Earring closures are the most-overlooked mechanical detail in jewellery — and the single detail that determines whether you actually keep the earrings you buy. The right closure suits the weight of the earring, the comfort of the wearer and the security of the piece for daily life.
Why closure choice mattersA poorly-chosen closure:
- Loses the earring (the most common jewellery loss by far — roughly 70% of reported lost pieces are earrings).
- Irritates the earlobe over long wear.
- Damages the piercing (nickel-laden cheap backs are the leading cause of irritation).
- Makes daily on/off inconvenient enough that the earrings stay in a drawer.
Butterfly (push) back
The most common. A small butterfly-shaped piece pushes onto a straight post and holds by friction.
- Pros: simple, inexpensive, widely available, fits most piercings.
- Cons: gradually loosens over time; can fall off during active wear. Most "lost earring" stories involve butterfly backs.
- Best for: small studs, low-risk situations, temporary wear.
Locking butterfly / friction-lock
A spring-loaded version that grips the post more firmly — a small innovation that dramatically reduces loss.
- Pros: significantly more secure than standard butterfly, still simple to use.
- Cons: slightly more expensive; some versions are slightly harder to put on.
- Best for: daily-wear studs, fine diamond pieces, anything you'd be devastated to lose.
Screw-back
A threaded post and matching back that screws together.
- Pros: the most secure closure available; will not come off accidentally.
- Cons: slow to put on/remove; requires a threaded post (not compatible with all earrings).
- Best for: valuable diamond studs (0.50 ct and larger), all-day wear where security matters most.
Lever back
A hinged wire that clicks closed behind the earlobe.
- Pros: very secure; elegant for drops and dangles; comfortable behind the ear.
- Cons: bulkier than a standard hook; not suitable for small studs.
- Best for: drop and chandelier earrings worn throughout the day.
French wire (fish hook)
A simple curved wire that passes through the piercing; held by a small silicone "stopper" bead or gentle bend in the wire.
- Pros: elegant and traditional; allows the earring to move gracefully.
- Cons: less secure; easy to slip out during active movement.
- Best for: lightweight drops and daytime dangle earrings.
Huggie / hinged hoop
A small hoop that opens at a hinge and closes via a click-in post.
- Pros: extremely secure, comfortable, no loose back to lose.
- Cons: limited to small-to-medium sizes; typically hoop-style only.
- Best for: daily-wear hoops, minimalist everyday pieces.
Clip-on (no piercing required)
A spring-loaded clip that grips the earlobe without a piercing.
- Pros: no piercing needed; vintage character; allows anyone to wear earrings.
- Cons: can be uncomfortable over long wear; pinches after 2–3 hours; pressure marks on the lobe.
- Best for: occasional wear, unpierced ears, vintage pieces being preserved in original form.
Screw-through / threaded post
A variation on screw-back where the back threads onto the post itself.
- Pros: extreme security; popular for babies' first earrings.
- Cons: the slowest closure to manipulate.
Latch-back
A curved post with a latching hook that loops behind the ear and snaps closed.
- Pros: very secure; sleek silhouette.
- Cons: specific to certain earring designs.
- Small studs (diamond, pearl): locking butterfly for everyday, screw-back for fine diamonds over 0.50 ct.
- Large studs or clusters: screw-back, always.
- Drops and chandeliers: lever back or latch-back.
- Hoops: huggie / hinged closure.
- Everyday minimalist hoops: huggie.
- Statement evening drops: French wire with silicone stopper, or lever back.
- Dangle earrings for dancing: lever back or latch; never French wire.
- Match the metal of the earring: 18k gold earrings take 18k backs; silver takes silver; platinum takes platinum.
- Hypoallergenic needs: 18k gold, platinum, titanium, surgical-grade stainless steel. Avoid nickel-plated backs.
- Silicone backs: flexible stoppers often added behind butterfly closures for extra security; replace every 1–2 years as they degrade.
- Always carry a spare back when wearing valuable earrings.
- Check the back weekly — tighten screw-backs; replace silicone stoppers that have softened.
- Change to screw-backs for travel — a five-minute upgrade prevents travel disasters.
- Never sleep in earrings with standard butterfly backs — the single biggest source of loss.
- Insure anything valuable — even the best closures can fail.
Are screw-back earrings worth the hassle?
For anything valuable, yes. The 10 seconds it takes to screw them on is a small price compared to losing a £1,500 diamond stud on a train platform.
Can I swap a butterfly back for a screw-back?
Only if the post is threaded. Plain straight posts cannot take screw-backs; a jeweller can add threading for a small fee, or you can replace the post entirely on valuable pieces.
Why do some backs tarnish faster than earrings?
Backs are often a different alloy than the earring body (cheaper pieces use nickel-rich backs). Replace with backs matching the earring metal to extend lifespan.
For piercing and earring guidance, see our ear piercings guide or earrings for your face shape.



