Your nails can reveal more about your health than many people realize. While ridges and streaks are often harmless, some nail changes may point to nutritional deficiencies, hormonal shifts, or medical conditions. The key is knowing which signs are normal and which deserve attention.
Vertical ridges are very common and usually appear with aging as nail growth naturally slows. Dryness, dehydration, harsh cleaning products, or low iron, zinc, and biotin levels can also make them more noticeable. Simple habits like moisturizing daily, drinking enough water, and eating foods rich in iron and healthy fats may help improve nail appearance over time.
Horizontal grooves, called Beau’s lines, are more concerning because they can signal interrupted nail growth after illness, surgery, high fever, severe stress, or poor nutrition. In some cases, they may also be linked to “Hypothyroidism, Diabetes, or circulation-related problems.” If these grooves suddenly appear on several nails or become deeper, doctors usually recommend medical evaluation.
White spots or streaks, known as leukonychia, are often caused by small injuries people barely notice. Sometimes they may also reflect low zinc or protein intake. Most isolated spots are harmless and disappear as the nail grows, but persistent streaks combined with fatigue or other symptoms may require blood testing to check nutritional health.
The most important warning sign is dark vertical streaks. While some are harmless pigmentation changes called melanonychia, others may rarely signal “Melanoma involving the nail.” New dark lines, widening streaks, uneven borders, or pigment spreading onto surrounding skin should be checked quickly by a dermatologist. Brittle nails, deep grooves, fatigue, hair thinning, and feeling unusually cold may also point to thyroid-related problems. As the article explains, “your nails can sometimes reflect broader health changes happening inside the body long before other symptoms become obvious.”