The California esthetician license is the fastest path into the skin care industry — 600 hours of school, one written exam, and you're licensed to perform facials, waxing, lash and brow services, and more. SB 803 in 2022 also expanded the scope of what estheticians can legally do, giving this license more range than it had before.
California's esthetics licensing is regulated by the Board of Barbering and Cosmetology (BBC), part of the California Department of Consumer Affairs. The BBC approves schools, processes applications, and contracts with PSI Services to administer the written examination. This guide covers everything in the order you'll need it: who qualifies, what the exam looks like, fees and timelines, and what you can legally do once licensed.
The basics: who qualifies
To apply for a California esthetician license, you must meet three baseline requirements:
- Age 17 or older at the time of application.
- Completion of 10th grade (or equivalent — a GED counts).
- 600 hours of esthetics training from a BBC-approved cosmetology or esthetics school. Out-of-state training is reviewed case-by-case using Form B.
What SB 803 changed in 2022
Senate Bill 803, effective January 1, 2022, made two changes that directly affect California estheticians:
- Practical exam eliminated. The hands-on portion of the esthetics examination was removed. Only the written exam remains.
- Esthetician scope expanded. SB 803 added lash perms (lifts), brow lamination, lash and brow tinting, and facial dermaplaning to the legal scope of the California esthetician license. If you trained before 2022, these services are now within your scope without additional licensing.
The 600-hour training requirement itself was not changed by SB 803 — it was already lower than the old cosmetology requirement. What changed is what you can do with it.
What a California esthetician license covers
A California esthetician license authorizes you to perform skin care services only. Specifically:
- Facials and cleansing treatments
- Facial massage and steaming
- Masks and chemical exfoliation (within esthetics scope)
- Waxing and threading for hair removal
- Lash and brow tinting
- Lash perms (lifts) and brow lamination
- Facial dermaplaning
- Makeup application
An esthetician license does not cover hair cutting or coloring, chemical hair services (perms, relaxers), or nail services. For those, a separate cosmetology or nail technology license is required.
The California esthetics written exam
The exam is administered by PSI at testing centers throughout California and at select locations nationwide. Once the BBC approves your application, you'll receive a PSI candidate handbook and can self-schedule.
California's esthetics exam is developed for the BBC by PSI — it is not the NIC National Esthetics Theory Examination used by most other states. Content overlap is significant (infection control, skin anatomy, facials, hair removal, and related topics appear on both), but the item bank and structure differ. NICPrep's esthetics question banks are calibrated to the NIC exam format. For California specifically, our content is strong supplementary study material — domain coverage matches — but is not a 1:1 match to the California-specific item bank.
Exam structure
- 60 scored questions + 10 unscored pretest questions (70 total)
- 90 minutes to complete
- Multiple choice, computer-based
- Available in English, Spanish, Korean, Vietnamese, and Simplified Chinese
Content areas
The California esthetics written exam tests across these domains, per the BBC/PSI content outline:
- Safety and infection control
- Client consultation and skin analysis
- Facial treatments and massage
- Hair removal
- Makeup and lash/brow services
- Anatomy and physiology (skin, muscles, nerves)
- Chemistry of skin care products
- Electrical and light therapy equipment
Passing score: 75% (45 correct out of 60 scored questions). Safety and infection control consistently carries the most weight — knowledge of disinfection levels, contact times, and Standard Precautions should be your study anchor.
Step-by-step: how to get licensed in California
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Complete 600 hours at a BBC-approved school
Verify your school's approval status on the BBC's school listing at barbercosmo.ca.gov. Full-time students typically finish in 4–6 months. Out-of-state training requires Form B review.
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Submit your examination application
Apply online through the BreEZe portal (faster) or by mail. Include your Proof of Training (POT) from your school, two passport photos, and the $125 total fee ($75 exam + $50 license). Processing takes 8–12 weeks.
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Receive your PSI handbook and schedule
Once the BBC approves your application, PSI sends a candidate handbook. Self-schedule your written exam at any PSI location. Choose your language preference at scheduling.
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Take the written examination
90 minutes, 70 multiple-choice questions. You'll see your pass/fail result on screen at the test center the moment you finish.
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Visit a California PSI location for your license
After passing, you must visit a PSI location in California to have your photo taken and receive your physical license. You cannot work legally until you have the license in hand — typically issued within 2–4 weeks of passing.
NICPrep's esthetics question bank covers all the core domains — infection control, anatomy, skin analysis, facials, and hair removal. Try 10 free questions with full rationales, no signup required.
Reciprocity: if you're already licensed in another state
California offers reciprocity for estheticians licensed in other U.S. states. You don't have to retake the exam if:
- You hold (or held) a U.S. state esthetics or cosmetology license — current or expired, both count.
- Your original state sends a license certification directly to the BBC at barbercosmo@dca.ca.gov or by mail.
- You submit a Reciprocity Application through BreEZe and pay the $50 reciprocity fee.
What does not qualify for reciprocity: apprentice licenses from other states, licenses from Puerto Rico or Guam, out-of-country licenses, and waxing-only or lash-extension-only licenses (California doesn't issue those as separate license types).
If you don't pass on the first try
California allows unlimited retakes. Submit a Re-Examination Application and pay the exam fee again — there's no waiting period. PSI will email you to schedule once the application is approved.
Most esthetics candidates who fall short do so in infection control (disinfection sequencing, contact times, decontamination order) or skin pathology (recognizing contraindications and when not to proceed with a service). Both areas are heavily tested and respond well to targeted review.
License renewal in California
Your California esthetician license is valid for two years and expires on the last day of your birth month. Renewal is $50, and California requires no continuing education hours — just the renewal fee. You can renew up to 60 days before expiration through the BreEZe portal.
Other California beauty licenses
The esthetician license is one of several narrower license types California offers. If your goals extend beyond skin care:
Other California licensing guides
Official California esthetics resources
- California Board of Barbering and Cosmetology (BBC) — official licensing authority, school listings, application forms, and exam information.
- BreEZe online portal — apply for license, schedule exams, renew, request certifications.
- PSI Exams — schedule and manage the California written examination.
Last verified May 2026 against the California Board of Barbering and Cosmetology and PSI candidate information bulletins. Fees and requirements change — always confirm current information with the BBC before applying. NICPrep is an independent prep resource and is not affiliated with the BBC, PSI, or the State of California.