How to Stop Nails Peeling, According to Experts

If your nails are constantly peeling, flaking, splitting at the tips or snagging on everything you touch, you’re not alone. Nail peeling—also known as nail lamellar dystrophy or onychoschisis—is one of those annoying beauty woes that we’re too frequently reminded of (why is it always when you have a cute event coming up?!), and the gag is, nail peeling is surprisingly hard to fix long term.

We tend to associate peeling nails with upkeep issues (too many gel manicures, not enough cuticle oil application), but it can also point to deeper deficiencies, dehydration or simply be down to how you’re filing them. I tapped a dermatologist for the science-y take, plus two manicurists to help decode what’s going wrong at the salon (or at home) and how to actually stop the nail peeling cycle for good. Here’s what they want you to know…

Selena gomez bare nails

“Peeling nails—medically known as onychoschizia—are usually the result of external trauma,” says Dr Jessica Halliley, aesthetics doctor and founder of Your Beauty Doctor. “This includes repeated soaking in water, harsh filing or buffing, using nails to prise things open, improper removal of polish or enhancements, or exposure to cleaning agents and acetone. Repeated cycles of hydration and dehydration—like washing dishes or frequent hand-washing—stress the keratin layers, causing separation and flaking.”