how long does a hickey last
Most hickeys last about 5–12 days, but anywhere from 3 days up to 2 weeks is normal, depending on how deep the bruise is and how fast your body heals.
How long does a hickey last?
A hickey is basically a small bruise caused by suction breaking tiny blood vessels under the skin. Just like any bruise, your body needs time to reabsorb that trapped blood.
Typical timeline:
- 3–5 days: Still obvious, often red, purple, or dark blue.
- 5–7 days: Starts turning greenish or yellow as it heals.
- 7–14 days: Fades to light yellow/brown, then back to normal skin tone.
On forums, people commonly report theirs lasting about a week, but sometimes close to two weeks, especially if it was a strong, deep hickey or if they bruise easily.
What affects how long it lasts?
A hickey will usually last longer if:
- The suction was strong or lasted a long time (more vessel damage).
- It’s on thin, sensitive skin (like the neck) where bruises show more.
- You naturally bruise easily or have slower circulation.
- You’re low on sleep, stressed, or your general health/healing is not great.
It may fade faster if:
- Your circulation is good and you generally heal quickly.
- You treat it early with simple bruise-care steps (see below).
Quick ways to help it fade (a bit) faster
Nothing makes a hickey vanish instantly, but you can sometimes speed things up slightly or make it less obvious.
First 24–48 hours (fresh hickey):
- Cold compress
- Wrap ice or a cold pack in a cloth and press gently for about 10 minutes, a few times a day.
* Cold helps slow bleeding under the skin and reduce swelling.
- Avoid rubbing too hard
- Aggressive “toothbrush” or “spoon” rubbing can irritate skin or make it worse, even if people on forums swear by it.
After 48 hours:
- Warm compress
- Use a warm, damp cloth or heating pad (low) for 10 minutes a few times a day.
* Warmth can improve blood flow and help your body clear the trapped blood.
- Gentle massage
- Once it’s not tender, lightly massaging around (not aggressively on) the area can help circulation.
- Bruise-friendly creams
- Over‑the‑counter arnica gel, vitamin K cream, or products marketed for bruises are sometimes used to try to speed fading.
* Evidence isn’t perfect, but many people find them mildly helpful and they’re generally safe when used as directed.
- General health basics
- Staying hydrated, eating well, and sleeping enough helps overall healing.
How to hide a hickey while it heals
Since you usually can’t erase it overnight, covering it is often your best bet.
Makeup options:
- Use color corrector (slightly green or yellow for purple/blue marks), then a concealer and foundation that match your skin.
- Blend edges really well so it doesn’t look cakey or obvious.
Non‑makeup options:
- High‑neck tops, hoodies, scarves, or turtlenecks.
- Jewelry like chunky chokers or scarves if it fits your style.
Mini “forum discussion” snapshot
People talking about hickeys online tend to say things like:
“Like a week‑ish but it can vary.”
“Maybe 2–3 days for an average one, maybe longer… ~1 to 2 weeks.”
Most agree you can’t fully “fix” it instantly; at best you can shrink it a bit and hide it well until it fades.
When to actually worry
A normal hickey:
- Stays in one spot, slowly fades over days to two weeks.
- May be tender but not extremely painful.
Get medical advice if:
- The area is very painful, swollen, or feels hot.
- You notice numbness, weakness, vision changes, or other odd symptoms near or beyond the hickey area.
- You have frequent big bruises without clear cause.
Those can be signs of something more serious than a simple surface bruise.
TL;DR
- A hickey usually lasts about 5–12 days , but 3 days to 2 weeks is still normal.
- Cold early, then warm later, plus gentle care can help it fade a bit faster, but there’s no instant cure.
- While you wait, makeup, scarves, and high‑neck clothes are your best friends.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.