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Oregon Cosmetology License Requirements

Information verified:
Training Hours Exam Requirements Renewal Info
Training Hours
1,110 hours
Exam Provider
Oregon Health Licensing Office (in-office walk-in)
Application Fee
$30.00
Renewal Fee
$65.00
Renewal Period
2 years
Renewal Portal

How to Get a Cosmetology License in Oregon

Oregon does not issue a single "cosmetologist" license. Instead, the Oregon Health Licensing Office (HLO) certifies practitioners separately in five fields of practice: Hair Design, Barber, Esthetician, Nail Technologist, and Natural Hair Care. The path below describes how to earn an Oregon practitioner certification in any field of practice using Pathway One — graduation from an Oregon school. Reciprocity and non-credentialed pathways are summarized at the end.

  1. Enroll in a Board-approved Oregon school. Choose either an hourly school under OAR Chapter 817 or a competency-based school under OAR Chapter 119/193. Each field of practice has its own curriculum hours, plus 20 hours of Oregon Laws and Rules and 20 hours of Career Development that apply to every field.
  2. Complete the field-specific training. Hair Design requires 1,110 hours and 455 practical operations; Barber 746 hours and 465 operations; Esthetics 444 hours and 220 operations; Nail Technology 241 hours and 70 operations. Natural Hair Care requires completion of the HLO-issued training module rather than a fixed school program.
  3. Pass the Board-approved practical examination at your school. The school administers the practical and forwards your passing score directly to HLO. Practical scores are valid for five years from the date you passed.
  4. Submit documents to HLO. Your school sends the official transcript and practical score to HLO. You bring the completed Cosmetology Practitioner Certification Application, two original government-issued IDs (one photographic), and your application fee to HLO in Salem.
  5. Sit for the written examinations at HLO. Walk-in only, Monday–Friday, 9:00 AM cutoff for full-day testing and 1:00 PM hard cutoff for single exams. Each field of practice exam is $45 plus a $45 Oregon Laws and Rules exam. You have 90 minutes per exam. Both must be passed within two years of the application date.
  6. Pay the certification fee and receive your certificate. The original certification fee is $35 per field of practice. Once you pass and pay, HLO issues your certificate the same day. The certificate is valid for two years from issuance.

Pathway Two — Reciprocity: out-of-state license holders submit an Affidavit of Licensure (or arrange direct verification from their home state board), pay a $100 reciprocity application fee plus a $65 original-cert-by-reciprocity fee per field, and pass each field of practice written exam plus the Oregon Laws and Rules exam. Pathway Three — Non-Credentialed: applicants with foreign or undocumented training contact a Board-approved Oregon school for a documentation review, skills assessment, and practical evaluation before being approved to sit for the written exams.

Training Requirements

Oregon's Board of Cosmetology adopted a tiered curriculum where each field of practice has its own training-hour requirement, in addition to a shared core of 20 hours of Oregon Laws and Rules and 20 hours of Career Development that every cosmetology student must complete. Hours are earned at Board-approved hourly schools under OAR Chapter 817 or competency-based schools under OAR Chapter 119/193.

Hours by Field of Practice

  • Hair Design — 1,110 hours, 455 practical operations. The longest cosmetology curriculum in Oregon, covering cutting, styling, chemical services (color, dyeing, relaxing, permanent waves), shampooing, conditioning, scalp treatments, and braiding.
  • Barber — 746 hours, 465 practical operations. Shaving, beard trimming, haircutting, styling, and shampooing. Oregon barbers cannot perform chemical services — that scope is reserved for Hair Designers, which is one of the most specific scope distinctions in any state's beauty regulation.
  • Esthetician — 444 hours, 220 practical operations. Skin cleansing and exfoliation, facials, manual and machine hair removal, makeup, and body wrapping. Becoming a Certified Advanced Esthetician (a separate credential under the Board of Certified Advanced Estheticians) requires you to first hold an active Oregon esthetics certification.
  • Nail Technologist — 241 hours, 70 practical operations. Manicures, pedicures, polish, color, and artificial nail application, sculpting, and removal.
  • Natural Hair Care. Complete the HLO-issued Natural Hair Care Training Module and earn the certificate of completion. There is no fixed school-hour requirement for Natural Hair Care, but the candidate must still pass a written examination at HLO.

Competency-Based vs. Hourly Schools

Oregon is one of the few states that formally recognizes both hourly programs (which track time-in-seat) and competency-based programs (which credit the student once they demonstrate proficiency, regardless of clock hours). Competency-based programs operate under OAR Chapter 119 (cosmetology) and OAR Chapter 193 (esthetics), so a student in a competency-based program may finish in less calendar time than a peer in an hourly school while still meeting the same operational and skill requirements before taking the practical exam.

Career Development and Laws & Rules

Every cosmetology student in Oregon — across all five fields of practice — must complete 20 hours of Career Development and 20 hours of Oregon Laws and Rules during school. Career Development covers booking, client communication, payment systems, salon business operations, and ethics. Oregon Laws and Rules walks through ORS Chapter 690 and OAR Chapter 817, the same source material the state will quiz you on at HLO using a separate $45 written examination.

Cosmetology Exam Requirements

Oregon stands out among U.S. states by handling its written examinations in-house at HLO in Salem rather than through a national vendor like PSI, Pearson VUE, or Prov. Every Oregon practitioner must pass two written exams: the field of practice exam ($45) and the Oregon Laws and Rules exam ($45). The practical exam, by contrast, is administered by your school, not by HLO.

Walk-In Written Examinations

Written exams are conducted on a walk-in basis Monday through Friday at HLO, 1430 Tandem Ave. NE, Suite 180, Salem, OR 97301-2192. The lobby is open 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, but the testing cutoff is 1:00 PM — applicants who arrive after 1:00 PM are turned away and must come back another day. You are allowed 90 minutes per exam, so plan accordingly:

  • One field of practice + Laws and Rules: arrive between 9:00 AM and 11:00 AM.
  • Two field of practice exams + Laws and Rules: arrive by 9:00 AM.
  • Three or four field of practice exams in a single day: arrive at 9:00 AM and be ready to test immediately; this is the maximum a single applicant can attempt in one day.

Bring two original government-issued IDs — one must be photographic — with names matching your application. Question banks for field exams come from the Milady and Pivot Point textbook series. To prepare for the Laws and Rules exam, study the Practitioner Application Information Packet and the Oregon Cosmetology Laws and Rules.

Languages and Accommodations

HLO offers the field of practice exams (barbering, hair design, nail technology, esthetics) and the Oregon Laws and Rules exam in English, Spanish, and Vietnamese. Applicants whose primary language is not English may receive additional time on English-administered exams; with extra time and three field exams plus Laws and Rules, HLO will spread the testing across two days. ADA accommodations are available by submitting an HLO Accommodation Request Form in advance.

Practical Examination

The practical examination is administered at your Board-approved Oregon school as part of the school program. The school evaluates skills against the Board-approved practical rubric and forwards your passing score directly to HLO. Practical scores remain valid for five years; if you don't apply within five years of passing, you must retake the practical at a school. Reciprocity applicants typically have the practical waived once HLO accepts equivalency.

Retake Policy

If you fail a written exam, you may retake it the next business day, up to ten failed attempts. After ten failed attempts on a single exam, the Board may require additional school hours and practical operations before letting you retest.

How to Renew Your Oregon Cosmetology License

$65.00
Renewal Fee
2 years
Renewal Period

Each Oregon practitioner certification is valid for two years from the date of issuance and expires on the last day of the issuance month. Renewal costs $65 per field of practice, and there is no traditional continuing education requirement — only a bloodborne pathogens training attestation that took effect July 1, 2025.

Renewing Online

HLO mails a courtesy renewal notice approximately six weeks before expiration, but the responsibility to renew on time is yours. Online renewal is at apps.oregon.gov/ECommerce/OHLA. You will need your license number and your assigned personal identification number (PIN); PINs do not change. If you have lost yours, retrieve it at elite.hlo.state.or.us/OHLOPublicR/LPRBrowser.aspx using the email HLO has on file. Online renewal opens 45 days before expiration. You cannot renew online if your authorization has already expired (after 11:59 PM on the expiration date) — at that point, you must mail an Authorization Holder Information Update form along with the renewal fee and applicable late fees.

Bloodborne Pathogens Training

All cosmetology certification holders renewing on or after July 1, 2025 must complete and maintain current bloodborne pathogens (BBP) training. The training is valid for one year and may be completed online or in person. During renewal you simply attest that you have current BBP training; you don't have to upload a certificate, but you must be able to produce proof if HLO asks.

Late Renewal and Inactive Status

If you do not renew by your expiration date, your certificate moves into inactive status and you may no longer legally provide services. There is a three-year reinstatement window: pay the current renewal fee plus a $50 delinquency fee for each year you were expired (capped at three years). After three years inactive, the certificate is no longer reactivatable — you must reapply, pay all application and certification fees, and pass both the practical and the written examinations again before HLO will issue a new certification.

Independent Contractor and Freelance Renewals

Independent contractor registrations and freelance authorizations work differently: they renew annually for $140 each, and if not renewed they go dormant rather than inactive. Dormant authorizations don't expire — to reactivate one, contact HLO directly.

Other Cosmetology License Types in Oregon

The Oregon Board of Cosmetology issues five distinct practitioner certifications, each requiring its own application, training, written exam, and certification fee. There is no umbrella cosmetology license — practitioners must certify in every field they want to practice. Three additional cosmetology business and contractor authorizations cover where and how a certified practitioner may legally provide services.

Hair Design (1,110 hours, 455 practical operations)

The broadest hair-services scope in Oregon: cutting, styling, chemical services (color, dyeing, relaxing, permanent waves), shampooing, conditioning, and braiding. Application $30, original certification $35, biennial renewal $65. Hair Designers are the only Oregon practitioners authorized to perform chemical services on hair.

Barber (746 hours, 465 practical operations)

Shaving, beard trimming, haircutting, styling, and shampooing. Oregon barbers cannot perform chemical services — that distinction is built into Oregon's scope statutes and is more restrictive than barbering scope in many other states. Application $30, certification $35, renewal $65.

Esthetician (444 hours, 220 practical operations)

Skin cleansing and exfoliation, facials, hair removal (manual and machine, including waxing), makeup, and body wrapping. Esthetics is a prerequisite for advanced (non-ablative) esthetics, which is regulated separately by the Board of Certified Advanced Estheticians. Application $30, certification $35, renewal $65.

Nail Technologist (241 hours, 70 practical operations)

Manicures, pedicures, polish, color, tinting, and artificial nail application, sculpting, and removal — both natural and artificial nails on hands and feet. Oregon's 241-hour requirement is among the lower nail technology hour minimums in the country. Application $30, certification $35, renewal $65.

Natural Hair Care

A separate certification for braiding, twisting, locking, and natural styling without chemical services. The applicant completes a board-issued training module rather than a fixed school program, then passes a written exam at HLO. Application $30, certification $35, renewal $65.

Business and Contractor Authorizations

  • Facility License — required for every salon, barbershop, or cosmetology establishment. $140 application, $155 annual renewal.
  • Temporary Facility Permit — operate a facility on a temporary basis for up to 30 consecutive days. $70 application, $140 permit.
  • Independent Contractor Registration — required for any practitioner who is not under the control and direction of a facility license holder. $70 application, $140 annual registration.
  • Freelance Authorization — written authorization to practice outside of or away from a licensed facility (mobile services, on-location, etc.). $35 application, $140 annual authorization.
  • Demonstration Permit — short-term permission to demonstrate techniques outside a licensed facility, for example at trade shows. $25 application, $50 permit.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many hours does Oregon require for a cosmetology license?
It depends on the field of practice. Hair Design requires 1,110 hours and 455 practical operations; Barber 746 hours and 465 operations; Esthetics 444 hours and 220 operations; Nail Technology 241 hours and 70 operations. Natural Hair Care requires completion of the HLO-issued training module. Every field also includes 20 hours of Oregon Laws and Rules and 20 hours of Career Development.
Does Oregon issue a single "cosmetology" license that covers everything?
No. Oregon explicitly does not offer an umbrella cosmetology certification. To practice in multiple disciplines you must apply, train, test, and pay separately for each field of practice — for example, both Hair Design and Esthetics if you want to do hair plus facials.
What is the minimum age to apply for an Oregon cosmetology license?
HLO does not publish a fixed minimum age on its public application pages. School admission age is set by each Board-approved school under OAR Chapter 817; in practice, applicants are typically at least 16 with high-school standing or equivalent. Confirm the age and education prerequisites with your chosen Oregon school before enrolling.
Where do I take the Oregon licensing exam?
Written exams are administered in person at the Health Licensing Office, 1430 Tandem Ave. NE, Suite 180, Salem, OR 97301-2192, on a walk-in basis Monday–Friday with a 1:00 PM testing cutoff. Each field of practice exam is $45, plus a $45 Oregon Laws and Rules exam. Available in English, Spanish, and Vietnamese.
What about the practical examination?
Your Board-approved Oregon school administers the practical and forwards your passing score directly to HLO. There is no separate state-level practical at HLO. Practical scores are valid for five years.
How much does it cost to get certified in Oregon?
The application fee is $30 per field of practice, plus a $45 written exam fee per field, plus a $45 Oregon Laws and Rules exam fee, plus the $35 original certification fee per field once you pass. A first-time hair design applicant pays roughly $30 + $45 + $45 + $35 = $155 in HLO fees, on top of school tuition.
How does Oregon reciprocity work?
Out-of-state license holders submit an Affidavit of Licensure or arrange direct verification from their home state. HLO determines whether the original training is substantially equivalent. Reciprocity applicants must still pass each Oregon field of practice written exam plus the Oregon Laws and Rules exam. Reciprocity application is $100 per field; original certification by reciprocity is $65 per field.
Does Oregon require continuing education?
No traditional CE hours are required. However, all cosmetology certification holders renewing on or after July 1, 2025 must complete and maintain current bloodborne pathogens (BBP) training, valid for one year. You attest to current BBP training during renewal — no certificate upload is required, but you must keep proof.