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When Is Exfoliation Performed During a Pedicure? Guide

Written by Bodycraft | May 18, 2026 6:00:04 AM

When Is Exfoliation Performed During a Pedicure? Here’s the Real Order

Exfoliation performed during a pedicure?
After soaking. Before massage.


That’s the sweet spot.


Here’s how it usually flows in a basic salon pedicure:

  • Feet are cleaned
  • Soaked in warm water (5–10 minutes)
  • Nails trimmed and shaped
  • Exfoliation (scrub or foot file)
  • Rinse, mask (sometimes), then massage

So yeah, exfoliation happens after the soak softens your skin. Not before. Doing it on dry, hard skin? Nah. That’s rough and uncomfortable.


Quick tip. Warm water loosens dead skin. Makes scrubbing easier. Less force needed. That’s the real win.


My friend Anjali once skipped soaking at home and went straight to a foot scrub. Big mistake. Skin felt raw. Patchy. Next time she soaked for 8 minutes first. Total difference. Smooth. Even. Way more “ahh.”


That soak matters more than people think.


Now, some salons add exfoliation twice. A light scrub after soak. Then a heel file for stubborn areas. That’s normal. But it should feel firm, not painful. Firm but gentle. Strong, not aggressive. You get the idea.


Also, exfoliation isn’t just about heels. It’s full foot. Top, sides, even around toes. Quick but thorough.


And no, it’s not the last step. Massage comes later. Polish comes last. Scrub sits right in the middle of the service. Middle stage. Transition step.


In short, soak first. Exfoliate next. Then relax.


Simple order. Works well.


Feels better too.


Ever noticed how soft your feet feel right after the scrub stage? That’s not magic. That’s timing done right.

FAQ

Can exfoliation happen before soaking?

Not recommended. Skin should be softened first.


How long should exfoliation last?

Usually 3–5 minutes, depending on buildup.


Is exfoliation done in every pedicure?

Most standard pedicures include it.