How To Apply BIAB Nails: A Step-by-Step Guide
To do BIAB nails, you prep the natural nail, apply a base coat, build the apex using a bead of builder gel over two to three layers, cure each layer fully, then seal with a top coat. That is the process in its simplest form.
But the technicians getting three-week retention from every client are not just following those steps. They understand exactly why each one exists, and what happens when any of them is skipped or rushed.
This guide covers the full application sequence with the technical detail that most tutorials leave out: cuticle pocket prep, correct bead placement, apex structure, and the real reasons BIAB lifts.
What Is BIAB and How Is It Different from Gel Polish?
BIAB is a soft, soak-off builder gel that strengthens the natural nail by creating a structured overlay, unlike regular gel polish which simply sits on the surface. The result is a durable, glossy finish that supports the nail's stress point and allows the natural nail to grow underneath.
The distinction between BIAB and standard gel nail polish matters in practice. Gel polish is a colour product. BIAB is a building product. It has a thicker consistency, a self-levelling formula, and it is designed to create an apex, the highest point on the nail that distributes pressure and prevents breakage. Unlike hard gel extensions, BIAB is a soak-off product built for natural nail overlays, not dramatic length. Understanding that difference is the foundation of a correct BIAB manicure.
For nail techs, BIAB is one of the most requested services in Ireland right now. Clients want the strength without the harshness of acrylics, and they want their natural nails to actually grow. A correctly applied BIAB overlay delivers that. A poorly applied one lifts within a week and damages client trust faster than anything else.
Before any of that matters, you need the right kit. Here is exactly what a professional BIAB application requires.
What Products and Tools Do You Need for BIAB?
Here is what a professional BIAB application requires.
For nail prep: a 100/180 grit buffer, a 220/240 grit nail file, a cuticle pusher, cuticle nippers, lint-free wipes, nail dehydrator, and an acid-free primer.
For application: a Probase or rubber base coat (essential for lighter shades and HEMA-free formulas), your chosen BIAB in the relevant colour or clear, a fine liner brush for sidewall work, and a gel top coat.
Your LED nail lamp matters more than most people give it credit for. Underpowering your cure is one of the most common causes of lifting, sensitivity, and poor retention. A 36W minimum is standard. Curing times vary by lamp and product, so always follow the manufacturer's guide rather than guessing.
Cuticle oil completes the kit. Apply it to the skin around each nail at the end of every set to rehydrate the area and support healthy nail growth between appointments.
One product note worth flagging: if you or your client has a sensitivity to HEMA (Hydroxyethyl Methacrylate), HEMA-free and TPO-free BIAB formulas are available and they require exactly the same application technique. Demand for these is growing across Ireland and the EU. The HSA has published chemical safety guidance for nail bars covering sensitisation risks from nail products, which is worth reading if you work with clients who have known chemical sensitivities. If you're working with a HEMA-free builder gel, make sure your top coat is compatible with that system.
Kit sorted. Now here is how to use it correctly.
Step-by-Step: How to Apply BIAB on Natural Nails
Step 1: How to Prep the Natural Nail for BIAB
Nail prep determines everything that follows. A clean, correctly prepared nail plate is the difference between a set that lasts three weeks and one that lifts in five days. If you're working through this technique for the first time, our Advanced Gel Polish BIAB course covers every stage of prep and application in a hands-on, one-day practical format at our Sligo training centre.
Start by removing any existing gel polish or product using acetone and lint-free wipes. Once the nail plate is clear, use your cuticle pusher to gently push back the cuticle and open the cuticle pocket. The cuticle pocket is the area between the soft tissue and the nail plate at the base of the nail. If product sits in an uncleaned cuticle pocket, it will lift. This step is non-negotiable.
Use cuticle nippers to carefully remove any non-living tissue from the surface of the nail plate. Do not cut living skin. Work carefully around the sidewalls too, as residue in this area causes lateral lifting.
Now lightly buff the surface of the nail plate using your 100/180 buffer to remove the natural shine. The aim is to create a texture that improves adhesion, not to thin the nail. Over-filing thins the nail plate and increases the risk of sensitivity over time. Take the shine off, nothing more.
Use your 220/240 nail file to shape the free edge to the desired shape before applying any product.
Wipe every nail thoroughly with a lint-free wipe saturated in nail dehydrator or acetone. This removes dust, oils, and any remaining debris. If oil is left on the nail plate, nothing will bond properly. Wipe each nail individually and allow it to air dry completely before the next step.
Step 2: Apply Primer and Base Coat
Apply your acid-free primer to the nail plate and allow it to air dry. Do not cure it. Primer improves adhesion between the natural nail and the builder gel, particularly on oily nail types or nails prone to lifting. A thin, even layer is all you need.
Once the primer is dry, apply a thin layer of Probase or rubber base coat and cure under your nail lamp for 60 seconds, or as specified for your lamp. Cap the free edge, which means running the base coat along the very tip of the nail, to seal it and prevent tip lifting.
If you are working with Clear BIAB, White BIAB, or a HEMA-free formula, this base coat layer is essential, not optional. It creates the foundation the builder gel needs to bond correctly.
Step 3: Apply the First Layer of Builder Gel
BIAB application parts company with gel polish here. The product is thicker, the purpose is different, and getting this layer right sets up everything that follows.
Apply a thin layer of builder gel across the entire nail. Keep this layer thin and even. Do not build structure yet. This first layer is about adhesion, setting the bond between the base coat and the product. Cure under your nail lamp for 60 to 99 seconds on low heat mode, depending on your lamp settings.
Low heat mode matters here. Builder gel generates heat as it cures. A thick application on high power can cause a heat spike that is uncomfortable for the client and can cause the product to cure unevenly.
Step 4: Build the Apex Using the Bead Method
Bead placement and apex structure are what separate a set that holds for three weeks from one that lifts, breaks, or looks flat. Take your time here.
Pick up a small to medium bead of builder gel on your brush. Place it approximately one third of the way down the nail, slightly above the stress point. The stress point is the area where the natural nail begins to extend past the finger, and it is the area under the most daily pressure.
Using a light floating action, gently guide the bead towards the cuticle, keeping a clean margin of around 1.5mm from the skin. Then float the product down towards the free edge. Do not press the brush flat and drag. Let the self-levelling formula do the work. The gel will settle naturally, which is why controlling bead size and placement matters more than heavy-handed brushwork.
To help the product settle into a smooth apex, turn the client's hand palm-up for a few seconds before curing. Gravity will pull the product gently to the centre of the nail and create a more natural curve. Flip the hand back and cure for 60 seconds.
The apex should be the thickest point of the nail, tapering gently towards the cuticle and towards the free edge. Think of the natural curve of a healthy nail and build to mirror it.
Step 5: Apply a Second Layer and Cap the Free Edge
Once the first BIAB layer is cured, assess the nail. For most overlays, a second layer is needed to build adequate strength and achieve a full, smooth finish.
Apply a second bead in the same position, using the same floating technique. On this layer, you can be slightly more deliberate about building thickness at the apex if the nail needs extra durability, for example on a client who works with their hands or who has naturally flexible nails. Seal the free edge by gently dragging the brush across the tip of the nail to cap it. Cure again under your lamp.
If a third layer is needed for extra strength or to even out the surface, apply it using the same method and cure before moving on.
Step 6: Refine the Surface and Apply Top Coat
Once all BIAB layers are fully cured, wipe the inhibition layer from the nail using a lint-free wipe and cleanser. The inhibition layer is the slightly tacky surface that remains after curing. Removing it allows you to assess the surface clearly.
If refinement is needed, use a 120/180 nail file to gently smooth any uneven areas and refine the shape. Use a soft brush to remove any dust from the nail surface before applying any further product.
Apply your chosen gel top coat in a thin, even layer and cure under your lamp. Cap the free edge again on this step. Finish with a drop of cuticle oil massaged into the skin around each nail to rehydrate the area and nourish the cuticle.
Follow that sequence correctly and you have a set built to last. If your sets are still lifting, the next section explains exactly why.
Why Is My BIAB Lifting?
Lifting is the most common BIAB complaint and it's almost always a technique issue, not a product issue. Here are the actual causes.
Product touching the cuticle or skin. Any builder gel that cures in contact with the skin will lift from that point, often within days. Keep a clean margin of 1.5mm at the cuticle and sidewalls at all times.
Uncleaned cuticle pocket. Non-living tissue left in the cuticle pocket breaks the bond between product and nail plate. Even if the rest of the prep is perfect, a dirty pocket creates a weak point that lifts first.
Residual oil or dust on the nail plate. Dehydrate every nail individually and don't touch the nail plate after dehydrating. Skin oils transfer immediately.
Two curing mistakes account for a significant share of lifting complaints. Under-curing, caused by thick layers, underpowered lamps, or rushed timing, leaves product partially set. Adhesion weakens and sensitivity risk rises. Over-filing does the opposite damage: aggressive buffing or e-file pressure leaves the nail plate too smooth and too thin, giving the product less surface to grip.
Skipping primer. On oily nail types, primer is the difference between a set that lasts three weeks and one that lifts in five days. Don't skip it on clients who regularly present with lifting.
Bead placed too close to the cuticle. Product that migrates onto the skin during self-levelling will lift. Place your initial bead with room to move, or it has nowhere to go but the skin.
If your sets are consistently lifting in the same area on the same client, that area tells you exactly where your prep or application needs work.
Should BIAB Be Soaked Off Every Time?
BIAB does not need to be fully removed at every appointment. Frequent soak-offs in acetone are unnecessary and, over time, can dry out the natural nail unnecessarily.
For most clients, an infill every two to three weeks is the right approach. File the surface of the existing builder gel to break the seal and remove bulk, push back and clean the cuticles, dehydrate the regrowth area, apply a slip layer, place a new bead of BIAB close to the cuticle, float it down to blend with the existing product, and cure. This maintains the integrity of the set and supports continuous nail growth.
A full soak off is appropriate every four to five appointments, or sooner if there is visible lifting, cracking, separation at the free edge, or any sign of moisture under the product. Never apply new product over lifted BIAB.
If you have questions beyond the steps and maintenance, the answers to the most common ones are below.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does BIAB last on nails?
Two to four weeks before an infill is needed, for most clients. That range shifts depending on nail prep quality, lifestyle, and aftercare. Clients who apply cuticle oil daily and wear gloves when cleaning consistently sit at the longer end.
Can you apply gel polish over BIAB?
Yes. BIAB works as both a standalone overlay and as a base for gel nail art and gel polish colour. Apply your chosen gel polish over the cured BIAB layers, finish with a top coat, and you've got the strength of a builder gel with a full colour range to work from.
Does BIAB damage natural nails?
Applied and removed correctly, BIAB is one of the more nail-friendly options available. Damage happens when product is peeled or forced off rather than soaked, or when a technician over-files the nail plate during prep or removal. Those are technique problems, and they're avoidable.
What is the difference between BIAB and hard gel?
Soak-off vs file-off. BIAB is a soft gel that breaks down in acetone once the top layer is filed. Hard gel doesn't dissolve and must be filed off entirely. BIAB suits overlays on short to medium natural nails. If a client wants serious length and maximum rigidity, hard gel is the better tool.
Can a pregnant client have BIAB?
Many clients continue with gel services throughout pregnancy. The products are applied externally and don't absorb into the bloodstream. That said, pregnancy heightens sensitivity, so HEMA-free and TPO-free formulas are worth recommending for any client who is pregnant or who has shown previous sensitivity to standard gel products. Always suggest they check with their midwife or GP if they have any concerns.
Build Your Kit and Your Skills with Kohana Professional
Getting the technique right is half the job. The other half is working with a builder gel you can trust to perform consistently. Kohana Professional carries a full range of BIAB, including HEMA-free and TPO-free formulas, Probase, nail lamps, nail files, and everything else your kit needs.
Browse the full BIAB range at Kohana Professional and get everything you need in one order, delivered directly to your door across Ireland.
If you are new to the industry or looking to build your confidence with BIAB technique from the ground up, our beginner nail technician courses cover the full application process, product knowledge, and client care in a structured, practical format. Explore the course options and take the next step in your nail career.
Get in touch with the Kohana Professional team and we'll get back to you.
The biggest mistake with BIAB is treating it like gel polish. It is not a colour product with a thick formula. It is a building product with a specific technique. Learn that distinction properly and your sets will last, your clients will return, and lifting becomes a problem you used to have.