TL;DR: 30-90 min depending on type. Basic 30, classic 45-60, spa 60-90, gel 60-75, medical 30-45. Add 30-45 min drying for regular polish; gel cures instantly.
You’re looking at your diary, trying to squeeze in some self-care, and the question pops up — how long does a pedicure actually take? The honest answer: it depends entirely on the type. There’s no one-size-fits-all timing, and squeezing the wrong type into a 30-minute slot is a recipe for chipped polish on the way to your meeting. This guide walks through every UK salon pedicure type, what fills the time during each step, the drying time most marketing skips, and the realistic numbers for DIY at home. By the end you’ll know exactly how to budget your slot — and whether to book regular or gel based on the time you’ve actually got.
The short answer — pedicure time by type
Here’s the straightforward breakdown of UK salon pedicure timing:
Basic pedicure: 30 minutes. The express option. Soak, nail trim and shape, light cuticle care, a quick buff, and one coat of polish. Maintenance-focused, useful between more thorough treatments.
Classic pedicure: 45-60 minutes. The standard for most UK salon-goers. Builds on the basic with proper exfoliation, more detailed cuticle work, a relaxing foot and lower-leg massage, and careful polish application.
Spa or luxury pedicure: 60-90 minutes. The full pampering experience. Extended massage, premium masks, paraffin wax dip, prolonged exfoliation, often a longer-lasting polish. Most of the extra time is genuine relaxation, not faff.
Gel pedicure: 60-75 minutes. Similar prep to a classic, but each gel layer (base, colour, top) needs 30-60 seconds under a UV or LED lamp. The trade-off: instantly dry and durable on exit.
French pedicure (gel): 75-90 minutes. Adding precise white tips needs a steady hand and meticulous work. Add 15-30 minutes to a standard gel appointment for the tip painting and curing.
Medical pedicure: 30-45 minutes. Performed by a podiatrist or HCPC-registered foot health practitioner. Skips the soak and decorative polish, focuses on nail cutting, callus removal, and treating issues like thickened nails or corns. The College of Podiatry confirms this style prioritises foot health over aesthetics.
A crucial final step: if you go for regular (non-gel) polish, add 30-45 minutes drying time after your appointment before your toes are truly smudge-proof. Gel polish needs zero extra dry time. This is the bit most people forget when booking around a busy day.
Quick reference: how long every UK pedicure type takes
Time in the chair varies significantly by service, and the drying time for regular polish is a hidden extra many forget. Gel eliminates this wait entirely, making it the time-efficient choice for busy schedules.
- Standard time depends on type chosen
- Add 30-45 min drying for regular polish
- Gel cures instantly under UV/LED — no extra wait
| Pedicure type | Time in chair | Drying time | Total budget |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic pedicure | 30 min | 30-45 min regular OR 0 gel | 30-75 min |
| Classic pedicure | 45-60 min | 30-45 min OR 0 gel | 45-105 min |
| Spa/luxury pedicure | 60-90 min | 30-45 min OR 0 gel | 60-135 min |
| Gel pedicure | 60-75 min | 0 — instant cure | 60-75 min |
| French pedicure gel | 75-90 min | 0 | 75-90 min |
| Medical pedicure | 30-45 min | no polish | 30-45 min |
What takes time during a UK pedicure
Ever wondered what fills that hour in the chair? Here’s the step-by-step breakdown for a typical 60-minute classic pedicure:
7-step time breakdown
- Foot soak — 5-10 min
- Nail trim + file — 5 min
- Cuticle care — 5-10 min
- Exfoliation + callus — 10-15 min (most variable)
- Foot + leg massage — 5-10 min
- Polish application — 10-20 min regular / 20-30 min gel
- Drying time — 30-45 min regular / instant gel
If a salon promises a classic pedicure in 30 min, they’re cutting corners — usually exfoliation or massage.
Factors that affect pedicure duration
Your appointment time isn’t fixed. Several practical factors stretch or shorten the slot:
| Factor | Time impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy callus/hard skin | +10-20 min | first-time clients especially |
| Gel removal from previous set | +15-20 min | never peel before appointment |
| French tip / nail art | +15-30 min | book longer slot in advance |
| Add-ons paraffin/mask | +10-20 min each | £10-£25 cost |
| Junior vs senior technician | varies | experienced techs more efficient |
| Salon busyness | varies | mid-week afternoon = leisurely |
| Severe nail issues like ingrown | +15-30 min | NHS podiatrist may be better |
DIY pedicure at home — how long it really takes
Doing your own pedicure can be a relaxing ritual, but be realistic with timing — particularly if you’re new to it.
Beginner: 60-90 minutes. First few attempts include time spent searching for tools, learning what to do, and being careful at each step. The learning curve is the biggest time cost.
Experienced: 30-45 minutes. Once you’ve got a routine and your tools to hand, you can power through a basic maintenance pedicure quickly.
The breakdown:
Prep (soak, trim, file, cuticles): 15-20 minutes
Polish application (regular): 15 minutes
Dedicated drying time: 30-45 minutes when you can’t really do anything that risks smudging
Tools that speed it up:
A small nail dryer fan (£10-£20 on Amazon UK) — cuts drying time roughly in half.
Quick-dry top coat (Sally Hansen Insta-Dri ~£8, OPI Rapidry ~£15, Essie Good to Go ~£10) — surface-dry in 5-10 minutes.
A home gel kit (~£40-£80 with UV/LED lamp) — eliminates dry time entirely. Skill curve takes a few attempts.
Things that slow you down: complex nail art, applying coats too thick (they take 3x longer to dry), no clear workspace, attempting to do it while distracted with kids/Netflix/work calls. If you’ve got 90 minutes of focused time, you can do a beautiful job. If you’ve got 20 minutes squeezed between school runs, just do a quick file and a clear top coat.
Drying time — what no one tells you
This is the most common reason for post-pedicure frustration. Understanding polish drying properly avoids smudges and ruined manicures.
Polish drying time — what no one tells you
- Regular polish = touch-dry 15-20 min, fully hardened 30-45 min (some longer)
- Quick-dry top coat (Sally Hansen Insta-Dri, OPI Rapidry) = surface dry 5-10 min
- Gel = instant cure under UV/LED, drive home immediately
- Wait 60 min before closed-toe shoes after regular polish
Bring sandals or flip-flops to your appointment, even in winter. Slip them under tights.
What to expect at a UK salon (timeline)
Here’s the typical minute-by-minute breakdown of a standard 60-minute classic pedicure at a UK salon:
4-step salon timeline
- Arrival + consultation — 5-10 min (arrive 5 min early)
- Soak + prep — 15-20 min
- Treatment + polish — 20-30 min
- Finishing + payment — 10-15 min
UK tipping = 10-15% in cash if happy. Card payment via tap avoids smudging fresh polish.
Booking advice for special occasions
Planning for an event? Timing your pedicure properly avoids day-of stress.
Don’t rush a pedicure
- Avoid 12-1pm lunch slots if you’ve got a meeting after
- Quality drops with rushed appointments
- Squeeze + smudge risk = ruined polish + £30+ wasted
- Fresh gel removed badly = damaged nail plate for months
- Don’t paint over old gel — base coat won’t bond properly
If you’ve got a wedding or holiday, book gel 1-2 days before — 4-6 weeks of perfect toes, zero drying-time stress.
What UK Readers Are Telling Us
“Booked a 30-min basic for my work-from-home day. Done in 25 min, dry by lunchtime. Quick + lovely.”
★★★★★
“Tried to squeeze a classic pedicure into a lunch break. Smudged my toes putting tights on for the meeting. Lesson: book gel or don’t bother.”
★★☆☆☆
“Spa pedicure 90 min before my wedding — paraffin wax, foot mask, OPI gel. Felt like a dream. Worth the £75.”
★★★★★
“DIY at home with quick-dry top coat — 35 min start to dry. Beats the £35 salon visit + £8 cab home.”
★★★★☆
Frequently Asked Questions
The Verdict
60 min for standard, 90 for luxury, plus 30-45 min drying for regular polish.
Budget 60 minutes for a standard, quality UK salon pedicure — that’s the sensible minimum for most people. If you’re after a deeply relaxing spa experience or have specific polish requests like gel or French tip work, extend that to 90 minutes. Choose regular polish? Carve out an extra 30-45 minutes afterwards for proper drying — this is the most-overlooked planning step, and it’s the difference between perfect toes and frustrating smudges.
Related reading: What is a Pedicure? UK Guide · Pedicure Colours 2026 Guide · French Pedicure UK Guide
Last updated: 27 April 2026 · Walton Surgery Health Guides · For informational purposes only, not medical advice.
