If you have diabetes and wonder “can diabetics have pedicures?”, the short answer is: yes if you take care, pedicures can be safe and even helpful for foot hygiene.
Diabetes can reduce blood flow and damage nerves in the feet. That means you may not feel a small cut or skin break.
If a pedicure tool accidentally nicks your skin, healing is slower, and infection risk is higher.
Choose a salon that cleans and sterilises tools properly or bring your own kit.
Ask the technician to trim nails straight across, not too short, no cuticle cutting.
Avoid long soaks, hot baths or harsh exfoliation — water can dry skin or cause burns if you don’t feel temperature well.
Skip pedicure if you have open sores, cuts, infections, or foot ulcers.
After pedicure, inspect feet carefully — look for redness, swelling, pain or itchiness.
If you already have nerve damage (neuropathy) or poor circulation.
If your blood sugar is poorly controlled or you’ve had foot ulcers or wounds recently.
Talk with your doctor or foot-care specialist if unsure.
Check your foot circulation (e.g. press under toe nail if colour returns quickly, circulation may be okay).
The Indian Express
Prefer mild foot care: simple nail trim, gentle cleaning avoid aggressive spa-style treatments.
If feet are healthy, once in 4–6 weeks may be okay but only with careful hygiene and foot checks.
If you see redness, swelling, pain, discharge or feel foot is unusually warm get medical help quickly.