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Free Cure Time Calculator

Gel Nail Cure Time Calculator
Exact Seconds for Every Lamp & Brand

Stop guessing cure times. Enter your lamp type, wattage, gel brand, coat type, and color — get precise cure times with under-cure detection and a built-in live countdown timer.

LED & UV Lamps All Wattages 10+ Brands Live Countdown Timer Under-Cure Alerts 100% Free
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Gel Nail Cure Time Calculator

Build your full manicure coat stack — get precise cure times for each layer plus a live session timer

Lamp Type LED is fastest; UV takes 2–4× longer per coat
Lamp Wattage
W
Common: 24W, 36W, 48W, 54W, 72W
Gel Brand
Coat Thickness
Dominant Color Depth Darker & specialty pigments need longer cure
Nail Condition

🎨 Coat Stack Builder (drag to reorder)


Your Cure Time Results

Total Session Time

Understanding Gel Curing

What Is Gel Nail Cure Time — and Why Getting It Wrong Is Costly

Cure time is the number of seconds your gel nail product must be exposed to UV or LED light before the chemical reaction called photopolymerization is complete. During this reaction, liquid photoinitiator molecules in the gel formula absorb light energy, break apart into free radicals, and trigger a chain reaction that links thousands of polymer chains together — transforming the gel from a viscous liquid into a hard, cross-linked solid.

When cure time is correct, the result is a nail coating that is hard all the way through, flexible enough to resist snapping, and bonded tightly to the layers above and below it. When cure time is wrong — even by 10 or 15 seconds — the outcome can be dramatically different from what most people expect.

Under-cured gel is the single most common cause of premature lifting, peeling, and allergic sensitization in gel nail services. The outer surface may feel set and non-sticky, but if the photoinitiators deeper in the gel layer were not reached by the light, the interior remains partially liquid. This under-cured interior is structurally weak and is a reservoir of unreacted monomers — the same monomers that, with repeated skin exposure through lifting and peeling, cause the allergic reactions that are increasingly reported in gel nail users.

🚨 Important: Repeated skin exposure to under-cured gel monomers is the primary mechanism behind gel nail allergies. Once sensitized, a person may develop a permanent allergic reaction to all acrylate products — not just gel nails. Correct cure times are a health issue, not just a cosmetic one.

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The Chemistry

Photopolymerization requires every layer to receive sufficient light energy. Wattage, wavelength, and time all determine whether the reaction completes fully.

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Hardness & Wear

Fully cured gel is 30–50% harder than under-cured gel. Incorrect cure time is the invisible reason some gel manicures last 3 days instead of 3 weeks.

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Skin Safety

Unreacted monomers in under-cured gel can cause sensitization with repeated exposure. Cure time is a professional safety standard, not a preference.

LED vs UV Explained

LED vs UV Lamps: Cure Time Differences Fully Explained

The single most impactful variable in gel cure time is lamp type. LED lamps and UV lamps cure gel through the same underlying chemical mechanism — photoinitiator activation — but they differ fundamentally in the wavelengths they emit, how efficiently they deliver energy to the gel, and therefore how long each coat needs to be exposed.

How UV Lamps Work

Traditional UV nail lamps emit a broad spectrum of ultraviolet light, typically spanning 320nm to 400nm. This broad spectrum means that while the lamp does emit the wavelengths that most gel polish photoinitiators respond to (primarily 365nm), much of the lamp’s energy is emitted at wavelengths that are less useful for curing. Additionally, UV lamps use fluorescent bulb technology that degrades over time — a bulb that has been used for hundreds of hours emits significantly less UV energy than a new bulb, even at the same wattage rating.

Standard UV lamps at 36 watts require approximately 2 minutes per coat for standard gel polish color coats. Base coats and top coats may vary. For builder gels and hard gels, UV cure times extend to 3 minutes or more per layer. The practical implication for a full gel manicure (base coat + 2 color coats + top coat) is a cure-only time of 8 to 10 minutes under UV.

How LED Lamps Work

LED nail lamps emit narrow-spectrum light at specific wavelengths — most commonly 365nm, 405nm, or both simultaneously. Because the emission is targeted precisely at the wavelengths that photoinitiators respond to most efficiently, LED lamps cure gel polish in dramatically less time while often using less electrical power. A 48W LED lamp cures most gel polishes in 30 seconds per coat — a 4× speed improvement over UV.

LED lamp components do not degrade the same way UV fluorescent bulbs do. The LED emitters are rated for 50,000 hours of operation, meaning the cure efficiency at year three is virtually identical to year one — an important consistency benefit for professional settings where reliable cure quality is non-negotiable.

The Wavelength Compatibility Issue

Not all gel polishes are formulated to cure under both LED and UV wavelengths. Some older gel formulas use photoinitiators that only respond to UV-range wavelengths (around 365nm) and will not fully cure under a 405nm-dominant LED lamp. Most modern professional gel brands have updated their formulas to include photoinitiators that activate at both wavelengths, ensuring compatibility with both lamp types — but this is worth verifying for any unfamiliar brand.

Rule of thumb: If your brand says “LED or UV compatible” on the packaging, it contains dual-activation photoinitiators and will cure correctly under either lamp type at the appropriate time. If it says only “UV,” do not assume your LED lamp will deliver complete cures.

Lamp TypeWavelengthAvg Cure TimeBulb LifeWattage Range
UV Lamp320–400nm (broad)2–3 min / coat~1,000 hrs (bulbs)18W – 54W
LED Lamp365nm & 405nm (targeted)30–60s / coat~50,000 hrs12W – 96W+
Dual LED+UVFull spectrum coverage30–60s / coat~50,000 hrs36W – 120W

Wattage Guide

Lamp Wattage and Cure Time: What Every Number Means

Wattage is the electrical power input to your nail lamp — it is directly related to, but not the same as, the light output that reaches the gel on your nails. Higher wattage generally means more photons per second reaching the photoinitiators, which means faster complete curing. But the relationship is not perfectly linear, and wattage is only one of several variables that determine whether a cure is complete.

6W – 18W: Entry-Level / Travel Lamps

These small, portable lamps are found in travel kits and budget sets. They require significantly extended cure times — typically 90 to 120 seconds per coat for standard gel polish — and may struggle to fully cure darker colors, glitters, and builder gels in a single cycle. If you use one of these lamps, double every recommended cure time and be vigilant for signs of under-curing (sticky residue after wiping, soft flexible areas, premature lifting).

24W: Entry Home Use

A 24W LED lamp can cure most standard gel polishes in 60 to 90 seconds per coat. It is usable for home manicures on light to medium shades with thin coat application. Dark colors, glitters, and builder gels should be cured for 90 seconds minimum, potentially in two 60-second cycles with a brief pause between them to prevent heat spike discomfort.

36W: The Reliable Standard

For decades, 36 watts was considered the professional standard — and it remains an excellent balance point for both home and salon use. At 36W LED, most gel polishes cure in 45 to 60 seconds per coat. At 36W UV (traditional), cure time is approximately 2 minutes per coat. If you own a 36W UV lamp that is more than 6 months old, the bulbs have degraded enough to warrant adding 30 seconds to each coat’s cure time.

48W – 54W: Professional Home & Entry Salon

This wattage range is where most quality home-use LED lamps now sit. At 48W, standard gel polish cures in 30 to 45 seconds per coat. Builder gel and hard gel at this wattage typically require 60 seconds per layer. The speed improvement over 36W is meaningful across a full manicure — saving 2 to 4 minutes total for a base coat + 2 color coats + top coat service.

72W – 96W: Professional Salon Standard

High-wattage professional lamps at 72W and above can cure many gel polishes in as little as 10 to 20 seconds per coat. While this is excellent for productivity, it introduces the risk of heat spikes — a burning or stinging sensation caused by the exothermic heat of the polymerization reaction being released too quickly. Most professional high-wattage lamps include a “low heat” mode that starts at lower intensity, gradually ramping up to prevent this sensation.

💡 Pro tip on heat spikes: If a client reports burning during cure, do not remove the hand and re-expose — this risks under-curing. Instead, teach clients to briefly lift their hand out of the lamp if heat becomes uncomfortable, wait 2 seconds, and return it. The brief interruption releases the heat spike while minimally affecting cure completeness.

WattageLamp TypeStd Gel (light)Std Gel (dark)Builder GelHeat Spike Risk
6–18WEntry LED90–120s120s+Not recommendedVery Low
24WLED60–90s90s90–120sLow
36WLED / UV45–60s / 2 min60s / 2–3 min60–90s / 3 minLow–Medium
48WLED30–45s45–60s60sMedium
72W+Pro LED10–30s30–45s30–60sMedium–High

Coat-By-Coat Guide

Cure Times by Coat Type: Base, Color, Top, and Builder

One of the most persistent misconceptions in gel nail application is that all coats cure for the same amount of time. In reality, each layer type has a different formula composition, different thickness, and different functional requirements — all of which affect the cure time needed for complete polymerization.

Base Coat Cure Time

Gel base coats are typically formulated to be thin, adhesion-focused layers. They contain fewer color pigments (often none) and are designed to bond to the natural nail while remaining slightly tacky after curing to grip the color layer above. Because they are thin and pigment-free, light penetrates easily and cure times are generally the shortest in the application stack.

Most professional brands recommend 10 to 30 seconds under an LED lamp for base coats. CND Shellac’s base coat cures in just 10 seconds under their LED lamp. OPI GelColor base coat cures in 30 seconds. The residual tackiness after curing is intentional and correct — it is the inhibition layer, caused by oxygen preventing the outermost molecules from fully polymerizing, which allows the next layer to chemically bond to the base.

Color Coat Cure Time

Color coats introduce pigment particles that absorb light and compete with the photoinitiators for the photons your lamp emits. Dark colors — deep reds, blacks, navy blues, forest greens — are particularly light-absorptive and require longer exposure times to ensure that the photoinitiators receive sufficient energy despite the pigment competition.

Light or sheer color coats on a standard 48W LED lamp typically cure in 30 seconds. Medium colors in 30 to 45 seconds. Dark and very saturated colors should cure for 45 to 60 seconds. Glitter and metallic polish contain reflective particles that can create uneven light distribution within the coat, also warranting extended cure times. As a general safety rule: when in doubt about a dark or specialty color, add 15 to 30 seconds to the standard time.

Top Coat Cure Time

Top coats vary more widely in cure time than any other coat type, and this is where many DIY gel manicures go wrong. Standard gel top coats typically cure in 30 to 60 seconds under LED. However, high-gloss “gel effect” top coats, no-wipe formulas, and matte top coats all have different formulations that may require adjusted times.

CND Shellac’s top coat requires a full 60 seconds under their LED lamp — significantly longer than the 10-second base coat. This is because top coats are formulated for maximum hardness and surface smoothness, requiring more complete polymerization. No-wipe top coats contain extra photoinitiators to cure the inhibition layer, often requiring the same or slightly longer time than standard top coats.

Builder Gel and Hard Gel Cure Times

Builder gels and hard gels are substantially thicker than regular gel polish and serve structural rather than cosmetic functions. They must cure completely all the way through for the nail extension to have the hardness, resilience, and adhesion required. These products require the longest cure times of any gel nail product.

Most builder gels at 48W LED require 60 seconds per layer. If applied thick (common in nail extension work), a second cure cycle of 30 to 60 seconds is often recommended. Under UV lamps, builder gel typically requires 3 minutes per layer. Polygel, which is applied with a slip solution and has different photoinitiator chemistry, follows its own brand-specific cure times.

The golden rule of gel curing: Always cure in thin layers. A single thick layer of gel is harder to fully cure than two thin layers receiving the same total cure time. Thin layers allow light to penetrate all the way through, while thick layers trap unreacted monomers in the depth of the coat where light cannot reach.

Signs & Troubleshooting

Under-Cured vs Over-Cured Gel: How to Tell the Difference

Cure time errors produce visible, tactile, and functional signs that are diagnosable if you know what to look for. Being able to identify under-curing versus over-curing — and understanding what causes each — is the difference between a gel manicure that lasts three weeks and one that starts lifting by day three.

Signs of Under-Cured Gel

Under-cured gel is the more common and more serious problem. The signs to watch for include:

  • Excessive tackiness after wiping: Some inhibition layer stickiness is normal, but under-cured gel feels wet, not just slightly tacky, even after thorough cleansing with IPA or gel cleanser.
  • Soft or flexible areas: Press gently on the nail surface with a fingertip. Fully cured gel feels completely hard. Under-cured gel has soft spots that depress slightly under pressure.
  • Premature lifting at the edges: Under-cured product loses adhesion to lower layers within days, causing edge lifting that allows moisture and bacteria underneath.
  • Wrinkling during cure: Visible wrinkling during the cure cycle is a sign the coat was applied too thick — the surface is curing and contracting while the interior is still liquid.
  • Color appears dull or cloudy: Fully cured gel has a glassy, uniform sheen. Under-cured areas appear slightly milky or less glossy than the surrounding surface.

Signs of Over-Cured Gel

Over-curing is less dangerous than under-curing but has its own consequences. Excessively long cure times can cause:

  • Brittleness: Gel that is significantly over-cured can become brittle, increasing the risk of cracking under impact.
  • Yellowing: Some gel formulas, particularly older UV-cured types, will yellow with excessive UV exposure due to photooxidation of the film-forming agents.
  • Adhesion failure between layers: If a base coat is massively over-cured before the color coat is applied, the inhibition layer may fully polymerize, reducing the chemical bonding surface available for the next layer.

⚠️ When in doubt, slightly over-cure rather than under-cure — with the important caveat of staying within reason (no more than 50% above the recommended time). The risks of under-curing are significantly more serious than the risks of modest over-curing for most professional gel products.

The Sticky Layer (Inhibition Layer) — Normal vs Problem

Many first-time gel users are confused by the sticky layer that remains after curing. This is the inhibition layer, caused by the reaction between oxygen in the air and the gel surface during curing, which prevents the outermost molecules from polymerizing. It is a normal feature of most gel products and is removed with IPA or gel cleanser after the final top coat.

The key distinction: the inhibition layer should feel mildly tacky, like a slightly sticky film, and should wipe off cleanly. If the sticky residue is thick, wet, or the nail surface beneath is soft, the product is under-cured and needs additional cure time — not just another wipe.

FAQ

Gel Nail Cure Time — Answered

How long do you cure gel nails under LED?
Under a standard 36–48W LED lamp, most gel polish base coats cure in 10–30 seconds, color coats in 30–60 seconds (longer for dark shades), and top coats in 30–60 seconds. Builder gels and hard gels require 60–90 seconds per layer. The exact time depends on your lamp’s wattage, the specific brand’s formula, coat thickness, and color pigment density. Our calculator above gives you precise times for your specific combination.
Can I use any LED lamp with any gel polish brand?
Most modern professional gel polishes are formulated to cure under both 365nm and 405nm LED lamps, making them compatible with the majority of current LED lamps. However, some older formulas and budget brands may be formulated specifically for UV wavelengths only. The key check: look for “LED compatible” or “LED & UV” on the packaging. If using a cross-brand combination (a different brand’s lamp from your polish), use the conservative cure time for your lamp wattage and verify that the nails are fully cured before proceeding to the next coat.
Why do dark gel colors need longer cure times?
Dark pigments in nail polish — particularly blacks, deep navies, deep reds, and dense metallics — absorb UV and visible light heavily. This absorption competes directly with the photoinitiators that need to capture photons to trigger polymerization. The deeper you go into a dark-pigmented coat, the fewer photons are available to activate the photoinitiators. The result is that dark colors need more exposure time to deliver sufficient photon energy all the way through the coat depth. Always add 15–30 seconds to your standard cure time for dark or heavily pigmented shades.
My nails still feel sticky after curing — is something wrong?
A mildly tacky surface after curing is completely normal — it is called the inhibition layer, caused by oxygen exposure during the cure process. This layer is removed after the final top coat with an IPA wipe or gel cleanser. However, if the nails feel genuinely wet or the surface is soft when pressed, the gel is under-cured and needs additional cure time. The difference: normal inhibition layer = slightly tacky, hard beneath. Under-cured gel = wet/sticky, soft when pressed, may show cloudy appearance.
Can I cure gel nails in sunlight?
Technically, sunlight contains UV wavelengths that can partially activate gel photoinitiators, and some gel formulas will eventually cure in direct sunlight. However, sunlight curing is unreliable, inconsistent, and extremely slow — typical sunlight exposure times for a single coat would be 20–60 minutes depending on intensity, latitude, and time of day. The result is also typically incomplete curing, with the deeper areas of the coat remaining under-cured. Sunlight curing is not recommended as a substitute for a proper lamp for any gel product intended for professional use.
How often should I replace UV lamp bulbs?
UV lamp fluorescent bulbs should be replaced every 4–6 months of regular use, regardless of whether they still illuminate. UV bulb output degrades significantly over time — a bulb at the 6-month mark may emit only 60–70% of its original UV energy, meaning cure times that were correct with a new bulb are now insufficient. Many nail technicians keep track of bulb installation dates on a label on the lamp base. LED lamps do not have this issue — their emitters are rated for 50,000+ hours and maintain consistent output throughout their lifespan.
Does over-curing gel nails cause damage?
Modest over-curing (up to 50% above recommended time) is generally safe and is preferable to under-curing. Significant over-curing can cause the gel to become more brittle and in some UV-cured formulas, may cause yellowing over time. The natural nail itself is not meaningfully affected by gel lamp exposure within normal cure ranges — the energy levels are far below those required to damage the nail plate. The heat generated during polymerization (the exothermic reaction) is the primary discomfort factor with high-wattage lamps, not the UV exposure itself.
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