
Finger Free helps people interrupt nail biting, cuticle biting, finger biting, and skin picking around the nails.
If you keep damaging the same fingers while driving, studying, watching TV, scrolling at night, or sitting at a screen, you are not alone.
This is not just a bad habit. It is a repeat behavior pattern.
Finger Free was built to help interrupt that pattern earlier – before more damage happens.
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Finger Free App
Stop damaging your fingers. Train your hands to do something else.
No shame. No guilt. No empty motivation.
Finger Free is built around practical interruption and retraining.
What Finger Free Helps With
Finger Free is designed for people dealing with
- nail biting
- cuticle biting
- biting skin around nails
- tearing hangnails
- thumb biting
- finger scanning for rough edges
- repeated damage to the same fingers
These patterns often show up during stress, boredom, waiting, screen time, driving, studying, and bedtime.
How It Works
You feel the urge. You hit one button.
I FEEL IT
The app then gives you a short intervention designed to interrupt the loop in real time.
The goal is simple
- catch the urge earlier
- interrupt the behavior
- reduce repeated damage
- help your fingers finally heal
Why Finger Free Is Different
Most advice for nail biting is too vague.
Finger Free focuses on the actual pattern behind the habit
- trigger situations
- rough cuticles and rough nail edges
- repeated target fingers
- boredom and waiting
- thumb-focused biting
- the automatic loop that happens before the damage
It is built to be practical, direct, and useful in real life.
Start Here
- How FingerFree.app Helps Interrupt the Pattern
- Finger Nail Biting Case Studies
- How to Stop Biting Your Cuticles
- Finger Biting Trigger Checklist
- Why I Bite the Skin Around My Nails
- Common Body-focused Repetitive Behaviors
Created by Vern Lovic
Finger Free website and mobile app were created by Vern Lovic, who holds an MA in Rehabilitation Counseling from the University of South Florida and a BA in Psychology with an emphasis on studies in behavior modification.
Final Step
Stop waiting for willpower to fix a pattern that keeps repeating.
Start interrupting the pattern.
Buttons
- Get the iPhone App
- Start Free
Common Questions About Nail Biting and Skin Picking
Is nail biting a mental disorder?
Most of the time, no. Nail biting is usually a learned behavior loop, not a psychiatric diagnosis. In more severe cases it may overlap with anxiety or body-focused repetitive behaviors.
→ Read: Is Nail Biting a Mental Disorder?
Can nail biting cause permanent damage to nails or cuticles?
In aggressive long-term cases, repeated trauma can affect the nail matrix or cuticle area. Most mild cases do not cause permanent damage.
→ Read: Can Nail Biting Cause Permanent Damage?
What’s the difference between onychophagia and onychotillomania?
Onychophagia refers to nail biting. Onychotillomania refers to picking or tearing at nails or skin around the nails. Many people do a mix of both.
→ Read: Onychophagia vs Onychotillomania
Is biting the skin around my nails worse than biting the nail itself?
Skin picking and cuticle tearing can sometimes lead to more inflammation and infection than simple nail shortening.
→ Read: Swollen Fingertips and Damaged Cuticles
Is nail biting really a big deal?
For many adults, it’s mostly cosmetic and social. For others, it can become physically damaging.
→ Read: When Nail Biting Is Not a Big Deal — And When It Is
What If You Just CANNOT QUIT?
See Other Nail Biting / Skin Picking Acceptance posts
- It’s Not the End of the World!
- How to Stop Caring So Much About Your Fingers
If you haven’t downloaded Finger Free
on the Apple App Store – GET IT here >
