How to Start a Hair Salon in New York (2026)



Last updated: February 25, 2026

Starting a hair salon in New York requires both individual practitioner licensing and a separate business establishment license, both issued by the New York Department of State (DOS). New York regulates all salon-related professions under the umbrella term “Appearance Enhancement,” with five distinct license types requiring anywhere from 75 to 1,000 hours of approved schooling. The good news: New York does not require continuing education for license renewal, and the state fees are relatively low. This guide covers every step from cosmetology school to opening your doors.

Hair Salon Requirements in New York at a Glance

Requirement Agency Cost Timeline
Cosmetologist License (individual) NY DOS $40 app + $15 written + $15 practical After 1,000 hours schooling
Appearance Enhancement Business License NY DOS $60 4-year license
LLC Formation NY Department of State $200 2-3 business days
LLC Publication Requirement County Clerk + DOS $250-$1,550+ Within 120 days
Liability Insurance or Surety Bond Private Carrier $420-$740/year or $100-$500 bond Required for business license
Wage Bond (if nail services) Surety Company $25,000-$125,000 bond amount Required for nail service businesses
Workers’ Comp / DBL / PFL WCB / Carrier / NYSIF Varies Before hiring employees

How to Start a Hair Salon in New York (Step by Step)


Step 1: Get Your Cosmetology License

All salon practitioners in New York must be licensed by the NYS Department of State, Division of Licensing Services. New York offers five license types under the “Appearance Enhancement” umbrella:

License Type Required Hours Written Exam Practical Exam
Cosmetologist 1,000 hours Yes Yes
Esthetician 600 hours Yes Yes
Natural Hair Stylist 300 hours Yes Yes
Nail Specialist 250 hours Yes Yes
Waxing Specialist 75 hours Yes No

Exam details:

  • Written exam: Multiple-choice, 2.5 hours, ~100 questions, 70% to pass, $15
  • Practical exam: 3.5 hours, 70% to pass, $15 (not required for waxing)
  • Written exams available in 8-13 languages including English, Spanish, Chinese, Korean, and Russian
  • Results are pass/fail only, valid for 5 years
  • Must be at least 17 years old with a health certification from a physician

Total licensing cost per individual: $40 application + $15 written + $15 practical = $70 (plus optional $10 temporary license)

License term: 4 years. Renewal: $40. No continuing education required for renewal in New York.

Step 2: Form Your Business Entity

Register an LLC with the Department of State ($200). Complete the publication requirement within 120 days. Apply for a free federal EIN from the IRS.

Step 3: Get an Appearance Enhancement Business License

Every salon establishment must hold an Appearance Enhancement Business License from DOS:

  • Application fee: $60 (4-year license)
  • Renewal: $60 every 4 years
  • Owner must be 18+

Insurance or Bond Requirement (Mandatory)

You must maintain one of the following:

  • Option A – Liability Insurance: Professional/accidental or general liability with minimum $25,000 per occurrence and $75,000 aggregate
  • Option B – Surety Bond: $50,000 bond (1-year term, costs ~$100-$500/year depending on credit)

Wage Bond (Nail Salons)

If your business provides nail services, an additional wage bond is required based on the number of full-time nail providers:

Number of Nail Providers Bond Amount
2-5 employees $25,000
6-10 employees $40,000
11-25 employees $75,000
26+ employees $125,000

Step 4: Set Up Your Facility (Sanitation Compliance)

Your salon must comply with 19 NYCRR Part 160 (Appearance Enhancement Rules and Regulations):

  • Disinfectants: Must use EPA-registered “hospital grade disinfectant” (ethyl/isopropyl alcohol, quaternary ammonium, sodium hypochlorite, etc.)
  • Implements: Combs and brushes must be cleaned, rinsed, and immersed in disinfectant for at least 10 minutes after each client
  • Skin-penetrating implements: Must be single-use disposable OR sterilized (autoclave or 10+ hours in EPA liquid sterilant)
  • Facilities: Hot and cold running water, hand washing in all lavatories, fire code and sanitary code compliance
  • SDS sheets: Safety Data Sheets available for all chemicals used
  • Signage: Must post a sign at the entrance indicating state licensing

DOS provides a self-inspection checklist (Form DOS-2031) for business owners.

NYC Additional Requirements

  • Certificate of Occupancy from NYC Department of Buildings (confirms the space is approved for salon use)
  • FDNY pre-operational fire safety inspection
  • Price posting: All services and prices must be clearly displayed near the register
  • Refund policy: Must be posted at each register or entrance

Step 5: Get Insurance

Liability insurance (or a surety bond) is already required for the business license. If you hire employees, you also need:

  • Workers’ compensation – mandatory for all employers
  • Disability benefits (DBL) – mandatory
  • Paid family leave (PFL) – mandatory, funded by employee payroll deductions

Estimated annual insurance for a small salon with 2 employees: approximately $2,900 (general liability + workers’ comp + property).

Step 6: Register for Taxes

Salon services (haircuts, styling, coloring) are generally not subject to sales tax in New York. However, retail product sales (shampoo, styling products, etc.) are taxable. Get a Certificate of Authority if selling retail products. If hiring, register for withholding tax and unemployment insurance.

Cost to Start a Hair Salon in New York

Item Cost Notes
Cosmetology school tuition $12,000-$18,000 1,000 hours, varies by school
Cosmetologist license (individual) $70 $40 app + $15 written + $15 practical
Appearance Enhancement Business License $60 4-year license
LLC formation + publication $450-$1,750 $200 filing + $250-$1,550 publication
Liability insurance (annual) $420-$740 Required for business license
OR surety bond ($50,000) $100-$500/year Alternative to insurance
Workers’ comp / DBL / PFL (if employees) Varies Mandatory with employees
Salon build-out / equipment $10,000-$75,000+ Stations, chairs, sinks, lighting, etc.
Initial supplies and inventory $2,000-$5,000 Products, tools, disposables
Security deposit / first month rent Varies widely Location-dependent

Estimated total startup cost: $25,000-$100,000+ (excluding cosmetology school tuition, which is a prior investment)



Related New York Business Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many hours of cosmetology school are required in New York?

1,000 hours at a state-approved cosmetology school. After completing your hours, you must pass both a written exam (2.5 hours, 70% to pass, $15) and a practical exam (3.5 hours, 70% to pass, $15). Total licensing cost is $70.

Do I need a separate business license to open a salon in New York?

Yes. In addition to individual practitioner licenses, every salon must hold an Appearance Enhancement Business License from the Department of State ($60, 4-year term). You must also maintain liability insurance ($25,000/$75,000 minimum) or a $50,000 surety bond.

Is continuing education required for cosmetology license renewal?

No. New York does not require continuing education for any Appearance Enhancement license renewal. Licenses renew every 4 years for $40 with no training requirements.

Are salon services subject to sales tax in New York?

Salon services (haircuts, styling, coloring, perms) are generally not subject to sales tax in New York. However, retail product sales (shampoo, styling products, etc.) are taxable. You need a Certificate of Authority if selling retail products.

What insurance does a salon need in New York?

The Appearance Enhancement Business License requires either liability insurance ($25,000 per occurrence / $75,000 aggregate minimum) or a $50,000 surety bond. If you have employees, you also need workers’ comp, disability benefits, and paid family leave coverage. Nail salons must also maintain a wage bond ($25,000-$125,000 based on staff size).

Can I rent chairs to independent stylists in New York?

Yes, but chair renters need a separate Area Renter License from the NYS Department of State. The salon must hold the Appearance Enhancement Business License, and each independent contractor must hold their own individual practitioner license.


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.