The 9 Main Nail Shapes (and When to Use Each)
Nail shape is one of the most impactful decisions in any nail appointment. The right shape can make fingers look longer, hands look slimmer, and nails look healthier. Here is every main nail shape, who it suits, and how it is achieved.
1. Square
The square shape has a flat, straight tip with sharp 90-degree corners. It is one of the most popular shapes for short-to-medium nails because it maximises the nail bed's width and creates a clean, polished look.
Best for: Long, narrow nail beds. Not recommended for wide nail beds as it can make fingers look wider.
How to file: File straight across the tip, then sharpen both corners to 90 degrees.
2. Squoval
Squoval (square-oval) is the most universally flattering nail shape. It has a straight edge across the tip with the corners very slightly rounded, combining the durability of square with the softness of oval.
Best for: Almost any hand shape. Particularly good for short fingers as it creates a neat, elongating effect.
How to file: File straight across, then lightly soften each corner with a diagonal stroke.
3. Round
The round shape follows the natural curve of the fingertip. It is the most low-maintenance shape and the most forgiving on short nails, as it requires no extension beyond the fingertip.
Best for: Short nails, bitten nails growing out, clients who want minimal maintenance. Not suited for long nail beds seeking drama.
How to file: File both sides at a slight inward angle toward the tip, maintaining a soft curve.
4. Oval
Oval nails taper toward the tip with a smooth elliptical curve. The sides are filed inward more than round, creating a more slender appearance. Oval is one of the most feminine and elegant shapes.
Best for: Wide or short nail beds — the tapering creates the illusion of length and slimness. Not great on very narrow nail beds as it can look too thin.
How to file: File both sides at an angle toward the centre of the tip, creating a smooth ellipse.
5. Almond
Almond nails are wider at the base and taper dramatically to a rounded point, resembling the shape of an almond. They require some length to work correctly. Almond is one of the most flattering shapes for making hands look elegant and fingers look long.
Best for: Medium to wide nail beds with some natural length or an extension. Requires confident wear — they are more prone to breaking than rounder shapes.
How to file: File both sides inward at a 45-degree angle, meeting at a soft rounded point at the centre of the tip.
6. Stiletto
Stiletto nails taper to a sharp point. They are dramatic, bold, and almost always require acrylic or gel extensions as natural nails cannot maintain this shape at length. Stiletto is the most high-fashion nail shape.
Best for: Clients who want a statement look and are not doing manual work that risks breakage. Requires extensions or very long natural nails.
How to file: File aggressively at steep angles on both sides to meet at a sharp central point.
7. Coffin / Ballerina
Coffin nails (also called ballerina nails) are long, tapered on the sides like stiletto, but with a flat squared-off tip rather than a point. The shape resembles a coffin or the toe of a ballet flat.
Best for: Longer nails with extensions. Works beautifully on wide nail beds. Very popular for nail art because the flat tip provides a large design surface.
How to file: Taper both sides inward, then file the tip straight across at a narrow width.
8. Flare / Duck
Flare nails (also called duck nails) widen at the tip, creating a flared or duck-bill shape. This is a bold, unconventional style popular in acrylic art looks.
Best for: Clients seeking a statement, creative nail set. Requires extensions.
How to file: Build or tip the nail with a wider platform at the free edge, then file the edges outward.
9. Lipstick
The lipstick shape is cut diagonally across the tip, with one side higher than the other, resembling the angled tip of a lipstick. It is a unique, eye-catching shape that works best as a design choice.
Best for: Clients who want something different and wear nails at a medium length. Works with natural nails or extensions.
How to file: File the tip at a diagonal, keeping one side longer.
Which Nail Shape Suits Your Hand?
| Hand type | Best shapes | Shapes to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Short fingers | Oval, almond, squoval | Square, wide coffin |
| Long fingers | Square, coffin, stiletto, round | Almond (can look too narrow) |
| Wide nail beds | Almond, oval, coffin | Square, flare |
| Narrow nail beds | Square, squoval, round | Almond, stiletto |
| Bitten/short nails | Round, squoval | Stiletto, coffin, flare |
Which Nail Shapes Last the Longest?
Durability from most to least: Round and squoval hold up best because they distribute stress evenly across the tip. Coffin and oval last well when the nail has adequate structure. Stiletto and flare are most vulnerable to breakage because the structural integrity is compromised at the extreme taper or flare point.
How Nail Shape Affects Nail Art
Nail art is strongly influenced by shape. A flat coffin tip provides maximum canvas space for intricate designs. An oval works beautifully for gradient and marble effects. Stiletto suits dramatic single-colour or foil looks. Knowing nail shapes is a core skill in any professional nail course — it is one of the first things clients ask about.
If you are interested in learning nail shapes professionally, our nail technology course covers shape selection, filing technique, and matching shapes to client preferences as part of the full curriculum.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most popular nail shape in Australia?
Squoval and almond are consistently the most popular shapes in Australian salons. Squoval suits the widest range of nail lengths and hand types. Almond has grown in popularity alongside the rise of gel extensions as more clients can achieve and maintain the length it requires.
What nail shape makes fingers look longer?
Oval and almond shapes create the most elongating effect. By tapering the sides of the nail inward, they draw the eye toward the tip and make both the nail and the finger look longer than they are.
What is the difference between almond and oval nails?
Oval nails have a gentler, more rounded taper with a wider tip. Almond nails taper more aggressively and end at a smaller, tighter rounded point. Almond is more dramatic and requires more length; oval is softer and more wearable at shorter lengths.
Can you change nail shape between appointments?
Yes, though shape changes are easier in some directions than others. Filing from square to oval is straightforward. Going from oval or almond back to square requires more length at the sides than most people have. Major shape changes are best done at a fresh application appointment.
What nail shape is easiest to maintain at home?
Round and squoval are the easiest shapes to maintain between salon visits. They do not have corners that chip or points that snap, and minor filing at home can keep them neat without distorting the shape significantly.