What Tattoo Supplies Do You Actually Need as a Beginner?

Let's be real — if you've spent more than ten minutes on tattoo forums or YouTube, you've probably been told you need five machines, three power supplies, and a colour set with 47 bottles before you touch a single piece of practice skin.

You don't.

Here's what actually matters when you're starting out, from someone who's thought about this way too hard so you don't have to.

The Machine — One Good One Beats Three Bad Ones

Before you go down the rabbit hole of coils vs rotaries, stroke lengths, and whether you need a machine that connects to an app — stop. You need one reliable machine that lets you focus on learning, not troubleshooting. Your goal right now is learning control, depth, and consistency — not collecting gear.
What actually matters at this stage:
  • Wireless — because cord management is one more thing you don't need to think about right now
  • Comfortable in your hand — this is personal, try a few if you can
  • Consistent hit — predictable power means you can actually learn from your mistakes instead of blaming the equipment

Starting Out and Watching Your Budget

These two machines do everything a beginner needs without requiring a second mortgage:
Dragonhawk Mast Tour

Dragonhawk Mast Tour

Price : $109.95

Fixed 3.5mm stroke, handles lining, shading, and colour packing. One machine, does everything. Exactly what a beginner needs — no decisions, just tattooing.

Filter X30 Adjustable Wireless Tattoo Machine

Filter X30 Adjustable Wireless Tattoo Machine

Price : $169.95

A step up if you want adjustability from day one. Smooth, reliable, and built to last past your first few hundred hours.

Got More to Spend?

These machines grow with you — you won't hit their ceiling anytime soon:
EZ P3 Pro Adjustable Stroke Wireless Pen

EZ P3 Pro Adjustable Stroke Wireless Pen

Price : $345.95

Six stroke options from 2.5mm to 4.0mm, two batteries with five hours each. The kind of machine serious artists actually keep using.

Dragonhawk Mast Fold Pro

Dragonhawk Mast Fold Pro Adjustable Wireless Machine

Price : $329.95

Adjustable stroke and a built-in digital display. Buy it once, keep using it as your skills level up. Simple.

Tattoo Inks — Quality Over Quantity, Every Single Time

Here's where a lot of beginners go wrong. They buy the biggest colour set they can find because more colours sounds like more options. Then six months later they have 40 half-used bottles of mediocre ink and no idea why their work isn't healing right.
Start with high-quality, reputable inks and build cleanliness and safety habits early — not just for your clients, but for your own reputation.
Brands worth actually trusting:
Hot take: you could start with just black. Learn how ink moves, how depth works, how shading builds. Add colour once you understand the fundamentals. Your future clients will thank you — and so will your wallet.

Starter Sets That Actually Make Sense

World Famous 7 Color Simple Set

World Famous 7 Color Simple Set

Price : $74.95

7 essential colors in one set — bright, long-lasting ink trusted by artists worldwide.

Solid Ink Mini Travel Set

Solid Ink Mini Travel Set

Price : $108.95

Compact travel-friendly ink set — everything you need in a portable package.

Dynamic Traditional Color Tattoo Ink Set

Dynamic Traditional Color Tattoo Ink Set

Price : $51.95

Classic traditional colors in one set — bold, vibrant, and beginner-friendly.

Enough variety to learn with. Not so much that you're overwhelmed before you've even started.

Needles & Cartridges — Not the Place to Save Money

You've got your machine. You've got your ink. Now you need cartridges — and this is genuinely not the place to go cheap.
Bad needles mean dull tips, blown out lines, and damaged skin. On practice skin that's annoying. On a real person that's a problem you can't undo. Always use pre-sterilized cartridges — and build that habit now before it actually matters.

Reliable and Affordable

Ready to Upgrade

Matrix Genesis Cartridges — sharp surgical steel, smooth ink flow, backflow membrane to keep your machine clean. They also do sample boxes by style — realism, lining, or mixed — genuinely useful when you're still figuring out what works for your technique.

Practice Skin — Skip This and You Will Regret It

Before you tattoo real skin, tattoo synthetic skin. A lot of it. Yes it feels different. No it won't prepare you for every situation. But it teaches you depth, consistency, and how your specific setup actually performs — before a real person is sitting in your chair trusting you with their skin.
  • Learn proper depth without consequences.
  • Build control and consistency before it counts.
  • Dial in your setup on something that doesn't bleed.
  • Reduce the risk of infection by keeping real skin out of the equation until you're ready.
Practice skin isn't optional. It's the gap between artists who develop solid technique and artists who wonder why their lines blow out every time.

Hygiene Basics — Boring? Yes. Non-Negotiable? Also Yes.

Nobody gets excited about nitrile gloves and barrier film. But artists who build clean habits early are the ones running professional setups later. The ones who skip it create problems for their clients and their reputation.
Add these essentials to your kit from day one:
  • Nitrile gloves — always
  • Barrier film and machine bags
  • Disposable ink cups
  • Green soap or surface disinfectant
  • Stencil paper and transfer gel
Two things that'll save you headaches early: don't pour more ink than you need into your caps — you can't put it back and waste adds up fast. And let your stencil fully dry before you start or it'll smear the second the needle gets near it. Ask anyone who's learned that one the hard way.

Start Simple. Stay Consistent. Actually Practice.

That's genuinely it. One solid machine, quality ink, sharp cartridges, practice skin, and clean habits. Everything else is noise until you've got those locked in.
  • One reliable machine beats five mediocre ones every time.
  • Quality ink from brands that actually care what goes into skin.
  • Clean habits built early stay with you for your entire career.
The artists who make it look effortless on TikTok put in thousands of hours on the basics before anyone was watching. Your job right now is to start yours — and maybe skip the $40 Amazon kit while you're at it.

FAQs

The real short list is a machine, cartridge needles, ink, practice skin, and hygiene basics. That covers every stage of the tattooing process without overbuying. A lot of beginners spend money on gear they don't need yet — a solid entry-level machine like the Mast Tour or Filter X30 will teach you far more than an expensive machine you don't know how to use yet.
Wireless is the simpler setup for most beginners today — no power supply to buy separately, and machines like the Filter X30 and EZ P3 Pro have voltage adjustment built into the machine itself. If your mentor has a preference, follow it. If you're self-learning, wireless reduces the number of variables while you're still building technique.
Start with a round liner (1RL or 3RL) and a curved magnum — those two needle types cover most of what you'll work on early. The critical thing is buying pre-sterilized cartridges from a reputable source. Mast Pro and Grizzly cartridges are both reliable, affordable options. Once you have a feel for your technique, you can explore other configurations.
World Famous, Solid Ink, and Dynamic are the three brands that come up most for good reason — consistent pigment, reliable bottle-to-bottle quality, and widely trusted in Canadian shops. The World Famous 7 Color Simple Set and the Solid Ink Mini Travel Set are both practical starting points — you get a working palette without buying 40 individual bottles.
Yes — and more of it than most beginners expect. Practice skin doesn't replicate every condition of real skin, but it's where you learn needle depth, how your machine performs at different voltages, and how to build line consistency before any of that has consequences. The artists who put real hours into synthetic skin before moving to clients show it in their early work.
Nitrile gloves, barrier film, machine bags, disposable ink cups, green soap, and stencil paper with a transfer gel or cream are the basics — all needed from day one, not added later. Building clean habits early is easier than correcting them after six months. Health inspectors and future shop owners look at how you set up and break down, not just your linework.
Maple Tattoo Supply carries everything covered in this post — machines, cartridges, inks, practice skin, and hygiene essentials — available in store at our North York, Downtown Toronto, and Saskatoon locations, or order online with fast shipping across Canada.