title: Manicurist
slug: manicurist
aliases:
  - Nail Technician
  - Nail Tech
  - Nail Artist
category: Hospitality
tags:
  - nail-care
  - sanitation
  - salon
  - nail-anatomy
  - client-care
difficulty: intermediate
summary: >-
  How a master nail tech thinks: protect the living tissue, keep a sterile
  field, match chemistry to the nail, and refer what is medical rather than
  cosmetic.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: hairstylist
    type: adjacent
    note: >-
      Shares the salon, the chair-side client read, and the sanitation
      discipline
  - slug: dermatologist
    type: collaboration
    note: The physician a tech refers to for suspicious nail and skin lesions
  - slug: podiatrist
    type: collaboration
    note: >-
      Handles foot and toenail problems out of a manicurist scope, especially
      diabetic clients
  - slug: massage-therapist
    type: related
    note: >-
      Another licensed hands-on body-care trade governed by sanitation and
      contraindications
  - slug: chef
    type: related
    note: >-
      Another Hospitality trade where sanitation is life-safety, not
      housekeeping
specializations:
  - nail-artist
  - pedicurist
  - acrylic-specialist
  - gel-specialist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Milady Standard Nail Technology
    kind: book
  - title: State Cosmetology Board Sanitation Regulations
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A manicurist exists to make hands and feet look and feel cared-for without
      ever harming the living tissue underneath. The visible work is color and
      shape; the real work is reading skin and nail, keeping a sterile field in
      a body-fluid environment, and choosing the right chemistry for the right
      nail. A good manicurist sends a client out with nails that are prettier
      and healthier than when they arrived — and knows the difference between a
      cosmetic complaint they can fix at the table and a medical problem they
      must refuse and refer.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Deliver beautiful, durable nails that protect rather than damage the
      natural nail, on a sanitized field, while reading each client's skin
      honestly enough to know when not to touch.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Assessing the nail and surrounding skin before any tool comes out: plate
      adhesion, free edge condition, cuticle health, signs of infection or
      systemic disease. Shaping the free edge and tending the proper cuticle
      without cutting living tissue. Selecting and applying product — polish,
      gel, dip, acrylic enhancements — matched to the client's nail and
      lifestyle. Maintaining implement sterilization and station sanitation to
      state-board standard. Managing the client's expectations against what the
      nail can actually take. Selling add-ons and retail honestly, never against
      the nail's interest. Tracking each client's nail history across visits.
      Knowing the contraindications cold and referring out when something is
      medical, not cosmetic.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **First, do not damage the plate.** The natural nail is your foundation
      and your reputation. Over-filing the surface, prying off enhancements, and
      aggressive electric-file work thin the plate for months. A client whose
      nails are wrecked under your gels does not come back.

      - **Sanitation is non-negotiable, every client, every time.** You work
      with skin, cuticle, and sometimes blood. One skipped disinfection cycle
      can transmit fungus, pseudomonas, or worse. The protocol does not bend
      because you're running behind.

      - **The proper cuticle, not the eponychium.** You remove the dead tissue
      stuck to the plate; you never cut the living seal. Cutting the eponychium
      opens the door to infection and is how careless techs hurt people.

      - **Match chemistry to the nail and the life.** A weak, peeling nail does
      not want hard acrylic; a client who gardens does not want delicate gel
      art. The right system is the one that survives their week without breaking
      the plate.

      - **Read the client, not just the nail.** Some want a fast clean classic;
      some want two hours of art and conversation. Mis-reading the brief is how
      you lose a regular.

      - **Honest upsell or none at all.** Recommend the add-on that genuinely
      serves the nail. The moment a client smells a commission-driven push,
      trust is gone.

      - **You are not a doctor.** You can spot that something is wrong; you may
      not diagnose it. Name what you see, decline to work over it, and refer.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The nail unit as a living system.** The plate is dead keratin, but
      it's produced by the living matrix under the lunula and sealed by the
      eponychium and proper cuticle. Damage upstream (matrix, nail bed) shows up
      weeks later as ridges, lifting, or worse. You treat the whole unit, not
      just the surface you can see.

      - **The sanitation chain.** Single-use files and buffers go in the trash;
      reusable metal implements get cleaned, then disinfected in EPA-registered
      hospital-grade disinfectant or autoclaved. Break any link — a re-used
      file, an under-soaked nipper — and the chain fails. You think in terms of
      what touches skin and what could have touched blood.

      - **Adhesion as the whole game in enhancements.** Lifting is where
      moisture and fungus get in and where the service fails. Proper prep —
      dehydration, the right primer, sealing the free edge, not flooding the
      cuticle — is what makes the set last three weeks instead of three days.

      - **Contraindication triage.** Before you start, you sort: cosmetic (work
      over it), caution (modify the service), or refuse-and-refer (do not
      touch). A suspicious dark streak, a swollen red nail fold, a diabetic's
      compromised foot — these jump straight to refer.

      - **Chemistry has a cure, not magic.** Gel cures by UV/LED initiating
      photopolymerization; acrylic cures by mixing monomer (liquid) and polymer
      (powder); dip uses cyanoacrylate and a powder. Under-cured gel and
      over-thinned acrylic both fail and can sensitize the client. Ratios and
      cure times are physics, not preference.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      The natural nail grows roughly 3 mm a month and the plate you damage today
      is visible for the better part of a year. Living tissue must never be cut,
      abraded, or chemically burned. Anything that touches more than one client
      must be either thrown away or properly disinfected between them. Product
      only holds if it bonds to a clean, dehydrated, intact plate. And the
      technician's hands move all day in other people's skin, so the field is
      contaminated by default and must be actively made safe.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this a cosmetic issue I can work over, or a medical one I have to
      refer?

      - Is that lifting, or is it a "greenie" — pseudomonas under the
      enhancement?

      - What's the plate adhesion like, and can it hold the system this client
      wants?

      - Did I dehydrate and prep, or am I about to apply over oil and lose the
      set?

      - Is this disinfectant in date, at the right dilution, and has the
      implement soaked the full contact time?

      - Am I cutting the proper cuticle, or am I about to nick the eponychium?

      - Does this client have diabetes, circulation problems, or an autoimmune
      condition I should know about?

      - Is this add-on right for the nail, or am I selling it for the ticket?

      - Is that product MMA — the banned monomer — and do I need to warn the
      client?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      **Which enhancement system?** Assess plate strength, the client's
      lifestyle, and how they remove. Brittle, thin nails: a builder gel
      overlay, gently. Bitten or short nails wanting length: sculpted acrylic or
      hard gel extensions. A client who picks and pries: avoid dip (which
      they'll peel and tear the plate) and steer to soak-off gel. Match removal
      method to system every time — never peel a gel, never pry an acrylic.


      **Work, modify, or refuse?** Healthy nail and skin: proceed. Minor
      hangnail, dry cuticle, a single lifted corner: modify — trim
      conservatively, seal, advise. Swelling, pus, warmth at the nail fold
      (paronychia), green/black discoloration that isn't bruising, thick
      crumbling fungal nails, a new dark vertical band: stop, do not service
      over it, refer to a dermatologist or podiatrist.


      **Diabetic or compromised-circulation client, especially a pedicure:** No
      aggressive cuticle work, no callus blading, no hot soaks they can't feel
      temperature in, no working over any break in the skin. A small cut on a
      diabetic foot is a serious wound, not a nick. When in doubt, do less and
      refer.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      Trigger: client sits down. Wash and inspect both hands or feet under good
      light — plate, free edge, cuticle, surrounding skin. Run the
      contraindication triage; if it's medical, stop and refer now, before any
      product. Confirm the service and read what the client actually wants
      today. Set up a sanitized station: fresh single-use file and buffer,
      disinfected metal implements, clean towel. Remove old product correctly
      for its system (soak-off gel, e-file the surface only on acrylic, never
      rip). Shape the free edge; gently push back and tend the proper cuticle
      without cutting the living seal. Prep the plate — dehydrate, prime as the
      system requires. Apply the chosen system to spec, sealing the free edge
      and keeping product off the skin. Cure or set fully. Finish, oil the
      cuticle, inspect. Advise on home care and the next visit. Break down the
      station: trash single-use items, clean and disinfect every reusable
      implement for the full contact time, wipe and disinfect the surface. Done
      when the next client could sit at a field as clean as the first.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Durability vs. plate health.** Hard acrylic and aggressive prep last
      longest but thin the nail; gentle systems are kinder but chip sooner. You
      choose for the nail in front of you, not the longest wear.

      - **Speed vs. thoroughness.** Rushing the soak-off and prying enhancements
      saves ten minutes and costs the client a damaged plate and you the rebook.

      - **The upsell vs. the relationship.** Add-ons grow the ticket, but
      pushing what the nail doesn't need buys a one-time number against a
      returning client.

      - **Length and art vs. function.** Long stiletto extensions photograph
      beautifully and break catching a car door. Read whether the client lives
      the life the nails demand.

      - **Pleasing now vs. honesty.** A client wants gel over a lifting,
      possibly infected nail. The kind answer is no, with a referral — even
      though it costs today's service.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - If it's living tissue, you don't cut it.

      - Green under the gel is pseudomonas, not dirt — never seal it back in.

      - A file that touched one client is either single-use trash or fully
      disinfected before it touches the next.

      - Thin the plate today, regret it for nine months.

      - Seal the free edge or the set lifts from the tip.

      - If the disinfectant isn't at full strength for the full contact time,
      the implement isn't clean.

      - A dark streak that wasn't there last visit goes to a dermatologist, not
      under polish.

      - Oil keeps cuticles and enhancements flexible; dry nails crack and lift.

      - When the foot is diabetic, do less, never more.

      - MMA is banned and shears the plate when it breaks — if it won't soak off
      and smells fruity-harsh, suspect it.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      Cutting the eponychium and calling it cuticle work, opening a chronic
      infection risk. Over-filing the natural plate with the e-file until it's
      paper-thin and painful. Prying or "popping" off acrylics and tearing the
      top layers of the plate with them. Sealing an enhancement over a greenie
      so the pseudomonas thrives in the dark. Re-using files, buffers, or
      under-disinfecting metal tools — the classic source of salon fungal and
      bacterial outbreaks. Under-curing gel and sensitizing the client to
      acrylates for life. Working over a clearly infected or suspicious nail
      because the client insisted. Servicing a diabetic foot like any other and
      turning a callus shave into a wound.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - Cutting healthy cuticle to make the work "look cleaner" for the photo.

      - Using a credit card, a flame, or brute force to remove gel instead of
      soaking it off.

      - The drill-first habit: reaching for the e-file before assessing the
      plate.

      - "It's just dirt" — treating a green nail as cosmetic and capping it.

      - Selling the most expensive enhancement to every client regardless of
      nail health.

      - Skipping disinfection because the next client is already waiting.

      - Diagnosing — telling a client "that's just a fungus, here's a fix"
      instead of referring.

      - Using or tolerating MMA monomer because it's cheap and sets hard.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Free edge:** The part of the nail plate that extends past the
      fingertip.

      - **Nail plate:** The hard, visible keratin nail; it's dead tissue
      produced by the matrix.

      - **Matrix:** The living tissue under the proximal fold that produces the
      plate; damage here is long-lasting.

      - **Lunula:** The visible whitish half-moon at the base — the front of the
      matrix.

      - **Eponychium:** The living skin seal at the base of the nail; never to
      be cut.

      - **Proper cuticle:** The thin layer of dead tissue shed from the
      eponychium onto the plate; this is what's gently removed.

      - **Greenie:** Pseudomonas bacterial infection under an enhancement,
      appearing green to black.

      - **Onycholysis:** Separation of the plate from the nail bed.

      - **Paronychia:** Infection/inflammation of the nail fold.

      - **MMA / EMA:** Methyl methacrylate (banned monomer) vs. ethyl
      methacrylate (the safe one) in acrylics.

      - **Soak-off vs. hard gel:** Gels removable in acetone vs. those that must
      be filed off.

      - **Contact time:** The minutes an implement must stay submerged in
      disinfectant to be effective.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      Cuticle nippers and pushers, fine nail files and buffers in graded grits,
      an electric file (e-file) with assorted bits, glass dappen dishes and
      brushes for acrylic, gel brushes, a UV/LED lamp for curing, a
      refractometer of the trade — the lamp's wattage and bulb life actually
      matter for cure. Acetone and soak-off wraps. Acrylic monomer (EMA) and
      polymer powder, builder and soak-off gels, dip systems. Dehydrator and
      primer (acid-free or acid). EPA-registered hospital-grade disinfectant and
      an autoclave or dry-heat sterilizer where state board requires. Single-use
      files, buffers, and toe separators. Good task lighting and a loupe for
      inspecting the plate.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      The manicurist works alongside hairstylists and estheticians in the same
      salon, sharing clients, the booking book, and the sanitation culture of
      the room. The salon owner or manager sets the retail and add-on targets
      the tech balances against client trust. Most important is the referral
      relationship outward: dermatologists for suspicious lesions, skin, and
      nail disease; podiatrists for foot and toenail problems, especially in
      diabetic clients. The best techs know exactly when to hand a client to a
      physician and do it without alarm or diagnosis. State board inspectors are
      a partner in disguise — the rules they enforce are the floor of safe
      practice, not an obstacle.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Sanitation is a duty of care, not a checkbox: clients trust that the tools
      touching their skin won't give them an infection, and that trust is earned
      every cycle. Honesty about products and add-ons matters — recommend for
      the nail, not the ticket, and disclose when a client's nail can't safely
      take what they're asking for. Stay in your lane: spotting a problem is
      your job, diagnosing and treating it is a physician's. Refer suspicious
      lesions promptly, because a manicurist is sometimes the first person to
      notice a melanoma under a nail. Respect banned products and labor rules —
      using MMA or skipping disinfection to cut cost shifts risk onto the
      client. Treat every client's body and history with discretion.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A regular wants a gel fill over a lifting, faintly green nail.** The
      client is in a hurry and just wants the corner re-glued. On inspection,
      the lifted area shows a greenish tinge under the gel — pseudomonas, a
      greenie, not trapped dirt. Capping it would seal moisture and bacteria
      into the dark, where it spreads. The manicurist explains plainly: "There's
      a bacterial spot under there; if I cover it, it gets worse." She removes
      that nail's enhancement entirely, cleans and dries the plate, leaves it
      bare to breathe, and advises keeping it dry and watching it. She does not
      name a treatment or prescribe — she tells the client to see a doctor if it
      darkens or doesn't clear, and rebooks her once it's healed. She loses the
      full set today and keeps the client for years.


      **A new client asks for long acrylics and mentions she's diabetic.** The
      client wants a full set of long sculpted acrylics with cuticle work and a
      pedicure. The diabetes flag reroutes the whole service. For the hands, the
      manicurist proceeds with the acrylics but does only gentle proper-cuticle
      tending — no cutting the eponychium, no aggressive e-file on the
      surrounding skin — because a small cut heals poorly and risks infection.
      For the feet, she declines the callus blade and hot soak entirely, does a
      gentle, warm-not-hot soak she temperature-checks herself, and keeps every
      tool clear of any break in the skin. She tells the client why, advises she
      let a podiatrist handle the calluses, and documents the diabetes in the
      client's notes for next time. Less service, more safety.


      **Removing a competitor's rock-hard set that won't soak.** A walk-in
      arrives with acrylics that resist acetone and smell sharply chemical —
      likely MMA, the banned monomer, which is notoriously hard to soak off and
      shatters rather than lifts. The temptation is to pry them to save time.
      Instead the manicurist files the surface down thin with the e-file to
      break the seal, then soaks longer in warm acetone, working gently so she
      removes product, not plate. She tells the client the prior set was
      probably MMA, why it's a problem (it bonds too aggressively and can damage
      the natural nail when it breaks), and applies a proper EMA or gel system
      going forward. Patience over prying protects the plate.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      - **hairstylist** (adjacent): shares the salon, the chair-side client
      read, and the sanitation discipline of working on the body.

      - **dermatologist** (referral): the physician a manicurist refers to for
      suspicious nail and skin lesions; the line a tech must not cross.

      - **podiatrist** (referral): handles the foot and toenail problems,
      especially in diabetic clients, that are out of a manicurist's scope.

      - **massage-therapist** (related): another hands-on body-care trade
      governed by licensure, sanitation, and contraindication awareness.

      - **chef** (related): another Hospitality trade where sanitation and
      contamination control are life-safety, not housekeeping.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - Milady Standard Nail Technology (industry textbook).

      - State cosmetology board sanitation and disinfection regulations.

      - EPA-registered hospital-grade disinfectant labeling and OSHA bloodborne
      pathogen standards.
