Waterproof Earrings: What Actually Makes Earrings Safe to Wear in Water - rhokea

Waterproof Earrings: What Actually Makes Earrings Safe to Wear in Water

You bought a pair of earrings labelled "waterproof." Two months later, the gold colour has faded and your ears are turning green. The problem is not that you got them wet too often. The problem is that the word "waterproof" has no standard definition in jewellery, and the metal underneath the surface was never designed to survive water in the first place.

Quick answer

Sterling silver is not waterproof. Gold plating is not waterproof. Most jewellery marketed as "waterproof" relies on a surface coating over a water-reactive base metal, and when water eventually reaches that base, the piece fails. The only genuinely waterproof earring metals are implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136), solid gold (14k and above), and platinum, because they are waterproof all the way through. If your jewellery has layers, every single layer must be independently waterproof. If one layer fails, the whole piece fails. Stainless steel resists corrosion but contains 10-14% nickel, which can leach in wet conditions, so it is waterproof but not necessarily skin-safe.


The all-layers rule: why most "waterproof" jewellery fails

This is the single most important concept for understanding waterproof jewellery, and almost no brand talks about it: every layer in a piece of jewellery must be independently waterproof. If even one layer is water-reactive, the piece will eventually fail.

Think of it like waterproofing a jacket. If the outer shell repels rain but the lining absorbs it, the jacket is not waterproof. Jewellery works the same way. A gold-plated earring has two layers: a thin gold top layer and a base metal underneath (typically brass, zinc, or copper alloy). The gold layer may resist water initially, but it is only 0.5 to 2.5 microns thick. Over time, water, sweat, and shower chemicals find their way through micro-scratches, pinholes, and edges. When they reach the base metal, the corrosion starts from the inside.

This is why plated earrings go green. The green is not the gold failing. It is the copper in the base metal oxidising underneath the plating and leaching through to your skin. The top layer looked fine, but the layer beneath it was never waterproof.

The rule

Every layer must survive water on its own

Before trusting any earring in water, ask: if I stripped away the outer finish, would the metal underneath still be fine in a shower? If the answer is no, the earring is not waterproof. It is water-resistant until the coating gives out.

Solid metals (titanium, gold, platinum) pass this test by default. They have no layers to fail.


Which metals are actually waterproof

Not all metals behave the same way in water. Some are inert and will sit in salt water indefinitely without changing. Others begin corroding within hours. Here is what actually happens, metal by metal, and whether each one passes the all-layers test.

Implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136)

Titanium is the most water-resistant metal used in earrings. When exposed to any environment containing oxygen or moisture, it spontaneously forms a thin layer of titanium dioxide (TiO2) on its surface, typically 1.5 to 10 nanometres thick.1 This passive oxide layer is self-healing: if scratched, it reforms almost instantly. It is chemically stable in fresh water, salt water, chlorinated pool water, sweat, and acidic environments.

Titanium is a solid metal, not a coating, so it passes the all-layers test inherently. It contains less than 0.05% nickel (ASTM F136 specification), meaning there is no risk of nickel leaching when wet.2 This combination of waterproof and skin-safe is why titanium is the standard material for surgical implants, marine engineering, and desalination plants.

Titanium is safe in the shower, the pool, the sea, and during exercise. Every day, indefinitely.

Solid gold (14k and above)

Pure gold (24k) is chemically inert and does not corrode or tarnish in water. However, pure gold is too soft for earrings, so it is alloyed with other metals for durability. The higher the karat, the more gold and the less alloy, and therefore the better the water resistance.

At 14k (58.3% gold) and 18k (75% gold), the gold content is high enough to provide good water resistance. The alloy metals, usually copper, silver, or zinc, are the weak point. Over time, repeated chlorine or salt water exposure can cause subtle discolouration in the alloy, particularly in white gold, which is sometimes alloyed with nickel. Yellow and rose gold alloys (copper and silver based) are generally safer in water.

Solid gold passes the all-layers test because it is the same material throughout. No coating to wear through.

Solid gold is durable in water but not immune. Rinse with fresh water after chlorine or salt exposure.

Platinum

Platinum is dense, inert, and extremely resistant to corrosion. It will not tarnish or react in any common water environment. It passes the all-layers test easily. The trade-off is cost: platinum earrings are substantially more expensive per gram than titanium, and less common in the earring market.

Stainless steel (316L): waterproof but not skin-safe

Stainless steel resists visible corrosion in water. It will not tarnish, pit, or discolour in showers or pools. By the narrow definition of "will it survive water," stainless steel is waterproof.

However, 316L surgical stainless steel contains approximately 10 to 14 percent nickel.3 When exposed to sweat or prolonged moisture, nickel can leach from the surface. For the estimated 8 to 19 percent of adults in Europe with nickel sensitivity, this can trigger allergic contact dermatitis even though the earrings look perfectly fine.4

This is an important distinction. Waterproof is not the same as skin-safe. A metal can survive water without corroding while still releasing compounds that irritate your skin. When choosing earrings for daily wet wear, you need both.

Stainless steel resists corrosion but may not be safe for sensitive skin in wet conditions.


Metals that fail the all-layers test

Sterling silver

Sterling silver (92.5% silver, 7.5% copper) is one of the least water-resistant metals used in earrings. It tarnishes when exposed to moisture, sulphur compounds, and chlorine. The copper in the alloy reacts with water and air to form a dark oxide layer. Chlorinated pool water and salt water accelerate this dramatically, causing rapid darkening and surface pitting.

Sterling silver should be removed before showering, swimming, or exercising. There is no coating or treatment that makes silver permanently waterproof. Anti-tarnish coatings (lacquer or rhodium plating) slow the process but do not prevent it.

Gold-plated

Gold-plated earrings have a thin layer of gold (typically 0.5 to 2.5 microns) electroplated onto a base metal, usually brass or zinc alloy. The gold layer is water-resistant on its own, but it is not thick enough to last. Water, sweat, and chemicals work through micro-scratches and edges, reaching the base metal. The base corrodes, the plating bubbles or peels, and your ears turn green.

Most gold-plated earrings last 6 to 12 months with regular wear. Daily water exposure cuts this further. Gold plating fails the all-layers test because the base metal is not waterproof.

Gold-filled

Gold-filled earrings have a much thicker gold layer (at least 5% of the item's total weight, mechanically bonded under heat and pressure). They are significantly more durable than gold-plated pieces and can last 10 to 20 years. However, the core is still a base metal, and over very long exposure to chlorinated or salt water, degradation can occur. Gold-filled is a better middle ground, but it still has a non-waterproof layer underneath.

PVD-coated (Physical Vapour Deposition)

PVD coating deposits a thin, hard layer of material (often titanium nitride or zirconium nitride, tinted to look like gold) onto a base metal. The PVD layer itself is typically 0.3 to 3 microns thick and is more durable than electroplating. The coating material, titanium nitride, is actually waterproof as a compound.

The problem is the base metal underneath. If the PVD is applied over stainless steel, brass, or zinc alloy, those base metals have their own water and skin-safety limitations. When the PVD layer eventually wears through (2 to 5 years with careful wear), water reaches the base metal, and the same problems as plating emerge. PVD is a meaningful improvement over gold plating, but it still fails the all-layers test unless the base metal is itself waterproof.


The full picture: waterproof and skin-safe compared

Waterproof matters, but it is only half the equation. A metal can survive water without corroding while still releasing nickel or other irritants when wet. This table evaluates both.

Metal Waterproof? Skin-safe when wet? All-layers test Lifespan in water
Implant-grade titanium Yes Yes (no nickel) Pass (solid) Indefinite
Solid gold (14k+) Yes Usually (check alloy) Pass (solid) Indefinite
Platinum Yes Yes Pass (solid) Indefinite
Stainless steel (316L) Yes No (10-14% nickel) Pass (solid) Years, but nickel leaches
PVD-coated Top layer yes Depends on base Fail (base metal exposed) 2 to 5 years
Gold-filled Top layer yes Depends on core Fail (core exposed) 10 to 20 years
Gold-plated Temporarily No (base corrodes) Fail 6 to 12 months
Sterling silver No Tarnishes on contact Fail Weeks before tarnish

The shower test: what actually happens to your earrings

Daily showers are the most common water exposure for earrings. Shower water itself is relatively benign, but the real agents of damage are soap, shampoo, conditioner, and body wash. These products contain surfactants, sulphates, and sometimes acidic or alkaline compounds that interact with metal surfaces differently depending on the alloy. Hard water areas add calcium and mineral deposits, which can dull any metal's surface over time (easily rinsed off, but worth knowing).

Moisture trapped after a shower is often more damaging than the shower itself. Water caught behind flat-back earrings or under butterfly backs creates a microenvironment where corrosion accelerates. In reactive metals like silver or plated base alloys, this trapped moisture does more harm than the shower water that runs over the surface. Threadless flat-back designs with smooth backs are less prone to this because they do not trap water against the skin.

The daily cycle of wet-dry-wet-dry is the most punishing environment for any coating. Gold plating, PVD, and lacquer finishes all degrade faster with daily shower exposure than with occasional rain or hand-washing. This is why coated earrings that seem fine for months can suddenly fail once you start showering in them regularly. If you want earrings you never have to think about removing, the only lasting solutions are solid metals that pass the all-layers test.


Swimming: pools, sea water, and hot tubs

Swimming introduces more aggressive chemistry than showering. Pool water contains chlorine (or bromine in some hot tubs), a powerful oxidising agent. Sea water contains roughly 3.5% dissolved salts by weight, primarily sodium chloride. Both environments are significantly more corrosive than fresh water.

Chlorinated pools

Chlorine attacks the alloy metals in gold (copper, silver, zinc), causing gradual weakening and discolouration, particularly in white gold. Sterling silver darkens rapidly in chlorinated water. PVD coatings and gold plating degrade noticeably faster with regular pool exposure. Titanium and platinum are unaffected by pool-level chlorine concentrations.

Sea water

Titanium has excellent resistance to salt water corrosion, which is why it is used in marine propellers, heat exchangers, and submarine components.1 Sterling silver pits and tarnishes rapidly in sea water. Gold alloys can develop a dull film. Stainless steel resists visible damage but may increase nickel release in the saline environment.

Hot tubs

Hot tubs combine warm water, bromine or chlorine, and often a slightly alkaline pH. This is one of the most aggressive common environments for jewellery. Remove anything that is not solid titanium, solid gold, or platinum before getting in.


Sweat: the overlooked water exposure

Most people think about showers and swimming when they consider waterproof earrings, but sweat is often the most corrosive liquid your earrings encounter. Human sweat is a weak acid (pH approximately 4.5 to 7.0) containing sodium chloride, urea, lactic acid, and trace minerals.5

This acidic, salty solution is particularly effective at breaking down gold plating, accelerating tarnishing in silver, and leaching nickel from stainless steel.3 For people who exercise regularly, commute in warm weather, or simply run warm, sweat may be the primary cause of earring degradation, not showering or swimming.

Titanium is inert in contact with sweat. Its passive oxide layer is stable in acidic environments, which is one reason it is chosen for long-term surgical implants that sit in direct contact with body fluids for decades.2


How to tell if earrings are genuinely waterproof

Step 1

Check the base metal, not the finish

A gold-coloured earring could be solid gold, gold-filled, gold-plated, PVD-coated, or painted. The colour tells you nothing about water resistance. Look for the base metal specification. Implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136 or ASTM F67), solid gold with karat stamp (14k, 18k, 24k), or 950 platinum are the reliable options.

Step 2

Apply the all-layers test

Ask: if I stripped away every coating and finish, would the metal underneath survive a shower? If the base metal is brass, zinc, or copper alloy, the earring is not waterproof no matter what the surface treatment is. The surface may buy time, but the base will eventually be exposed.

Step 3

Check for nickel if you have sensitive skin

If earrings are described as "surgical steel" or "stainless steel," they contain nickel. This may not be visible as corrosion, but it becomes relevant when the metal is wet. If you have sensitive skin, you need waterproof and nickel-free.

Step 4

Be sceptical of vague claims

"Waterproof," "tarnish-free," and "sweat-proof" are not regulated terms in the jewellery industry. There is no certification body, no standard testing protocol, and no enforcement. If a brand cannot tell you the exact metal composition and any coating specification, the claim is marketing, not material science.


How rhokea passes the all-layers test

Every rhokea earring starts with implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136), the same alloy used in surgical implants. Our colour finishes are achieved through SkinPlating, an anodisation process that creates a layer of titanium nitride (TiN), a ceramic compound that is itself waterproof, corrosion-resistant, and biocompatible. The base metal is waterproof. The finish is waterproof. Every layer passes the test independently.

Our titanium is independently tested by Intertek Testing Services under EU REACH Regulation. Nickel release measured at less than 0.1 µg/cm²/wk on both coated and uncoated surfaces, well under the EU limit of 0.2 µg/cm²/wk. Chemical composition confirmed as Ti-6Al-4V ELI, matching ASTM F136-13(2021)e1 in full.

This means rhokea earrings are safe to wear in the shower, the pool, the sea, the gym, and in bed. They will not tarnish, corrode, leach nickel, or degrade. There is no plating to wear through to a reactive base metal underneath, because the base metal is titanium.

The trade-off is that titanium is lighter than gold or platinum, and the colour range from anodisation is different from traditional plating. We think that is a fair exchange for earrings you genuinely never have to take off.

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Frequently asked questions

Are waterproof earrings actually waterproof?

Most earrings marketed as waterproof are not. Sterling silver tarnishes within weeks of regular water exposure. Gold-plated earrings lose their coating in 6 to 12 months. The only metals that are genuinely waterproof through to the core are implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136), solid gold (14k and above), and platinum. If your earrings have layers, such as a coating over a base metal, every layer must be independently waterproof for the piece to survive long-term water exposure.

Can you shower with titanium earrings?

Yes. Implant-grade titanium is safe to wear in the shower every day, indefinitely. It does not tarnish, corrode, or react to soap, shampoo, or fresh water. It contains no nickel, so there is no risk of skin irritation when the metal gets wet. Titanium earrings with SkinPlating (titanium nitride anodisation) are equally shower-safe because the coating is a ceramic compound that is itself waterproof.

Why do some earrings turn skin green in water?

Green skin is caused by copper oxidation. When water reaches a copper-containing base metal, whether through a worn coating or directly, the copper reacts with moisture and produces copper chloride or copper carbonate, a green compound. This is common in brass, bronze, low-karat gold alloys, and the base metals underneath gold plating. If your "waterproof" earrings turn your skin green, the base layer is not waterproof.

What is the all-layers rule for waterproof jewellery?

The all-layers rule means that every layer in a piece of jewellery, from the outermost finish to the innermost base metal, must be independently waterproof. If even one layer is water-reactive, the piece will eventually fail. This is why gold-plated earrings corrode: the gold top layer may resist water, but when water penetrates to the brass or zinc base metal, it corrodes from the inside. Solid metals like titanium, gold, and platinum pass the all-layers test by default because they have no layers to fail.

Is stainless steel waterproof?

Stainless steel (316L) resists visible corrosion in water and will not tarnish. However, it contains 10 to 14 percent nickel by weight. When exposed to sweat, chlorine, or prolonged moisture, nickel can leach from the surface. So while stainless steel is waterproof in the corrosion sense, it may not be skin-safe when wet, particularly for those with nickel sensitivity.

Can you swim in the sea with earrings?

Titanium and platinum earrings are safe in sea water. Solid gold (14k+) is generally safe but should be rinsed with fresh water afterwards. Sterling silver, gold-plated, and PVD-coated earrings should be removed before sea swimming, as salt accelerates both tarnishing and coating breakdown.

What earrings can you wear in the shower without them tarnishing?

Implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136), solid platinum, and solid gold (14k or higher) can all be worn in the shower without tarnishing. Titanium is the most corrosion-resistant of these. Avoid wearing sterling silver, gold-plated, or brass earrings in the shower.

Does PVD coating make earrings waterproof?

PVD coating improves water resistance compared to traditional gold plating, but it does not make earrings waterproof. The PVD layer itself (often titanium nitride) is water-resistant, but it is only 0.3 to 3 microns thick. If it wears through, water reaches the base metal underneath. PVD-coated earrings are better than gold-plated, but they still fail the all-layers test if the base metal is not itself waterproof.

What is the most waterproof metal for earrings?

Implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136) is the most waterproof and skin-safe metal used in earrings. It resists corrosion in fresh water, salt water, chlorine, and sweat due to a self-healing titanium dioxide passive layer. It contains less than 0.05 percent nickel, making it safe for sensitive skin even during prolonged wet exposure.

Is sterling silver waterproof?

No. Sterling silver is one of the least water-resistant metals used in earrings. It tarnishes when exposed to moisture, sulphur compounds, and chlorine. Chlorinated pool water and salt water cause rapid darkening and surface degradation. Sterling silver earrings should be removed before showering, swimming, or exercising.

1 Prando D, Brenna A, Diamanti MV, et al. "Corrosion of Titanium: Part 1: Aggressive Environments and Main Forms of Degradation." Journal of Applied Biomaterials & Functional Materials, 2017; 15(4):403-413. doi:10.5301/jabfm.5000387

2 Mitsuo N, et al. "Biocompatibility of titanium from the viewpoint of its surface." Science and Technology of Advanced Materials, 2022; 23(1):467-477. PMC9389932

3 Haudrechy P, Foussereau J, Mantout B, Baroux B. "Nickel release from stainless steels." Contact Dermatitis, 1994; 31(4):249-255. PubMed

4 Ahlström MG, Thyssen JP, Wennervaldt M, Menné T, Johansen JD. "Nickel allergy and allergic contact dermatitis: A clinical review of immunology, epidemiology, exposure, and treatment." Contact Dermatitis, 2019; 81(4):227-241. PubMed

5 Thyssen JP, Menné T. "Metal allergy - a review on exposures, penetration, genetics, prevalence, and clinical implications." Chemical Research in Toxicology, 2010; 23(2):309-318. PubMed

Written by Dr Eman Butt, MA (Cantab), MB BChir, PGDip, medical doctor and co-founder of rhokea. All rhokea jewellery is made from implant-grade titanium (ASTM F136 / F67) with SkinPlating technology. This guide is for informational purposes and does not constitute medical advice.