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StateCosmetologyBoard

North Carolina Cosmetology License Requirements

Information verified:
Training Hours Exam Requirements Renewal Info
Training Hours
1,500 hours
Exam Provider
NIC / Prov
Application Fee
$49.00
Renewal Fee
$49.00
Renewal Period
3 years
Renewal Portal

How to Get a Cosmetology License in North Carolina

Getting your North Carolina cosmetologist license requires completing 1,500 hours of approved training, passing NIC examinations administered by Prov, and submitting your license application to the NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners. Here is the step-by-step process.

  1. Enroll in a board-approved cosmetic art school. Your school must be licensed by the NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners. A list of all licensed schools is available at nccosmeticarts.com. Since August 2024, new enrollments are processed through the board's electronic Enrollment Access Hub.
  2. Complete 1,500 hours of approved training. Your school will certify your hours, verify completion of all required service performances, and submit your graduation form directly to the board. You cannot apply for exams until the board receives your graduation paperwork.
  3. Register for examinations through Prov. After the board receives your graduation form, register at provexam.com. Click "Schedule a Test," select North Carolina and NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners, then choose your license type and exam language. Your school must approve your registration before you can schedule. You must apply within 3 months of your graduation date.
  4. Pass the NIC written and practical examinations. A minimum score of 75% is required on both the written and practical exams for cosmetologists. The practical exam is administered in English only. Multiple examiners evaluate each candidate. Review the Candidate Information Bulletin (CIB) at provexam.com under "Learn About My Test."
  5. Apply for your license. After passing both exams, apply online via the Online License Application or by mail. The license fee is $49. Licenses are issued and mailed within 5–10 business days after receipt of a completed application and payment.

Temporary permit option: After graduation, you may work under a temporary permit ($5 fee) while awaiting your exam results. You must have applied for your exam through Prov within 3 months of graduation. Permits are valid for 6 months from graduation and cannot be renewed.

Training Requirements

North Carolina requires 1,500 hours of cosmetic art training at a board-licensed school for the cosmetologist license. The curriculum must cover all areas tested on the NIC examinations and meet the board's educational standards defined in 21 NCAC 14T. Students must also complete all required service performances as specified in board rules before graduating.

Cosmetology Curriculum Areas

  • Hair services: Cutting, styling, chemical texture services, coloring, and scalp treatments
  • Skin care: Facials, makeup application, waxing, and hair removal
  • Nail care: Manicures, pedicures, and nail enhancements
  • Infection control: Board sanitation regulations, disinfection procedures, blood exposure protocols, and safe chemical handling
  • North Carolina law: Chapter 88B statutes, board rules (21 NCAC Chapter 14), and professional conduct standards

Training must begin with infection control and blood exposure procedures. Schools submit graduation forms directly to the board — students cannot self-report hours. Since August 2024, the board's Enrollment Access Hub handles enrollment documentation electronically.

Apprentice Cosmetologist Pathway

North Carolina offers an apprentice cosmetologist license requiring 1,200 hours of school-based training. This is not an on-the-job apprenticeship — all apprentice cosmetologists must graduate from a licensed cosmetic art school. The apprentice license allows limited services and requires only a 70% passing score (vs. 75% for full cosmetologist). Apprentices may later qualify for a full cosmetologist license by completing the additional training hours or work experience.

Other License Types

  • Esthetician: 600 hours in an approved esthetics curriculum
  • Manicurist: 300 hours in an approved manicuring curriculum
  • Natural Hair Care Specialist: 300 hours in an approved NHC curriculum

There are no apprenticeships for manicuring, esthetics, or natural hair care — only the cosmetology pathway offers an apprentice option.

Cosmetology Exam Requirements

North Carolina uses the NIC (National Interstate Council) examination system administered by Prov. Applicants must pass both a written theory exam and a practical skills exam. North Carolina has used NIC examinations since October 1, 2007.

Passing Score Requirements

  • Cosmetologist: 75% on both written and practical
  • Apprentice Cosmetologist: 70% on both written and practical
  • Esthetician: 75% on both written and practical
  • Manicurist: 75% on both written and practical
  • Natural Hair Care Specialist: 75% on both written and practical
  • Teacher: 85% on both written and practical

Registering for Examinations

After your school submits your graduation form to the board, register at provexam.com. Click "Schedule a Test" → "Start Scheduling" under Self-Registration. Select North Carolina and "NC – Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners" as your certifying body. Choose your license type and written exam language. Your school must approve your registration before you can schedule a test date. You must register within 3 months of graduation and after your graduation date.

Written Examination

The NIC written exam tests cosmetology sciences, sanitation, infection control, and North Carolina law. The written exam is available in English and Spanish. Once approved by your school, you will receive a voucher email from Prov to schedule your exam date and select a testing center.

Practical Examination

The NIC practical exam evaluates hands-on skills in a controlled setting. Practical exams are conducted in English only. Multiple examiners rotate so each candidate is evaluated by different examiners. Proctors read verbal instructions while candidates perform tasks. Review the Candidate Information Bulletin (CIB) at provexam.com for required supplies and procedures.

Rescheduling and Contact

You may reschedule your exam free of charge if you notify Prov at least 3 business days before your scheduled test date. Contact Prov at (866) 720-7768 (toll-free), (801) 733-4455 (call or text), or NCSupport@provexam.com. Hours: Monday–Friday, 8:00 AM – 12:00 AM (Midnight).

ADA Accommodations

Candidates requiring ADA accommodations must submit forms (available on the Prov homepage) to support@provexam.com. Accommodations must be approved prior to scheduling exams.

How to Renew Your North Carolina Cosmetology License

$49.00
Renewal Fee
3 years
Renewal Period
8 hrs
CE Hours Required

North Carolina cosmetologist licenses renew on a three-year cycle with a renewal fee of $49. Other license types have shorter cycles: esthetician, manicurist, natural hair care specialist, and apprentice licenses renew annually at $20; teacher licenses renew every 2 years at $20.

Continuing Education — 8 Hours Per Year

North Carolina requires 8 hours of CE per year of the license cycle — not just in the renewal year. At least 50% (4 hours) must be directly related to your cosmetic art discipline. The remaining hours may cover business practices, customer service, or other approved topics. Instructors must have at least 50% in teacher training techniques.

Acceptable CE includes: learning a new skill from another professional, educational videos or tutorials, correspondence or online courses, and hands-on classes. The board provides free CE classes for each license type on its website. CE records are kept by the licensee — the board does not receive reported hours from providers. You submit records only if selected for audit.

CE Exemptions

  • 20-year cosmetologist exemption: Licensed cosmetologists with at least 20 consecutive years of experience may apply for CE exemption
  • Age 60 + 10-year exemption: Licensees age 60 or older with 10 years of continuous work experience may apply (does not apply to teacher licenses)

Renewal Window and Late Fees

The cosmetologist renewal window opens July 1 and closes October 1 of the expiration year. A $10 late fee applies if postmarked after October 1. After November 1, an additional $25 reinstatement fee is required. You may renew online or by mail.

How to Renew

  1. Complete 8 hours of CE per year of your license cycle and retain date, location, and description records.
  2. Log in to the board's online portal at nccosmeticarts.com using the numeric portion of your license number.
  3. Affirm CE completion and pay the renewal fee ($49 cosmetologist, $20 other types).

Renewing by mail is also available using the Personal License Renewal Application. Mail payment must be by money order or certified check.

Other Cosmetology License Types in North Carolina

The NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners regulates multiple practitioner license types, each with different training requirements, passing scores, and renewal cycles.

License Type Training Hours Passing Score In-State Fee Out-of-State Fee Renewal Cycle
Cosmetologist 1,500 75% $49 $64 3 years
Apprentice Cosmetologist 1,200 70% $20 $35 Annual
Esthetician 600 75% $20 $35 Annual
Manicurist 300 75% $20 $35 Annual
Natural Hair Care Specialist 300 75% $20 $35 Annual
Teacher (Cosmetology) 800 85% $20 $35 2 years
Teacher (Esthetics) 650 85% $20 $35 2 years
Teacher (Manicuring/NHC) 320 85% $20 $35 2 years

All license types require passing NIC examinations administered by Prov at provexam.com. CE of 8 hours per year applies to all active licenses. Teachers may alternatively qualify with 1 year of full-time work experience in a cosmetic art shop immediately prior to application (in lieu of teacher school hours) but must still pass the teacher exam at 85%.

Natural Hair Care Specialist Scope

The NHC license permits services that result in tension on hair strands or roots — twisting, wrapping, extending, locking, braiding, cornrows, and track-and-sew weft hair. It does not permit chemical services, heat styling as a standalone service, haircuts, or use of chemical adhesives for extensions. Licensure has been required since July 1, 2015.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many training hours does North Carolina require for a cosmetology license?
North Carolina requires 1,500 hours at an approved cosmetic art school for a cosmetologist license, or 1,200 hours for an apprentice cosmetologist license. Estheticians need 600 hours; manicurists and natural hair care specialists each require 300 hours. All programs must be completed at a board-licensed school.
Who administers the NC cosmetic arts exam?
NIC (National Interstate Council) examinations are administered by Prov. Register at provexam.com after your school submits your graduation form to the board. Contact Prov at (866) 720-7768 or NCSupport@provexam.com.
What is the passing score for the NC cosmetology exam?
Cosmetologists, estheticians, manicurists, and natural hair care specialists must score 75% on both written and practical exams. Apprentice cosmetologists need 70%. Teachers require 85%. Practical exams are conducted in English only.
How many CE hours does North Carolina require?
North Carolina requires 8 CE hours per year of the license cycle for all active license holders. At least 4 hours must be cosmetic art-related. The board provides free CE classes on its website. Records are kept by the licensee and submitted only if audited.
Does North Carolina offer reciprocity from other states?
Yes. You must hold a current license (not a registration or certificate) in good standing. Some states require a certification letter sent to the board first; others allow direct application. Out-of-state cosmetologist fee is $64; other license types are $35. Military members and spouses from all states qualify with no fee.
What is a Natural Hair Care Specialist license?
The NHC license (required since July 1, 2015) permits services resulting in tension on hair — braiding, cornrows, locks, twists, and sew-in extensions. It does not permit chemical services, haircuts, or heat styling as a standalone service. Requires 300 hours and a 75% exam score.
How do I verify a North Carolina cosmetic arts license?
Use the board's free verification tool at nccosmeticarts.com/onlineservices/Verification.aspx. Search by name or license number.