How to Start a Hair Salon in Kansas (2026)



Last updated: February 25, 2026

Starting a hair salon in Kansas requires a cosmetologist license from the Kansas Board of Cosmetology (KBOC) and a separate establishment license for your salon location. Kansas requires 1,500 hours of cosmetology school, passing both a written and practical exam (total $150 in exam fees), and paying a $60 individual license fee. The salon establishment license is also $60. This guide covers every requirement to legally open and operate a hair salon in Kansas in 2026.

Hair Salon Requirements in Kansas at a Glance

Requirement Agency Cost Timeline
Cosmetology School (1,500 hours) KBOC-accredited school $8,000-$18,000 12-18 months
Written Cosmetology Exam Exam provider via KBOC $75 Pass at 1,000+ hours of school
Practical Cosmetology Exam Exam provider via KBOC $75 Pass after 1,420+ hours of school
Individual Cosmetologist License Kansas Board of Cosmetology $60 2-4 weeks after passing exams
Salon Establishment License Kansas Board of Cosmetology $60 2-4 weeks after inspection
LLC Formation (recommended) Kansas Secretary of State $160 online 2-3 business days
General Liability Insurance Private insurer $500-$1,500/year 1-3 business days

How to Start a Hair Salon in Kansas (Step by Step)


Step 1: Complete Cosmetology School (1,500 Hours)

Kansas requires cosmetologists to complete 1,500 hours of training at a KBOC-accredited cosmetology school before applying for a license.

What you’ll learn in cosmetology school:

  • Hair cutting, styling, coloring, chemical treatments (perms, relaxers)
  • Scalp and hair care treatments
  • Skin care and facial treatments
  • Nail care (manicures and pedicures)
  • Sanitation, disinfection, and infection control
  • Kansas cosmetology laws and professional ethics
  • Business practices and client management

Exam timing:

  • Written exam: you may take it after completing 1,000 hours of school
  • Practical exam: you may take it after completing 1,420 hours of school

School cost: $8,000-$18,000 total, depending on the school and program format. Financial aid (federal student loans) may be available at accredited schools.

Step 2: Pass the Cosmetology Exams

Kansas requires passing both a written and a practical exam through a KBOC-approved exam provider:

Written exam:

  • Fee: $75
  • Passing score: 75%
  • Content: Kansas cosmetology laws, safety and sanitation, hair care theory, skin care, nail care
  • Available through KBOC-approved exam providers (check kboc.kansas.gov for current providers)

Practical exam:

  • Fee: $75
  • Passing score: 75%
  • Content: Hands-on demonstration of hair cutting, chemical services, sanitation procedures, and other practical skills

Total exam cost: $150

If you fail either exam, you may retake it after paying the applicable exam fee again. Check with KBOC for retake waiting periods.

Step 3: Apply for Your Individual Cosmetologist License

After passing both exams, apply to the Kansas Board of Cosmetology (KBOC):

Contact:

  • Website: kboc.kansas.gov
  • Phone: (785) 296-3155
  • Email: KBOC@ks.gov
  • Address: 2420 NW Button Rd, Topeka, KS 66618

Application requirements:

  • Completed license application form
  • Proof of passing both written and practical exams
  • Proof of completing 1,500 hours of cosmetology school
  • Initial license fee: $60

Temporary permit: While waiting for your license, KBOC offers a temporary permit ($15) that allows you to work under supervision.

License renewal: Licenses renew biennially (every 2 years). Renewal fee: $60 (on time) or $75 (late, within grace period). Kansas does not require continuing education hours for cosmetology license renewal.

Step 4: Form Your LLC

File Articles of Organization with the Kansas Secretary of State online for $160. An LLC protects your personal assets from business liabilities including customer injury claims, product liability, and general business debts. Processing takes 2-3 business days online.

File at: Kansas SOS Business Center

Step 5: Find and Set Up Your Salon Location

Your salon must meet KBOC facility requirements to obtain an establishment license. Key requirements:

  • Adequate ventilation and lighting at each workstation
  • Wet disinfection containers at each workstation
  • A shampoo bowl with running hot and cold water
  • Covered waste containers
  • Separate storage for clean and dirty/contaminated supplies
  • An autoclave or dry heat sterilizer if performing services with skin penetration
  • A restroom accessible to clients
  • Adequate space between workstations (typically 6 feet)

You’ll also need a commercial lease agreement and any local building permits required by your city for salon use of the space.

Step 6: Apply for a Salon Establishment License

Once your salon is set up, apply to KBOC for an Establishment License:

Application fee: $60

Process:

Renewal: Establishment license renewal fee: $50 (on time) / $80 (late within 60 days after expiration). Establishments without current licenses must cease operations.

Each location where you offer cosmetology services requires its own establishment license. Mobile services (bridal hair) are regulated separately – check with KBOC.

Step 7: Register for Sales Tax (If Selling Products)

Salon services in Kansas are not subject to sales tax. This is a business-friendly advantage – you do not charge sales tax on haircuts, coloring, styling, or other personal services.

Retail product sales are taxable. If you sell shampoo, conditioner, styling products, or other retail items to clients, register for a free sales tax permit with KDOR and collect 6.5% state sales tax plus applicable local rates on product sales.

Register at: Kansas Department of Revenue – Business Registration

Step 8: Get Business Insurance

  • General liability insurance — Covers customer slip-and-fall accidents, chemical burns, property damage. Cost: $500-$1,500/year.
  • Professional liability insurance — Covers claims of negligence or unsatisfactory results from hair services. Often bundled with general liability for salons.
  • Workers’ compensation — Required once annual payroll exceeds $20,000 (once you hire employees).
  • Property insurance — Covers your salon equipment, furniture, and inventory.

Hiring Cosmetologists for Your Salon

All cosmetologists working in your Kansas salon must hold a current individual cosmetologist license from KBOC. You can hire them as employees or rent them booth space as independent contractors (the most common model in the salon industry).

Booth rental considerations:

  • Booth renters are self-employed; they pay you rent for their station
  • Each booth renter must hold their own individual KBOC license
  • The salon must maintain its KBOC establishment license regardless of whether stylists are employees or renters
  • Ensure booth rental agreements clearly establish the independent contractor relationship

Cost to Start a Hair Salon in Kansas

Item Cost Notes
Cosmetology school (1,500 hours) $8,000-$18,000 Financial aid may be available
Written exam $75 KBOC-approved provider; 75% passing score
Practical exam $75 KBOC-approved provider; 75% passing score
Individual cosmetologist license $60 Kansas Board of Cosmetology; biennial renewal $60
Salon establishment license $60 KBOC; biennial renewal $50
LLC formation $160 Kansas Secretary of State (online)
Salon buildout and equipment $10,000-$50,000 Styling chairs, shampoo bowls, mirrors, hood dryers, reception desk
General and professional liability insurance $500-$2,000/year Combined salon policy
First and last month’s rent + deposit $3,000-$9,000 Commercial space; varies by location and size
Initial product inventory $1,000-$3,000 Color, chemicals, retail products
Marketing and signage $500-$2,000 Logo, website, social media, salon sign

Estimated total startup cost (beyond school): $16,000 – $85,000


Related Kansas Business Guides

← Back to all Kansas business guides

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get a cosmetology license in Kansas?

To get a Kansas cosmetology license: (1) Complete 1,500 hours at a KBOC-accredited school. (2) Pass the written exam ($75; eligible after 1,000 hours) with 75%+. (3) Pass the practical exam ($75; eligible after 1,420 hours) with 75%+. (4) Apply to KBOC with the $60 license fee. Total licensing cost (excluding school): $210.

How much does it cost to open a hair salon in Kansas?

Opening a salon in Kansas (beyond cosmetology school) typically costs $16,000-$85,000. Major costs include salon buildout and equipment ($10,000-$50,000), LLC formation ($160), KBOC establishment license ($60), insurance ($500-$2,000/year), first month’s rent and deposit ($3,000-$9,000), and product inventory ($1,000-$3,000).

Do I need a separate license for my salon location in Kansas?

Yes. In addition to your individual cosmetologist license, you must obtain a separate Salon Establishment License from KBOC for each physical location where you operate. The establishment license application fee is $60. A KBOC inspector must visit and approve the facility before the license is issued.

Are salon services subject to sales tax in Kansas?

No. Cosmetology services (haircuts, coloring, styling, perms, etc.) are not subject to Kansas sales tax. However, retail product sales (shampoo, conditioner, styling products) are taxable. Register for a free KDOR sales tax permit if you sell any retail products, and collect 6.5% state sales tax plus local rates on those sales only.

Does Kansas require continuing education for cosmetology license renewal?

No. Kansas does not require continuing education (CE) hours for cosmetology license renewal. Simply pay the $60 biennial renewal fee by the renewal date to keep your license current. The KBOC does offer voluntary CE opportunities for professional development.

Can I hire independent contractor stylists for my Kansas salon?

Yes. Booth rental (having stylists rent stations as independent contractors) is common in Kansas salons. Each booth renter must hold their own individual KBOC cosmetologist license. Your salon establishment license remains the salon owner’s responsibility regardless of whether stylists are employees or booth renters. Consult an employment attorney to ensure your booth rental agreements properly establish the independent contractor relationship.


Robert Smith
About the Author

Robert Smith has run a licensed private investigation firm for 8 years from the Florida-Georgia state line - where he learned firsthand how wildly business licensing rules differ between states just miles apart. He personally researched requirements across all 50 states and D.C., reviewing hundreds of government sources over hundreds of hours to build guides he wished existed when he started. Not a lawyer or accountant - just a business owner who has done the research so you don't have to.