So you’re hunting for JJK tattoo inspo — love that for you. Jujutsu Kaisen totally took over the fandom, and if you’ve been daydreaming about carrying a little piece of that world on your skin, you’re in the right place. Whether it’s Gojo’s goofy confidence or Sukuna’s terrifying swagger, these designs can mean whatever you want — a reminder of strength, a tribute to a favorite scene, or just something that makes you smile when you catch a glimpse. Let’s wander through some ideas and see what sticks.
Gojo Satoru — playful power and those unforgettable eyes

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Gojo’s the kind of character you can take so many ways on skin. You could go silly — a tiny, funny Gojo that’s basically an inside joke — or go for full-on dramatic energy with saturated colors and magical linework. I love the tattoos that mix both: the sharp, intimidating gaze paired with a little goofy detail that shows personality. The eyes are iconic, so even a black-and-gray piece that hides a pop of blue will stop people in their tracks. And honestly, the moment he takes off his blindfold? Tattoo gold. It’s one of those tiny cinematic beats that reads immediately, whether it’s small and delicate or a full, vibrant sleeve.
Yuji Itadori and Sukuna — one body, two moods (and lots of drama)

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Putting Yuji and Sukuna together feels dramatic in the best way. There’s something so electric about a piece where Sukuna peeks out through Itadori — it reads like tension, like power waiting to slip out. Some tattoos go heavy with color and crisp linework, others keep it ghostly with black and gray and a tiny pop of red in the eyes. Little details matter here: a speck of white ink on a fang, the way Sukuna’s hand overtakes a face, or just the mouth and eye as a bold, statement-only piece. If you want creepy and beautiful at the same time, this duo delivers.
Tattoos of the rest of the crew — small symbols, big personalities

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Okay, so after Gojo and Sukuna, there’s a whole cast worth of ink ideas. Geto and Gojo together? Chaos energy, and honestly, it photographs like a dream. Suguru’s “Obey me” moment is a manga-accurate vibe that reads instantly, and Megumi’s summoning signs make for subtle, meaningful pieces if you want something less literal. You can also play with geometry, color splashes, and little signature details like Gojo’s blue eye woven into a larger composition.
Don’t sleep on the quieter characters either: Toge Inumaki’s mystery makes for a tattoo that feels secretive and cool, Nanami’s clean, darker tones create striking contrast, and Mahito is perfect if you’re into villains who look simple but carry a lot of menace. Some folks prefer villain energy to hero energy — and that’s totally valid. The best tattoos are the ones that speak to what you want to carry with you, whether that’s power, melancholy, mischief, or a weird little inside joke.
Wrap-Up
The contrast between characters and styles is what makes JJK tattoos so fun — like the way different shading styles highlight personality, or how a light brush of shadow can change a piece from soft to savage. If you’re planning your next session, think about which moment, eye, or tiny detail gives you that little rush, and bring a reference you actually love. Anyway, if you end up getting one of these, tell me about it — I want to see how it turns out.