the disappointment: one rainstorm, one sweaty set, one sunscreen application, and it's peeling off your arm before the headliner even starts. Face paint runs. Glitter gets everywhere. And by day two, the only thing left of your festival look is a smudge.
Jagua tattoos are different. The ink stains the skin itself — not a decal sitting on the surface. Once developed, it's completely waterproof. Rain, sweat, mud, sunscreen, swimming: none of it matters. The stain lasts 1–2 weeks, looks like a real tattoo, and fades naturally on its own.
We've put together festival guides for every market we serve. Whether you're heading to Glastonbury, Roskilde, Primavera Sound, or Tomorrowland Thailand — the approach is the same: apply 48 hours before, show up with peak color, and forget about it for the rest of the weekend.
Find your festival guide
We've written dedicated guides for the festivals that matter most in each country — with timing tips, design picks, and practical advice. Pick your destination:
More guides on the way
These countries have incredible festival scenes — dedicated guides are coming soon. In the meantime, browse the festival collection in your language.
Sticker vs henna vs jagua: which one survives a festival?
All three are legitimate options — but they're built for different things. Here's an honest side-by-side for festival conditions:
| Sticker tattoo | Henna | Jagua (Temporalis) ✦ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration | 1–3 days | 5–14 days | 7–15 days |
| Looks like | Shiny sticker | Warm reddish-brown | Real tattoo (blue-black) |
| Waterproof | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (once stained) | ✓ Yes |
| Survives sweat | ✗ Poorly | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Application | 10 sec | 30–60 min | 30 sec |
| Natural & vegan | Varies | Yes* | ✓ 100% plant-based |
* Natural henna is safe. Avoid "black henna" — it contains PPD, a toxic chemical that can cause burns and scarring.
Both henna and jagua stain the skin and survive festival conditions well — neither will wash off in the rain. The real difference is aesthetic: henna gives you a warm, earthy reddish-brown that works beautifully for traditional mehndi patterns. Jagua gives you a blue-black that looks like permanent tattoo ink. If the "real tattoo" look is what you're after, jagua is the way to go. If you love the henna aesthetic, that's a great choice too — just make sure it's natural henna, not the "black henna" sold at beach stands.
Sticker tattoos, on the other hand, really are a different category — they sit on the surface and don't survive water, sweat, or friction. For a multi-day festival, they're simply not built for the job.
How to time your festival tattoo perfectly
This is the part most people get wrong. Jagua ink needs time to develop — you can't apply it at the campsite and expect instant color.
The rule of thumb: If your festival starts Friday, apply Wednesday evening. If it starts Saturday, apply Thursday evening. Always give yourself two full nights of development.
Best festival tattoo styles
The designs that work best at festivals are bold enough to photograph well but versatile enough to work with different outfits:
- Botanical fine-line — roses, wildflowers, leaves. The most universally loved festival style, and the fine detail is where jagua shines.
- Celestial designs — suns, moons, stars, constellations. Perfect for arm and shoulder placements that catch the light.
- Butterflies — still one of the most searched festival tattoo designs. Works on wrists, collarbones, ankles.
- Minimalist symbols — small, clean, subtle. Great for finger tattoos and wrist placements.
- Matching group tattoos — the festival version of friendship bracelets. One design, your whole crew.
- Geometric & mandala — bold patterns that stand out at techno and electronic festivals.
Browse the full festival tattoo collection →
FAQ: festival tattoos
Do temporary tattoos survive rain and sweat at festivals?
It depends on the type. Sticker tattoos wash off in hours. Jagua tattoos stain the skin itself and are completely waterproof once developed. Rain, sweat, mud, sunscreen — none of it affects the stain. A jagua tattoo applied before a festival will last the entire event and beyond.
How long before a festival should I apply a temporary tattoo?
Apply your jagua tattoo 48 hours before the festival starts. The ink needs 24–36 hours to develop its full blue-black color. If your festival starts on Friday, apply Wednesday evening — you'll have peak color by Friday morning.
What are the best temporary tattoo styles for festivals?
The most popular festival styles are fine-line botanicals (flowers, leaves), celestial designs (moons, stars, suns), minimalist symbols, and matching group tattoos. Bold placements on arms, shoulders, and wrists work best for visibility in festival outfits.
How many tattoos should I order for a festival weekend?
For a multi-day festival, 2–3 tattoos per person is the sweet spot — one for a visible spot like your arm, one for something more subtle like your wrist or ankle, and a spare to share or swap with friends. Group orders of 5+ get 20% off at Temporalis.
Related reads:
- Semi Permanent Tattoos: The Complete Jagua Guide (2026)
- How to Apply Your Temporalis Tattoo
- Festival Tattoo Collection
Last updated: March 2026. Festival dates sourced from official festival websites and verified music press. Temporalis is not affiliated with any festival or event listed above.
