Salon pedicure vs medical pedicure: what the difference really is
This is not a “which is better” contest. Salons and podologists solve different problems — and trouble starts when one tries to substitute for the other. A good share of my patients come to fix what was “filed away” in salons for years.
Different goals
A salon pedicure is aesthetics: shape, cuticles, polish. Salons do this beautifully, and on healthy feet nothing stands in their way.
A medical pedicure is healthcare: recognising a pathology, treating it, and doing no harm. Behind the chair is a medical education, not a manicure course.
Different technique
In a salon, feet are soaked in a bath and worked on with cutting tools. Soaked skin hides the border between living and hardened tissue — hence the cuts and the “eaten-away” nail corners that later turn into ingrowth.
Podiatric technique is dry and instrument-based: professional softeners instead of water, burrs instead of blades. You can see what you are removing; removing too much is almost impossible; it should not hurt — and it doesn’t.
Different sterility
Foot skin means fungus, bacteria and micro-wounds. Salon hygiene standards vary wildly; in a podology practice there is no room for “approximately”: disinfection → ultrasonic cleaning → autoclave, every set in an individual sealed pouch opened in front of you.
When a salon is enough
Healthy nails and skin, no pain, no chronic risks — enjoy your trusted salon. A good technician will send you to a podologist themselves if they notice something.
When you need a podologist
- a nail hurts, grows into the skin, or has changed colour and shape;
- calluses and cracks keep coming back;
- diabetes — even for a “regular” pedicure;
- fungus, or a suspicion of it;
- a salon pedicure has become a painful ordeal.
Can you combine both?
Yes — and it is the best scenario: the podologist brings your feet to a healthy state and keeps them there, the salon handles the beauty. On healthy nails, aesthetic polish is absolutely fine.