Gransnet forums

Health

How much to cut toenails?

(58 Posts)
Luckygirl3 Sat 07-Sept-24 08:17:47

Because of my back surgery I cannot cut my own toenails. Someone comes in to do this every 8 weeks and charges £35. She is here and gone in a flash and it seems a lot of money for a few minutes work! I live rurally so I guess fuel has to feature in the cost.

What do others pay?

midgey Sat 07-Sept-24 11:24:15

Luckygirl I think you have a bargain! The very local podiatrist charges £49 for a home visit. She does exactly the same as yours, toe nail trim and a bit of cream and gone.

CariadAgain Sat 07-Sept-24 11:32:34

karmalady

I paid £33 and was in and out in less than 20 minutes. I decided to carry on myself as I can reach my toes fine and have a good professional nail clipper. I do it, when needed, after my shower when my nails are a bit softer, A bit of oil afterwards and I have saved £33, certainly saved enough so far to pay for for my new fabric stash

I agree re podiatrist v standard nail care, I saw a podiatrist once, no comparison, that man knew what he was doing, tested foot pulse etc Nail care is just nails, hard skin and oil

I've never heard of that - ie "test foot pulse". How do they do that and what is the purpose of it please?

Lovemylife Sat 07-Sept-24 11:34:07

I pay £25 for just over half an hour. She cuts nails, sorts out the dodgy nail, and removes dry skin with some sort of sander. I leave feeling like I have new feet 🤣

Charleygirl5 Sat 07-Sept-24 12:04:43

I have Macular degeneration so cannot see my toes. I pay £40 for 10 minutes and I visit him. No doubt the price will go up when I stop driving and he comes to the house. It is done every 6 weeks but I try to lengthen the visits between.

NW London prices.

Caleo Sat 07-Sept-24 12:22:11

About four months ago I paid £50 for a visit from a qualified chiropodist or podiatrist as they are called now. I decided to spend the money to get rid of inward curling toenails. Since then my daughter in law has cut my nails.

NB if you have diabetes you should take great care of toenails and never injure the skin around them.

Mt61 Sat 07-Sept-24 12:26:53

I asked for a price £23 to cut & file nails £35 to cut, file, remove hard skin & corns. I would shop round

Mt61 Sat 07-Sept-24 12:28:25

Mt61

I asked for a price £23 to cut & file nails £35 to cut, file, remove hard skin & corns. I would shop round

That’s for a podiatrist- dads diabete, she will visit the house

silverlining48 Sat 07-Sept-24 12:35:20

I have been paying £54 to have my nails cut smetimes only 20 minute appointment. It’s an hour drive plus parking charge once there.
I dud some checks more locally and found most charge around £ 38 so reluctantly as I like my man, will try the local option next time my nails click across the kitchen floor and maybe get them done more frequently.

Elusivebutterfly Sat 07-Sept-24 12:39:11

I pay £50 every six or seven weeks for a podiatrist. Where I used to live podiatry was available on the NHS but not here.
I think you should expect to pay more for a professionally qualified medical person i.e. a podiatrist than a pedicurist.

Athrawes Sat 07-Sept-24 12:41:59

I'm fortunate to deal with my own toe nails but occasionally I have a chiropodist pop in to ensure all is well as I have had blood flow problems and need occasional check ups. I've forgotten the cost but it was under £35 and worth every penny.

seadragon Sat 07-Sept-24 12:58:51

We can self refer to an NHS podiatrist/chiropdist via our GP surgery but "not being able to reach your feet" is not sufficient grounds...!!? It took me a wee while to work out that if I added osteo-arthritis in neck, hands and hip plus waiting list for hip replacement....arteriosclerosis (necessitating 3 cardiac stents?....and major damage to big toe nail leading to athlete's foot following it's having been torn off by accident by matelot's boot when I worked for the RN..... I might get free appointments....time will tell!

Patsy70 Sat 07-Sept-24 13:52:34

You could have a pedicure for £35, with pretty coloured toenails. 😊

LadyGracie Sat 07-Sept-24 14:09:07

We pay £25 each. We have a lovely chat about our families and generally put the world to rights, it takes about an hour for both of us.

Ours cuts and files our nails, sands any rough skin (I love this) and massages our feet.

Aveline Sat 07-Sept-24 14:15:50

My pedicures are a real treat. My feet feel and look great afterwards and the lady is so nice. It's always a pleasure to hear her news. She obviously provides a very popular service as other customers are always popping in to make appointments and are very chatty too. A monthly highlight for me!

Luckygirl3 Sat 07-Sept-24 14:25:52

It looks as though the service I am getting is about par for the course pricewise. I will pay up - and be grateful for it!

mrshat Sat 07-Sept-24 14:28:40

£55 for about 15 minutes - Herts/Bucks borders!!!

Luckygirl3 Sun 08-Sept-24 07:23:16

That's a lot!!

NanKate Sun 08-Sept-24 08:33:21

I have a great podiatrist who up until recently charged £35 per session and then upped it to £45 😳 Can’t fault his expertise so will continue seeing him every 6 weeks.

NanKate Sun 08-Sept-24 08:33:57

I’m in Bucks where everything seems more expensive.

Luckygirl3 Sun 08-Sept-24 08:49:03

Big Bucks in fact!! smile

aquagran Sun 08-Sept-24 08:52:21

Lady next to me at Nail Shop had toe nails cut by lovely lad for £12. She only had £8, he just said “That’s ok!” That’s in London.

downtoearth Sun 08-Sept-24 09:36:35

£28 for cut and filing with a drill type of thing, a brisk rub with a large emery board for hard skin, and some moisturiser every 6 weeks.

This is Mud Norfolk.

Lady who does my finger nails cant cope with my bent mishapen toes, I think she would rather I kept them in my shoes away from her sight.

kibera10 Sun 08-Sept-24 09:47:52

I have a lovely podiatrist and have been going to her for almost thirty years. Current cost is £48 and it takes around 30 minutes. I go every six weeks, and need to book two appointments ahead, as she is very busy.

Boz Sun 08-Sept-24 09:56:58

£25 in Shropshire/Staffs border. Nails clipped - sanded and creamed.
My biggest problem is that I hate it, because of highly sensitive feet that tingle and twitch when touched. The poor girl is aware of this and narrowly misses being kicked in the teeth when my feet jump at her.
Has anyone any tips for a diy job when one foot is very hard to reach?

silverlining48 Mon 09-Sept-24 19:03:22

Would not advise diy Box especially if you have trouble reaching one foot.
I ended up with dreadful infections and needed an expensive and painful operation to remove the nail and root on each side.
Coukdnt get it done on the nhs as I don’t have diabetes and it took ages to heal.
Not worth the risk.