Hypoallergenic Jewelry
Earrings and everyday pieces you can wear without the itch, the redness, or the green marks.
✦ Buy 2, get your 3rd piece free — applied automatically, no code.
Answered
Common questions
Is Stylr jewelry real gold?
Can I shower, swim, and sweat in it?
Will it tarnish or turn my skin green?
Is it hypoallergenic? Does it contain nickel?
About Hypoallergenic Jewelry
Earrings and everyday pieces you can wear without the itch, the redness, or the green marks. This collection is made from surgical-grade 316L stainless steel — the same alloy class used in body piercings and surgical implants — chosen because it releases very little nickel at the skin. What "hypoallergenic" actually means matters here, so we're precise about it below.
Hypoallergenic, said honestly
316L isn't nickel-free — it contains 10–14% nickel locked inside the alloy. What makes it hypoallergenic is that the nickel stays bound and barely releases at the surface, well under the EU limit that triggers most reactions. That's the real definition of hypoallergenic in metallurgy, and it's why 316L is a standard choice for piercings. We don't print "nickel-free," because that's chemically inaccurate — here's the full breakdown.
What's in the hypoallergenic collection
Built for skin that reacts to most jewelry, every piece shares the same 316L core:
- Earrings — studs, hoops, and huggies, the most-requested category for sensitive ears.
- Necklaces & pendants — everyday chains that won't leave a mark on your neck.
- Rings & bracelets — stack and layer without the itch.
Gold-tone pieces use 18K gold PVD over the same steel core, so skin contact is identical whether you wear silver or gold.
316L vs other "hypoallergenic" metals
- 316L surgical steel — very low nickel release; the practical everyday choice, and what this collection is made of.
- Sterling silver — can include nickel in some alloys and tarnishes; fine for many, not the safest bet for reactive skin.
- Brass / mystery base metal — contains copper; the usual cause of green skin and reactions. Avoid for sensitive skin.
- Plated base metal — fine until the thin plating wears through to the reactive metal underneath.
- Titanium & niobium — truly nickel-free and the gold standard for severe allergies (and a premium price).
If you have a confirmed nickel allergy
Most nickel-sensitive wearers do fine in 316L, but a small number with a strong, confirmed allergy still react to any nickel content. If that's you, titanium and niobium are the truly nickel-free options — we'd rather point you there than oversell. Read can you be allergic to stainless steel earrings and how titanium compares before deciding.
Choosing pieces for sensitive skin
- Look for a stated 316L stainless-steel core — not "stainless" or "hypoallergenic alloy" with no grade.
- Gold you can trust is PVD/18K plating over steel, not plating over brass.
- For a brand-new piercing, heal it in your piercer's recommended metal first, then switch.
- Patch-test anything new if you have a strong, confirmed allergy.
Frequently asked questions
Is 316L stainless steel safe for sensitive ears?
316L is a common choice for healed and sensitive piercings because it releases very little nickel at the skin. For a brand-new piercing, follow your piercer's aftercare first.
Will it turn my skin green?
No. Green marks come from copper, which isn't present at the wearing surface of 316L stainless steel.
Is the jewelry nickel-free?
No, and we won't claim that — 316L contains 10–14% nickel locked inside the alloy. It's hypoallergenic because that nickel stays bound and barely releases, well under the EU limit that triggers most reactions.
What about the gold-tone pieces — are they still hypoallergenic?
Yes. The PVD and 18K gold finish sits over the same 316L core, so the metal touching your skin is identical.
What if I have a strong, confirmed nickel allergy?
Most nickel-sensitive wearers do fine in 316L, but a small number with a strong allergy still react to any nickel content. If that's you, titanium and niobium are the truly nickel-free options — we'd rather point you there than oversell.
More on sensitive ears: surgical stainless steel earrings for sensitive ears.
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