Semi-Cured Gel Nails Not Curing? It Could Be Your Lamp
You've applied your semi-cured gel strips, cured them under your lamp, and... they're still soft and sticky. Or lifting at the edges. Or worse, they've gone gummy and won't set at all.
Nine times out of ten, this is a lamp issue. The good news: it's fixable. Here's how to diagnose what's going on and get a solid cure every time.
Signs your lamp is causing the problem
- Strips feel soft or tacky after curing
- Edges are lifting within hours of application
- The gel has a gummy texture instead of a hard finish
- Strips shrink, bubble, or melt during curing (opposite problem: lamp is too powerful or too close)
What wattage do semi-cured gel strips need?
Semi-cured gel nail strips are designed to work with home UV/LED lamps in the 6W to 24W range. This is intentional. The partial cure in the strip needs a gentler, more controlled light source to complete the curing process without overheating or distorting the gel.
If you're using a professional salon lamp (36W, 48W, 54W or higher), the gel can actually over-cure or melt before it has a chance to bond properly. If you're using a low-quality lamp that's not producing consistent UV output, the strips won't fully cure.
The sweet spot for most semi-cured gel strip brands is a dedicated home lamp. The LA-BEK UV/LED Lamp is specifically calibrated for our semi-cured gel nail strips and takes the guesswork out of curing time and wattage.
Open vs enclosed lamp design
The shape of your lamp matters more than most people realise. An open, flat lamp (the kind that looks like a small pad you rest your hand on) often leaves the sides of your nails under-cured. The light hits the top of the strip well, but misses the sidewalls and edges.
An enclosed or semi-enclosed lamp design cures the nail from multiple angles simultaneously. This is especially important for the edges and sidewalls, which are the most common lift points.
Troubleshooting checklist
- Check your lamp wattage. Aim for 6W to 24W for semi-cured gel strips. Anything above 36W is likely designed for salon gel, not semi-cured wraps.
- Check your cure time. Most semi-cured strips need 60 seconds per hand, sometimes 90 seconds if your lamp is on the lower end of wattage. Re-cure the full hand if strips feel soft.
- Check lamp placement. Your fingers should be fully inside the lamp, not resting with tips hanging out. The edges are the first to lift if they're not getting full light exposure.
- Check your lamp's age. UV bulbs degrade over time. If your lamp is more than 12 months old and you've noticed curing issues creeping in, the bulb output may have dropped.
- Check prep. Even the best lamp won't cure strips properly if nails aren't clean, dry, and completely oil-free before application.
When it's not the lamp
If you're using the right lamp and technique but still getting lift or soft spots, check these:
- Cuticle overlap: If the strip touches your cuticle or skin at any point, it will lift from that edge first. Apply strips 0.5mm away from the cuticle.
- Nail prep: Oil on the nail plate (from hand cream, cuticle oil, or natural oils) prevents adhesion. Clean nails with an alcohol wipe or acetone immediately before applying strips.
- Strip sizing: A strip that's too wide and folds over the side of the nail will lift from the edges quickly. Size down if you're not sure.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use any UV lamp for semi-cured gel nail strips?
No. Semi-cured gel strips are calibrated for home-use lamps in the 6W to 24W range. Professional salon lamps (36W+) can over-cure or melt the gel. A lamp that's too weak or inconsistent in UV output will under-cure, leaving strips soft and prone to lifting.
How long should I cure semi-cured gel nail strips?
60 seconds per hand is standard. If your lamp is on the lower end of the wattage range, try 90 seconds. If strips are still soft after that, the lamp output is the likely issue, not the cure time.
My gel strips feel sticky after curing. Is this normal?
A very slight surface tackiness immediately after curing can be normal with some lamps. But if the strip feels genuinely soft, gummy, or flexible, it hasn't fully cured. Re-cure for another 60 seconds. If it's still not firm, your lamp wattage or bulb condition is likely the issue.
Can I re-cure strips that didn't fully cure the first time?
Yes. If you notice soft spots or tackiness within the first hour or so of application, you can pop your hand back under the lamp for another 60 seconds. The gel will continue to harden. If you catch it early enough, a re-cure can save the set.
Why are the edges of my gel strips lifting but the rest is fine?
Edge lift usually comes from one of three things: prep (oil at the nail edge), sizing (strip is slightly too wide and folding over the sidewall), or lamp coverage (an open flat lamp not reaching the sidewalls). Check all three before deciding your lamp is the problem.
Browse the full semi-cured gel nail strip range or check out the LA-BEK UV/LED Lamp if you're ready to upgrade your setup.
