New Technology Claims to Kill Nail Fungus Directly Through the Nail — Our Team Tested for
6 Weeks to See if It's Real

By Sarah Thompson, Health & Wellness Editor

18 February 2026 — 09:45 AM

Nail fungus (onychomycosis) — hardly anyone talks about it openly, yet millions of people in the United Kingdom struggle with it. The treatment? Often lengthy, frustrating, and prone to relapses.

 

Recently, a new type of technology has been gaining attention — one that claims to treat nail fungus in a completely different way. No creams, no pills.

 

As a health editor, I'm naturally sceptical when it comes to so-called miracle solutions. We've seen too many bold promises that lead nowhere. But the science behind this one caught my attention — and I had to look closer.

The nail fungus industry makes billions from our shame

Nail fungus is far more than a cosmetic problem. For many people it becomes a daily burden — closed shoes in summer, avoiding the pool, the quiet embarrassment that never quite goes away.

 

The market is full of products promising relief. Creams, oils, lacquers, tablets — yet millions of people try one after another with little to show for it. The reason is simpler than you'd think.

 

The fungus doesn't sit on the surface of your nail. It lives underneath, hidden behind dense layers of keratin — the tough protein that makes your nail hard. Creams can't reach it. Lacquers evaporate before they get through. Even oral medication takes an indirect route through the bloodstream, with liver risks and a success rate of just 30–40%.

 

In short: most treatments are fighting in a place the fungus doesn't even live.

 

But recently, something caught my attention. A completely different approach — one that doesn't try to go around the nail or through the body, but directly through it.

The science behind it: what studies actually show

Published research in the National Library of Medicine confirms that specific wavelengths of light can penetrate the nail plate and disrupt fungal cells at a cellular level — without heat, without chemicals, without side effects.

 

One device currently uses this exact wavelength: NailHealth®. It's placed over the foot and emits precisely calibrated light for eight minutes. Painless, no preparation, no mess.

The expert behind the technology.

I was still cautious. A published study is one thing — real-world results are another. So I reached out to David Morgan, one of the UK's leading experts in nail fungus treatment and co-developer of the NailHealth® device.

 

I asked him one simple question: "Can you explain how it works — in a way anyone can understand?"

 

His reply:

David Morgan, UK Nail Fungus Expert & Co-Developer of NailHealth®

Title

Think of your nail as a thick pane of glass. The fungus lives behind that glass — not on the surface, but deep inside. Every cream, oil, and lacquer you've ever tried only cleans the outside of the glass. They never reach what's behind it. That's why they fail — not because they're bad products, but because they physically cannot get to where the fungus actually lives. What makes our device different is the wavelength. It's calibrated to pass directly through the glass and reach the fungus on the other side. Once there, it disrupts the fungal cells and allows healthy nail to grow back. No chemicals entering your body, no pain, no side effects. Just light doing what creams never could.

We put it to the test: our colleague's 6-week results

The science made sense. But I still wanted proof.

 

My colleague Laura (52) has been dealing with nail fungus for over four years. She'd tried creams, lacquers, even considered tablets but was put off by the side effects. When I told her about NailHealth, she was sceptical — but agreed to test it and document her progress weekly.

Week 1: No visible change. The nail looked exactly the same. Laura messaged me: "Are you sure this thing actually does anything?" I told her to keep going — the research suggested it takes time for the light to weaken the fungal structure beneath the nail.

Week 2: The first sign. The dark discolouration had softened slightly, especially in the centre. The edges were still affected, but the overall tone looked lighter. Not dramatic, but after four years of nothing working, it was the first visible progress.

Week 3-4: Now it was obvious. The discolouration was receding from the edges. Healthy nail tissue was growing through from the base — smooth and clear underneath the older damaged nail. Laura stopped asking whether it worked.

Week 5-6: The difference was undeniable. Discolouration remained only at the very tip — the last bit of old infected nail still growing out. The rest looked almost completely healthy. No pills. No side effects. No clinic visits. Just 8 minutes a day.

See the device Laura used

But will it work for everyone?

Laura's results were impressive. But one person's experience isn't enough — I wanted to know if this was a pattern.

 

So I looked beyond our own test. Independent forums, health discussion boards, podiatry groups — places where people have no reason to exaggerate.


What I found surprised me. Not because everyone had the same experience — they didn't. Some saw results after three weeks, others needed five or six. But the pattern was consistent: visible improvement in the majority of cases, and not a single report of side effects.

Diane 47, Birmingham

Clear nails again 

after 3 years of hiding

Haven't worn open shoes since 2022. Avoided the pool, avoided holidays, even skipped my friend's hen do in Mallorca because I couldn't bear to be barefoot. After about 4 weeks, the dark began to fade and a clearer nail grew through. It's now been 6 months since my nails cleared up completely. I booked a pedicure last week. The first one in three years. Cried in the chair, but honestly, I don't care. This thing has given me my feet back.

John 65, Manchester

First healthy nail

in over 10 years

Nearly didn't bother. Spent a fortune on lacquers, creams, even had a nail removed once. Grew back yellow. So when I saw NailHealth I thought yeah right, a little light for fungus, sure. Bought it anyway because it cost less than the prescription lacquers. First two weeks nothing. Then week three the base of my nail started growing in clear. First time in ten years. Eight minutes in front of the telly, no mess, no tablets.

Grace 73, Salisbury

3 nails fungus-free

after 5 weeks

At my age, you tend to just accept it. The fungus spread to three toes and I kept hiding my feet in thick socks. Didn't even tell my husband. When my daughter told me about NailHealth, I didn't expect much — but the device was much easier to use than expected. After about 5 weeks, my husband looked at my feet and said they looked different. That's when I knew it was finally working.

The feedback was consistent — different people, different ages, different severity. But the same pattern: visible improvement within weeks. That was enough to convince me personally. But as a journalist, I had one more question.

But is it the best option on the market?

The market for light-based nail fungus devices is small but growing. We compared NailHealth with several competing devices — the differences were clear.

 

What sets NailHealth apart is its 1064nm wavelength — the only wavelength clinically shown to penetrate the keratin barrier and reach the fungus beneath the nail. The competing devices use different wavelengths that simply don't penetrate deep enough. They may emit light, but it never reaches where the fungus actually lives.

 

NailHealth is a start-up with patented technology, which means supply is limited. The device is only available directly from the manufacturer and sells out fast — often within days. If you need one, don't wait.

 

Despite this, NailHealth was the clear winner in our test.

Is it worth the price?

NailHealth normally retails for £162.99. At first, our team thought that was steep — until we looked at what most people actually spend trying to treat nail fungus. Between creams, lacquers, podiatrist visits and GP appointments, it's not unusual to spend £300 or more on treatments that never work. A private laser clinic quoted us over £1,200 for a full course.

 

At the time of publishing, there's a 63% discount running — bringing it down

from £162.99 to £59.99.

 

What stood out to us: NailHealth offers a 365-day money-back guarantee. A full year to test it. If it doesn't work, full refund — no questions asked. In ten years of reviewing health products, we've rarely seen that level of confidence from a manufacturer.

Our verdict: is it real?

We started this investigation with one question: does this new technology actually work, or is it just another empty promise?

 

After reviewing the published research, speaking to the developer, testing it on a member of our own team for six weeks, and comparing it against every alternative on the market — our answer is clear.

 

It works. Not overnight, not like magic. But consistently, visibly, and without a single side effect.

 

NailHealth is the only device we've seen that addresses the actual reason nail fungus is so hard to treat: the keratin barrier. Everything else works around it. This goes through it.

 

If you've spent years trying treatments that never worked — this is worth trying. The 365-day guarantee means the only thing you risk is finally getting rid of it.

See if it's still in stock

 15 Comments

Sussan W. (65) Manchester

Honestly didn't expect much. Tried it after my sister wouldn't stop going on about it. Nails look noticeably better after about three weeks.

 

19. March  2026

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Margaret R. (57) Edinburgh

I am not someone who writes reviews. Ever. But after ten years of hiding my feet, I owe it to other women my age to say: by week four, the infected nail is nearly 90% healed.

 

17. March  2026

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Robert P. (71) Leeds 

My wife bought it for me because I refused to do anything about my feet for years. Three weeks later and I can actually see a difference. Don't tell her I said this but she was right.

 

16. March  2026

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Lindsay K. (63) Bristol

After years of embarrassment, I finally found something that actually works. Noticed a real difference after just a few weeks.

 

12. March  2026

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Brian S. (57) Birmingham

Does what it says. Simple as that. At my age I don't have patience for things that don't work – this one does.

 

9. March  2026

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Mareen D. (69) Nottingham

Rolled my eyes when I saw the ad. Ordered it thinking I'd be writing a very different review. Nails are clearing up and my only complaint is I wish I'd tried it sooner instead of wasting money on useless creams.

 

5. March  2026

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Claire L. (48) Sheffield

Thought it was a gimmick, turns out it isn't. Nail is growing back properly and looks 

almost normal.

 

26. February  2026

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Louise T. (68) Liverpool

Tried laser treatment privately, prescription tablets, every cream on the market. This was a last resort. One month on and it's the only thing that's ever actually made a difference.

 

22. February  2026

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Sophia W. (37) Glasgow

Worth every penny. Simple as that.

 

22. February  2026

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Colin H. (65) Cardiff

8 minutes a day and it actually works. Painless too – was expecting some burning sensation. Nothing like that. Just sits there and does its job.

 

20. February  2026

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Martin B. (72) Leicester

Five weeks in and still improving rather than fully healed. But the direction is clearly right after years of getting nowhere. No side effects either.

 

19. February  2026

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Richard N. (80) Newcastle

Genuinely embarrassing how long I put up with this. Works exactly as described. Wish I'd sorted it years ago.

 

18. February  2026

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Dorothea C. (61) Oxford

My granddaughter ordered this for me. Had no idea what it was meant to do at first! Nails are much better now – clearer and not so thick. Very pleased.

 

18. February  2026

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Joanna E. (37) Southampton

As a diabetic I can't take antifungal tablets. This has been a complete game changer. No pills, no side effects, just results. Actually cried when I saw my nail starting to clear up.

 

17. February  2026

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Andrew T. (54) Brighton

Wore sandals on the school run this week for the first time in years. Kids didn't even notice. I noticed.

 

13. February  2026

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See if it's still in stock