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No. You don’t have to have fingernails for fingerstyle guitar playing.
The real question is what kind of sound do you want?
How fingernails change your tone and volume
In classical and fingerstyle training, an instructor will typically encourage students to grow nails on their right hand (if playing a standard right-handed guitar) and shape them with a file so that rough edges are removed that could catch on strings.
Why? Fingernails give you more volume and a more distinct, brighter sound. Your playing projects, especially if you are playing unplugged. Your fingernails do the work for you.

Playing fingerstyle without nails
The alternative is playing with bare fingers. You may like the softer, warmer tone this produces. The drawback is that the flesh of your fingertips carries the burden of producing the sound. You may experience tenderness or need to develop calluses.
I had one very smart, multi-talented high school classical guitar student who bit her nails as a habit. As much as I nagged her, she never did grow her nails in the time I worked with her. However, she was able to really dig in with her fingertips on the nylon strings and produce a nice sound in spite of this.
With amplification via an electric, acoustic, or classical guitar, your volume issue would be solved. Then it would come down to preference. Many players experiment with both approaches before settling on whether or not to use fingernails for fingerstyle guitar.
Examples of well-known fingerstyle approaches
James Taylor is a good example of a fingerstyle guitarist who uses fingernails. He’s shared that he grows them out and reinforces them with fiberglass tape or acrylic to get his characteristic bright, clean tone. While many fans have speculated that he wears metal fingerpicks, he says they can fall off and make it harder to feel the strings.
Examples of guitarists who do not use fingernails for fingerstyle guitar are world-renowned fingerstyle guitarist Tommy Emmanuel and electric guitar icon Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits, who plays his electric guitar fingerstyle—no picks or long nails.
Nails vs no nails — quick summary
Here’s a quick recap of the differences in using fingernails for fingerstyle guitar or not:
- No nails = warmer, more mellow tone
- Nails = brighter, more defined notes
- Hybrid approaches are common
If your nails are fragile or inconsistent, don’t fret. Fingerstyle guitar is still completely doable without them. You choose!
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