CV Template · Tattoo Artist
A strong Tattoo Artist CV should make your technical skill, artistic identity, and shop reliability clear at a glance. Studios want to see the styles you can execute, how you manage clients, and whether you work safely under licensing and hygiene rules.
Hiring managers and studio owners look for more than attractive flash sheets. Your CV should connect your portfolio to real studio practice: custom design work, stencil preparation, machine setup, aftercare guidance, infection control, and client consultations. Mention the tattoo styles you specialize in, such as blackwork, fine line, realism, neo-traditional, Japanese, or lettering, and include any bloodborne pathogen training, local licensing, or apprenticeship background. If you handle bookings through Instagram, Fresha, Square, or studio CRM tools, note that too, especially if you manage deposits, waivers, and repeat clients.
Emphasize your apprenticeship, supervised practice, art training, and portfolio development rather than trying to pad the CV with unrelated work. Include flash sheets, healed practice pieces where appropriate, hygiene training, and any experience assisting with station setup, client intake, or cleaning protocols.
Yes, but make sure the link shows your best tattoo work quickly. A studio owner should be able to see clean photos, healed results, style range, and consistent linework or shading without scrolling through unrelated personal content.
List any local tattoo license, bloodborne pathogen training, infection control course, first aid certification, or health department registration required in your area. If you have completed an apprenticeship, include the studio name, mentor, dates, and the skills covered.
Pick a style, let the AI design three variations, download the PDF. Free preview — launch promo $1.99 $5 per clean PDF.