Tattoo booking form for artists

A tattoo booking form for realtattoo requests.

Collect the idea, placement, size, references, timing, and contact details before you spend another afternoon asking the same questions in DMs.

Made by handGDPR compliant

Tattoo intake, not a generic contact form

A good tattoo form helps
you decide before you reply.

A tattoo booking form is not just a name, email, and message box. It should collect the details that actually change the work: the idea, body placement, size, references, timing, and how the client can be reached.

Inklee turns that first messy request into a cleaner tattoo intake flow. Clients send the context first, and the artist can review whether the piece fits their style, schedule, or booking window before confirming anything.

Where requests fall apart

Most tattoo requests arrive
half-finished.

A client might send a screenshot, ask for a price, forget the placement, skip the size, and then disappear before the artist has enough information to answer properly.

“How much?” without placement or size

The price question lands first, before any of the context that actually changes the price. You ask. They answer. The momentum dies.

Reference images separated from the actual request

Saved screenshots in one thread, a description in another, a question in a third. You spend more time piecing the request together than answering it.

Preferred dates mentioned once and then buried

A date drops mid-conversation, then disappears under three new messages. By the time you scroll back, the timing makes no sense.

Guest spot city missing from the message

A traveling-client request without a city forces the artist to ask, then wait, then ask again, usually after the trip is already locked in.

Artists repeating the same intake questions every week

Placement. Size. References. Timing. Same questions, copy-pasted into a different DM, every single week.

How Inklee fixes it

A better form gets the
important details first.

With Inklee, the client sends a structured tattoo request before the artist decides what happens next. That makes the first reply faster, clearer, and less dependent on digging through chat history.

01

Collect tattoo-specific details in one place

Instead of asking five questions across five replies, the form gathers the basics before the conversation even starts.

02

Keep reference images connected to the request

Visuals stay attached to the idea they belong to, not floating in a separate chat thread above or below the message.

03

Ask for placement, size, timing, and contact details upfront

By the time you read the request, the four things that decide whether it can become a booking are already on the page.

04

Review the request before confirming anything

The form is the first step, not the last. You decide whether the idea fits before any time slot is offered.

05

Use the same flow from bio, replies, or guest spot announcements

One link, one form. It works the same whether the client found you through bio, stories, a DM reply, or a city announcement.

Fields the form should include

Six fields that make
a tattoo request useful.

The exact form can change from artist to artist, but these fields are the difference between a useful request and another vague message.

01

Tattoo idea

Let clients describe the concept in their own words before the conversation turns into guessing.

02

Placement

Body placement changes the design, time, price, and whether the idea works at all.

03

Size

A rough size helps the artist understand scope before talking dates or cost.

04

Reference images

Keep inspiration, style direction, and visual notes connected to the request.

05

Preferred timing

Collect date preferences without letting clients instantly lock a slot too early.

06

Contact details

Keep email, Instagram handle, or other contact info attached to the booking request.

Side by side

Generic contact form
vs tattoo booking form.

A basic form can collect a message. A tattoo request form should collect enough context for the artist to make a decision.

Feature
Generic contact form
Inklee tattoo form
Request context
Short message field
Idea, placement, size, references, timing, and contact
Reference images
Often missing or sent separately
Attached to the request context
Artist approval
Usually just sends a message
Supports review before confirmation
Instagram workflow
Often disconnected from bio and DMs
Works as the next step from Instagram inquiries
Guest spots
Usually no city or travel context
Can support location and guest spot demand
Booking clarity
Creates more follow-up questions
Reduces repeated intake questions

The goal is not to make clients fill out a tax return. The goal is to collect enough detail so the artist can answer properly.

Who it is for

Built for artists who choose
what gets booked.

Solo tattoo artists

For artists who handle their own intake without hiring a front desk.

Instagram-first artists

For tattooers using Instagram bio + replies as their booking entry point.

Traveling guest spot artists

For artists moving between cities, studios, and limited booking windows.

Custom-work artists

For artists who need to review the idea before saying yes to a slot.

FAQ

Tattoo booking forms, answered.

01What should a tattoo booking form ask for?

A tattoo booking form should ask for the tattoo idea, placement, size, reference images, preferred timing, contact details, and any notes the artist needs before reviewing the request. The goal is to collect enough context before the artist replies.

02Is a tattoo booking form different from a contact form?

Yes. A contact form usually collects a name, email, and message. A tattoo booking form should collect tattoo-specific details like placement, size, references, style direction, city, and timing.

03Should a booking form let clients pick a time immediately?

Not always. Many tattoo artists need to review the idea before confirming a booking. A request-first form is usually better because it lets the artist decide what fits before a client locks a slot.

04Can I use a tattoo booking form with Instagram?

Yes. Many artists use a booking form as the next step after Instagram. The client finds the artist on Instagram, taps the booking link, and submits the tattoo request with the details in one place.

05Should I ask for reference images?

Yes. Reference images help the artist understand style, direction, and expectations. They should stay attached to the request so the artist does not have to search through old messages.

06Should I ask for budget in a tattoo form?

It depends on the artist. Some artists want budget context early, while others prefer to quote based on idea, placement, size, and time. The form should be flexible enough to match the artist's workflow.

07Can a tattoo booking form help with guest spots?

Yes. For guest spots, a form can collect city, travel timing, placement, size, references, and contact details. That makes it easier to separate trip-based demand from regular requests.

08Does a booking form make the process feel too formal?

Not if it is written in the artist's voice. A good tattoo booking form should feel like a clean request flow, not a corporate appointment portal.

Stop starting every tattoo
request from zero.

Give clients one place to send the tattoo details you actually need.