$25 Amazon Buys Turn Costly Manicures Into DIY Trend

$25 Amazon Buys Turn Costly Manicures Into DIY Trend

> At a Glance

> – Salon manicures now top $100 in some areas

> – Amazon under-$25 tools let users skip salons

> – TikTok buzz sparks 2026 DIY mani-pedi wave

> – Why it matters: Beauty fans save cash without losing quality

Sticker-shock prices are pushing nail lovers toward Amazon’s budget toolkit. A November TikTok post noting “No one has their nails done 💅” racked up comments blaming $100-plus tabs. Enter the retailer’s sub-$25 lineup, now trending as the go-to for at-home spa sessions.

tools

Amazon’s Under-$25 Manicure Toolkit

Olivia M. Hartwell tested the most-popular items and flagged standout performers. Every pick conditions, shapes or finishes nails for under a quarter of one salon visit.

  • Sally Hansen Cuticle Cream, $6 (was $8) – apricot oil to stop chips
  • Glamnetic Press-On Nails, $14 (was $18) – two-week wear, 20-plus designs
  • Homedics Bubble Foot Spa, $24 (was $35) – heated bubbles plus pumice
  • Fandamei Nail Files & Buffers, $7 (was $12) – pro-level smoothness
  • Xunxmas Cuticle Tools, $6 – 8,000+ bought last month
  • Modelones French Tip Stamper, $8 (was $10) – crisp lines without tape
  • Sally Hansen Double Duty Base & Top Coat, $4 (was $6) – 74,000+ five-star ratings
  • Maryton Disposable Pumice Pads, $10 – gentle heel smoothing

What Shoppers Say

Former News Of Los Angeles shopping writer Alyssa Brascia calls Glamnetic press-ons “the perfect nails at a keyboard-friendly length,” adding they deliver salon looks “at a fraction of the price.”

One Homedics buyer wrote that for the “cost of one and a half nail salon” visits they now have “happy feet” at home.

Key Takeaways

  • Rising manicure costs fuel 2026 DIY trend
  • Amazon’s sub-$25 tools replicate salon steps
  • Best-sellers include cuticle cream, press-ons and a bubble foot spa
  • Shoppers report weeks of wear without salon prices

Grab the kit, queue a playlist, and you’ve got a full mani-pedi for what one tip used to cost.

Author

  • My name is Olivia M. Hartwell, and I cover the world of politics and government here in Los Angeles.

    Olivia M. Hartwell covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Los Angeles, focusing on who benefits from growth and who gets pushed out. A UCLA graduate, she’s known for data-driven investigations that follow money, zoning, and accountability across LA communities.

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