The Countdown: 10 Causes and What to Do About Each
Cause #10: You’re Over-Washing and Under-Moisturizing (The “Wet-Dry Whiplash”)
If your hands are in water all day—dishes, sanitizers, frequent handwashing—your nails get dehydrated.
Nails absorb water, swell, then dry out and shrink.
That repeated expansion and contraction weakens layers like a book getting soaked and dried over and over.
The result? Peeling, splitting, and rough edges that never stay smooth.
Fix that may help fast:
Moisturize after every wash with a thicker cream.
Add a drop of oil to cuticles at night.
Wear gloves for dishes and cleaning whenever possible.
If you feel like your nails are “paper-thin,” keep going—because the next cause often stacks with this one.
Cause #9: Hidden Chemical Exposure (Even “Nice” Products Can Be Harsh)
Nail polish remover, gel manicures, frequent acetone, and strong detergents strip protective oils.
Even “strengthening” formulas can backfire if they contain harsh ingredients that make nails rigid and prone to snapping.
Rigid nails don’t bend—they break.
Fix that may help:
Take a 2–4 week break from gel/acrylic if you can.
Switch to gentler removers and limit polish changes.
Use gloves for cleaning and avoid using nails as tools.
Recurrent Rashes or Blisters on Lips or Private Areas
If you’re thinking, “But I barely use polish,” the next cause might explain your situation.
Cause #8: Low Protein Intake (Keratin Can’t Build Without Materials)
Nails are made largely of keratin, a structural protein.
If your diet is consistently low in protein, nails may become soft, thin, and prone to breaking.
This is especially common with “light eating” patterns that look healthy on paper but lack enough building blocks.
