Brand ingredient check

Is Beetles HEMA-Free?

Beetles is mixed: 4 of 6 database products are marked HEMA-free and 2 are not. Beetles has many budget gel products and kits; the HEMA answer is product-specific, not brand-wide.

Target query: is Beetles HEMA free. Last updated: May 23, 2026. This is educational ingredient information, not medical advice.

Direct Answer

Ingredient Status for Beetles Why it matters
HEMA Detected in 2 of 6 database products Methacrylate allergen or cross-reactive sensitizer to check before use.
HPMA Not detected in disclosed ingredient lists Methacrylate allergen or cross-reactive sensitizer to check before use.
TPO Not detected in disclosed ingredient lists Photoinitiator with EU regulatory restrictions from 2025.
MMA Not detected in disclosed ingredient lists Acrylic monomer associated with nail damage and contact dermatitis concerns.

Beetles Products Checked

6 products in the database.

View standard brand page

Ingredient Sources

Beetles entries use disclosed product listings and are marked by confidence level on each product page. Source grades follow the public BuilderGel.app methodology.

HEMA-free means HEMA was not detected in the disclosed ingredient list we reviewed. It does not mean the product is free from every acrylate, methacrylate, photoinitiator, or allergy risk.

Product Source Grade
Beetles Builder Gel Clear Amazon listing B · 2026-05-06
Beetles Builder Gel Nude Amazon listing B · 2026-05-06
Beetles Gel Top Coat — No Wipe Product label or submitted source B · Not dated
Beetles BIAB Builder Gel Amazon listing B · 2026-05-06
Beetles Poly Gel Kit Product label or submitted source B · Not dated
Beetles Gel Builder — Clear Product label or submitted source B · Not dated

HEMA-Free Alternatives

These products are marked HEMA-free in the database. They are lower-risk starting points, not allergy-proof choices.

Medical and Formula Disclaimer

This page is not medical advice. Ingredient lists can change, Amazon listings can lag behind packaging, and HEMA-free claims do not rule out HPMA, Di-HEMA TMHDC, TPO, IBOA, cyanoacrylates, or other allergy triggers. If you have redness, itching, swelling, peeling, nail lifting, or facial/eyelid symptoms after gel use, stop using the product and ask a healthcare professional.