June used to stress me out. Not the weather, not the plans, the nails. Every summer I'd find myself sitting in the salon chair with my phone open to 47 saved screenshots, completely unable to pick one. My nail tech would give me exactly three minutes before she started making decisions for me, which honestly wasn't the worst outcome.
This year I did something different. I went through everything I'd been saving for simple summer nails and actually figured out what I kept coming back to. Turns out it's not the complicated stuff. It's the clean colors, the French tips that don't take forever, the one little detail that makes a solid color feel like something you planned. I put the 15 best ones together right here so you can skip the three minute panic entirely.
Short nails in summer are genuinely the move, by the way. They cost less at the salon, take less time to dry, and you can knock out most of these looks at home with a $10 bottle of gel polish and a topcoat. That math adds up fast when you're trying to stay on budget and still look like you have your life together.
Save this to Pinterest before you scroll, you'll want it at your next appointment.
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What You'll Find in This Post:
Soft Neutrals and Understated Glam
This category is for the person who wants their nails to look intentional without doing much. Marie Claire's short nail roundup pointed out that celebrity nail artist Elle Gerstein describes short nails as a place where simplicity does the heavy lifting, and these five looks prove it. Here are 5 looks that let the color do all the work.
Creamy Nude with Glitter Accent

This one has been in my saved folder since February. The nude is simple enough for a Monday and then the glitter ring finger makes it feel like something. Not a lot, just enough.
The best part is how doable this is at home. The nude goes on in two coats flat. The glitter nail just needs one coat of a fine glitter polish and a good topcoat over it. The whole thing costs you maybe $20 in supplies and lasts longer than most salon visits I've paid $50 for.
Nude and Gold Glitter Ombre

This is what happens when you let glitter do the nail art for you. The concentration is heavy at the tips and fades back toward the cuticle, which creates this gradient effect without actually doing a gradient. My friend Maya wore something close to this to a rooftop dinner last August and it looked like she'd just come from a really good appointment.
Pro tip: For this glitter fade at home, load the glitter polish onto a makeup sponge first and dab from the tip downward in layers. Way more control than brushing it on directly.
Pearly White

This one is what people mean when they talk about quiet summer glamour. It's not white, it's not clear, it's somewhere in between, with this soft iridescent shimmer that shifts in different light. Marie Claire named pearlescent finishes one of the biggest nail directions for 2026, and this is the short nail version done right.
This is also a solid salon ask if you want something that lasts. A sheer pearl gel is very forgiving as it grows out, which means you can get closer to three weeks before it starts to look worn.
Lavender with Glitter Accent

The lavender solid is doing plenty on its own. But that one glitter nail takes the whole set somewhere else. It's one nail, one coat of chunky glitter polish, and suddenly it looks like you planned the whole thing.
Lavender Solid with Glossy Finish

This one leans more purple than pink, which makes it a stronger choice for darker skin tones and anyone who wants their nails to actually show up. Essie "Bikini So Teeny" gets close to this shade for under $10.
You've seen all 5 neutral and understated looks! Now onto the summer colors that actually commit.
Summer Colors Worth Committing To
This is the section for when you want to look at your nails and feel something. Who What Wear's short nail design roundup noted that short nails and bold solid colors are all over feeds and salon request lists this season, and these four are exactly why. Here are 4 looks that do not apologize for themselves.
Hot Magenta Pink

This is my personal pick from this entire post. It's a hot, bright magenta pink that looks even better on warm and tan skin tones, and it photographs like a dream in natural light. I wore something this close to this exact shade last July and got a comment on my nails from a stranger at the grocery store. That's the bar for a summer color and this hits it.
Oval nails make this shade feel a little less loud, which is a good thing if you're worried about committing to a full neon. One coat of a quality gel and a topcoat and you're set.
Pastel Lilac Pink

Not quite pink, not quite lavender. It's the in between color that goes with everything and works for any occasion from a Tuesday at the office to a Saturday wedding. Who What Wear's 2026 summer nail guide puts soft pastel pinks and lilac tones at the top of the list for the season, and this one lands right in that sweet spot.
Bright Aqua Mint

A mint that actually has some energy to it. This is not the muted, washed out mint of a few years ago. It's brighter, more saturated, and it looks incredible against a tan. The matteish finish here keeps it from reading as too much. If you've been wanting to try something that isn't pink or nude, this is the one to start with.
Neon Coral Red Orange

This coral is summer in a bottle. There's nothing simple about how good it looks, but it genuinely could not be easier, one color, clean shape, done. It's the kind of shade that feels like a big commitment in the bottle and then you put it on and immediately wonder why you waited so long.
Which direction are you leaning, the soft neutrals or the bold summer colors?
Four summer shades down! French tips are next and these ones are worth it.
Pro tip: Bold solids like the coral and hot pink are the perfect candidates for an at home gel kit. Sally Hansen Miracle Gel runs about $10 a bottle and doesn't need a UV lamp. Two coats, topcoat, and you're done in under 30 minutes.
French Tips, Reimagined
The classic white French tip is fine. But these three are better. Marie Claire's 2026 nail trend breakdown noted that modern French tips with colored or unexpected tips are one of the most requested salon looks right now, and these are the versions worth asking for. Here are 4 looks in this category.
Neon Pink French Tip

The base is completely sheer, almost like bare nails, and then the tip hits in this bright neon pink that stops you mid scroll. It's the contrast that makes it. The see through base makes the neon feel like a choice rather than a lot, and the result is something that looks like you paid more for it than you did.
My friend Becca got these right before a bachelorette weekend and texted me three days later just to say everyone at the pool was asking about them. A sheer base gel and a neon pink tip polish is all this takes. Most salons charge around $5 to $10 extra for a colored tip over a standard French, worth it every time.
Lime Green French Tip

Soft pink base, neon lime tips. This is the one that looks like a risk and isn't. The pink softens the lime enough that it feels fun rather than overwhelming, and on short square nails it looks so clean. I genuinely stared at this image for three minutes the first time I saw it.
If your salon doesn't have this exact lime shade, Orly "Key Lime Twist" or Sally Hansen "Slime Time" get you there for about $8 a bottle.
Soft Lavender French Tip

This is the quietest one of the three but it's the one I keep coming back to. A sheer pale pink base with the softest white lavender French tip, it's almost like a regular French tip but with just enough purple to make it interesting. The kind of thing people notice and can't quite put their finger on.
This one is very achievable at home if you have a steady hand or nail tip guides, which you can find in most drugstores for a couple dollars.
Baby Blue French Tip

Sheer peachy nude base with a pastel baby blue French tip on every nail. The blue and nude combo is so much more interesting than blue alone, and it works for literally any summer occasion. It's also one of the easier French tips to do at home since you're using a soft, forgiving color rather than a sharp white.
Three French tips done, last section coming right up.
This is worth saving to Pinterest so you have it ready at your next appointment!
The One With the Accent Nail
Sometimes one nail is all you need to take a solid color somewhere interesting. These two do exactly that without adding a lot of time or money to your appointment.
Peach with a Heart Accent

The coral peach solid on most nails is already great on its own. And then the ring finger goes softer with a little peach heart near the cuticle, and the whole set becomes something you want to photograph. It's a tiny detail. It changes everything.
This is also one of the more affordable nail art requests you can make at a salon. Most techs can do a tiny heart in under two minutes, ask for it as an add on and expect to pay $5 or less. Or grab a nail art pen from the drugstore for about $4 and do it yourself.
How to Make Your Summer Mani Last (Without Spending More)
The solid colors in this post, the mint, the coral, the hot pink, the lilac, are all realistic at home options. A bottle of gel polish runs $10 to $12 and will cover a dozen manicures. That's under $1 per mani versus $40 to $55 at the salon.
Your Simple Summer Nail Questions Answered
Clean solid colors in coral, hot pink, mint, and lavender are everywhere right now, alongside modern French tips with neon or pastel colored tips instead of classic white. If you want one look that covers all your bases, a soft pastel solid with a glossy topcoat is the most requested style at salons this summer.
Most of them, yes. The solid colors, the glitter accent nail, and both lavenders are all beginner friendly with a basic polish and topcoat. The French tips take a tiny bit more patience but are doable with peel-off tip guides from the drugstore.
A basic gel manicure at most salons runs $35 to $55. Colored French tips usually add $5 to $10. An at home gel kit costs $25 to $40 upfront and covers dozens of manicures after that, so it pays for itself very quickly if you do your nails often.
OPI and Essie are both reliable mid range options at drugstores and Target. For gel without a lamp, Sally Hansen Miracle Gel and Olive and June both work well and come in a huge range of colors. For the neon shades specifically, Beetles Gel Polish has a really good neon collection under $10 per bottle.
About two to three weeks for most people. Heat, sunscreen, and water can shorten that slightly, but reapplying topcoat every few days helps a lot. Short nails also tend to outlast longer ones because there's less nail to catch on things and start the chipping process.
The lavender and blue French tips are manageable at home with tip guides. The neon pink and lime green are a little trickier because you want a clean line between the sheer base and the bright tip. Guides help here too, but if you're nervous, these are worth getting done at the salon and then maintaining with topcoat at home.
Square and rounded square (squoval) are the most flattering for short nails and work for every look in this post. Oval is another great option if you want something a little softer. All three are easy to maintain at home with a nail file, no salon needed between appointments.
For the solid colors and simple French tips in this post, yes. Press ons have gotten really good. Brands like KISS and Glamnetic make them in short square shapes now, and if you use nail glue instead of the adhesive tabs they come with, they can last up to two weeks. For a one day event or a quick refresh between salon visits, they're a solid option.
Love what you see? Save this post to Pinterest so you can pull it up at your next appointment!
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Now You Just Have to Choose
I will not tell you how long I spent on this list. Just know it was more than one sitting.
If I had to narrow it down to two right now, I'd go the neon pink French tip for something that feels like summer and the creamy nude with the glitter ring finger for everything else. But the coral? The coral might actually win.
Which one is going on your nails first?
Found your summer look? Pin this post so you don't lose it!


