North Carolina beauty licenses — 2026 requirements.

All four NC beauty licenses in one place. NC uses NIC exams via Prov for cosmetology, esthetics, and manicurist — a direct fit for NICPrep. Two separate boards: the NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners and the Board of Barber & Electrolysis Examiners. One of the few states with a 3-year license cycle.

North Carolina · Cosmetology

Cosmetology license — 2026.

1,500 hours or 1,200-hour apprentice curriculum, NIC exams via Prov, 75% passing (70% for apprenticeship graduates). $49 license fee. 3-year renewal cycle with 8 hrs CE/year. Blow-dry exemption added July 2024. Licensed through the NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners.

At a glance
Training hours
1,500
Or 1,200 hr apprentice curriculum
License fee
$49
Plus Prov exam fees; temp permit $5
Exam format
Written + Practical
NIC via Prov · 75% (70% apprentice)
License term
3 years
8 hrs CE/yr · 24 hrs total
North Carolina uses the NIC national exam via Prov — NICPrep is a direct fit

NC uses NIC National Theory and Practical Examinations administered through Prov (Psychological Assessment Resources). NICPrep's cosmetology question bank is built directly from the NIC CIB and is a direct-fit study resource for NC cosmetology licensing. Standard passing score is 75%; apprenticeship pathway graduates pass at 70%.

The NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners (NCBCE) governs cosmetology, esthetics, manicurist, and natural hair care specialist licenses. It is a separate body from the Board of Barber and Electrolysis Examiners. NC is one of the few states with a 3-year license cycle, and one of the few where apprenticeship cosmetology graduates sit for the same NIC exam but at a lower passing threshold (70% vs 75%).

Who qualifies

What the cosmetology license covers

Hair services (cutting, coloring, bleaching, perming, relaxing, styling, braiding, extensions); skin services (facials, makeup, waxing, lash extensions, lash lifts, brow lamination, lash/brow tinting); nail services (manicures, pedicures, artificial nails). Also covers dermaplaning and microneedling up to 1mm depth with FDA-approved devices, per the 2022 Board declaratory ruling.

The examination

Written (theory) — administered by Prov

Practical (hands-on) — administered by Prov

Temporary permit

A $5 temporary permit allows supervised work after graduation while awaiting exam scheduling. To qualify: school must submit graduation paperwork directly to the Board; exam application submitted within 3 months of graduation; permit form and $5 fee submitted. Valid 6 months from graduation — cannot be renewed.

Blow-dry exemption (SB 607, effective July 9, 2024)

Unlicensed employees in NC cosmetic art shops may now shampoo and blow-dry hair without a cosmetology license, provided their duties are strictly limited to shampooing and blow-drying only, and they comply with Board sanitation requirements. This does not expand into any other cosmetology services.

Step-by-step: how to get licensed

  1. Complete 1,500 hours at a Board-approved cosmetology school

    Verify school approval at nccosmeticarts.com. Programs typically run 10–14 months full-time. Or complete the 1,200-hour apprentice curriculum followed by a 6-month supervised apprenticeship.

  2. Apply for examination through Prov

    Your school notifies the Board upon graduation. The Board notifies Prov of your eligibility. Schedule written and practical exams at a Prov test site.

  3. Pass both NIC exams

    75% required (70% for apprenticeship graduates). Printed score report provided. Retakes permitted — fee applies per retake.

  4. Apply for your NC cosmetology license

    Submit the license application online or by mail to the NCBCE. Pay the $49 license fee ($20 for apprenticeship license). Licenses issued within 5–10 business days.

NICPrep is a direct fit for NC cosmetology.

Built from the NIC CIB — the exam Prov administers in North Carolina. Try 10 free questions with full rationales, no signup.

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Reciprocity

NC grants reciprocity for out-of-state cosmetologists with an active license in good standing from a state that offers reciprocity to NC. Military service members and spouses who relocate to NC due to military orders can use their current home-state license under the 2023 SCRA amendment. Each military branch reimburses spouses up to $1,000 for relocation-related licensing costs.

Renewal

3-year cycle · 8 hours of CE per year (24 hours total over the 3-year period) · Cosmetologists with 20 or more consecutive years of licensure are exempt from CE but must report any courses completed · Renew online at nccosmeticarts.com.

North Carolina · Esthetics

Esthetics license — 2026.

600 hours, NIC exam via Prov, 75% passing. No apprenticeship pathway — school only. $20 license fee. Same 3-year renewal cycle as cosmetology with 8 hrs CE/year. No reciprocity with Texas, Mississippi, or South Carolina.

At a glance
Training hours
600
School only — no apprenticeship
License fee
$20
Plus Prov exam fees; temp permit $5
Exam format
Written + Practical
NIC via Prov · 75% passing
License term
3 years
8 hrs CE/yr · 24 hrs total
North Carolina uses the NIC national esthetics exam — NICPrep is a direct fit

NC uses the NIC National Esthetics Theory and Practical Examinations administered through Prov. NICPrep's esthetics question bank is built directly from the NIC Esthetics CIB and is a direct-fit study resource for NC esthetics licensing. Passing score: 75%. No separate state law exam required.

Unlike cosmetology, there is no apprenticeship pathway for esthetics in North Carolina — all training must be completed at a Board-approved school. The 600-hour curriculum must be distributed across specific subject areas as defined by the Board. The 2022 Board declaratory ruling extended the esthetician scope of practice to include dermaplaning and microneedling (up to 1mm) with FDA-approved devices.

Who qualifies

Scope of practice (including 2022 expansion)

Facials, skin treatments, chemical exfoliation and peels within scope, waxing and hair removal, threading, makeup application, lash extensions, lash lifts, brow lamination, lash and brow tinting. Additionally, the 2022 Board declaratory ruling confirmed dermaplaning and microneedling (up to 1mm depth) are within esthetician scope, provided devices are FDA-approved and operated within manufacturer guidelines.

No reciprocity with TX, MS, SC

North Carolina grants esthetician reciprocity to out-of-state professionals except those licensed in Texas, Mississippi, or South Carolina. Applicants from those states must complete NC's licensing process in full.

The examination

Step-by-step: how to get licensed

  1. Complete 600 hours at a Board-approved esthetics school

    Programs typically run 4–7 months full-time. Verify school approval at nccosmeticarts.com. No apprenticeship option for esthetics in NC.

  2. Apply for examination through Prov

    The Board notifies Prov of your eligibility after your school submits graduation paperwork. Schedule written and practical exams at a Prov center. Request a $5 temporary permit if needed to work supervised while waiting.

  3. Pass both NIC exams (75% required)

    Both written and practical via Prov. Collect score reports. Retakes allowed.

  4. Apply for your NC esthetics license ($20)

    Submit application online or by mail to NCBCE. Issued within 5–10 business days.

NICPrep is a direct fit for NC esthetics.

Built from the NIC Esthetics CIB — the exam Prov administers in NC. Try 10 free questions, no signup.

Try free →

Renewal

3-year cycle · 8 hrs CE per year (24 total) · Estheticians with 20+ consecutive years of licensure are exempt from CE but must report any courses completed. Renew online at nccosmeticarts.com.

North Carolina · Barber

Barber license — 2026.

North Carolina's barber license is one of the most demanding in the country: 1,528 hours at a Board-approved barber school plus a mandatory 12-month apprenticeship — both are required, not alternatives. Governed by the separate NC Board of Barber and Electrolysis Examiners.

At a glance
Training hours
1,528
School + mandatory 12-month apprenticeship
Separate board
Barber Board
Different from NCBCE
Exam format
Written + Practical
NIC via Prov · 75% passing
Renewal
Annual
CE requirements — confirm at Board
North Carolina uses the NIC national barber exam — NICPrep is a direct fit

NC uses NIC National Barber Theory and Practical Examinations administered through Prov. NICPrep's barber question bank is built directly from the NIC Barber Styling CIB and is a direct-fit study resource for NC barber licensing. Passing score: 75%.

School + apprenticeship are both required — not alternatives

Unlike most states where apprenticeship is an alternative to school, North Carolina barbers must complete both: 1,528 hours of school at a Board-approved barber college, then a separate mandatory 12-month apprenticeship under a licensed barber. The apprenticeship cannot be completed in a barber shop — it must be completed in a Board-approved setting. Multiple salons may be used, each requiring a separate affidavit.

Who qualifies

Step-by-step: how to get licensed

  1. Complete 1,528 hours at a Board-approved barber college

    Verify college approval through the NC Board of Barber and Electrolysis Examiners. Programs typically run 12–16 months full-time.

  2. Complete the mandatory 12-month apprenticeship

    Must be in a Board-approved setting — not a barber shop. Multiple salons may be used, each requiring a separate affidavit. Apprenticeship is under the direct supervision of a licensed NC barber.

  3. Pass both NIC exams via Prov (75% required)

    Written and practical, administered by Prov. Schedule through the Barber Board process.

  4. Apply for your barber license through the NC Barber Board

    Submit application, score reports, and affidavits to the NC Board of Barber and Electrolysis Examiners. Confirm current fees and renewal terms at the Board website.

NICPrep is a direct fit for NC barbering.

Built from the NIC Barber Styling CIB — the exam Prov administers in NC. Try 10 free questions, no signup.

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North Carolina · Manicurist

Manicurist license — 2026.

NC calls this the "manicurist" license — 300 hours, NIC exam via Prov, 75% passing, $10 license fee. 3-year renewal cycle, 8 hrs CE/year. Governed by NCBCE alongside cosmetology and esthetics.

At a glance
Training hours
300
Board-approved school only
License fee
$10
Plus Prov exam fees; temp permit $5
Exam format
Written + Practical
NIC via Prov · 75% passing
License term
3 years
8 hrs CE/yr · 24 hrs total
North Carolina uses the NIC national nail technology exam — NICPrep is a direct fit

NC uses the NIC National Nail Technology Theory and Practical Examinations administered through Prov. NICPrep's nail technology question bank is built directly from the NIC Nail Technology CIB and is a direct-fit study resource for the NC manicurist exam. Passing score: 75%.

Who qualifies

What the manicurist license covers

Manicures, pedicures, nail shaping, polish and gel application, nail enhancements (acrylics, gels, tips, wraps), nail art. Hand and foot massage within nail service scope.

The examination

Step-by-step: how to get licensed

  1. Complete 300 hours at a Board-approved manicurist program

    Verify school approval at nccosmeticarts.com. Programs typically run 5–8 weeks full-time.

  2. Apply for examination through Prov

    Board notifies Prov after your school submits graduation paperwork. Schedule written and practical exams. Request $5 temporary permit if needed.

  3. Pass both NIC exams (75% required)

    Collect score reports from Prov for your license application.

  4. Apply for your NC manicurist license ($10)

    Submit application online or by mail to NCBCE. Issued within 5–10 business days.

NICPrep is a direct fit for NC manicurist licensing.

Built from the NIC Nail Technology CIB — the exam Prov administers in NC. Try 10 free questions, no signup.

Try free →

Renewal

3-year cycle · 8 hrs CE per year (24 total) · 20+ consecutive years exemption (same as cosmetology/esthetics). Renew online at nccosmeticarts.com.

North Carolina · All license types

Rules that apply to every NC beauty license.

Two separate boards

North Carolina maintains two distinct regulatory bodies. The NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners (NCBCE) at nccosmeticarts.com governs cosmetologists, estheticians, manicurists, and natural hair care specialists. The NC Board of Barber and Electrolysis Examiners at ncbarberboard.com governs barbers — separate application, separate fees, separate renewal cycle. If you hold both a barber and cosmetology license, you deal with two independent boards.

NIC exams via Prov — all NCBCE modalities

Cosmetology, esthetics, and manicurist exams are all NIC national examinations administered by Prov (Psychological Assessment Resources). Barber exams also use NIC via Prov, administered through the Barber Board. Written and practical components required for all license types. Temporary permit ($5) available for NCBCE licenses while awaiting exam scheduling — valid 6 months from graduation, cannot be renewed.

3-year license cycle (NCBCE licenses)

NC cosmetology, esthetics, and manicurist licenses have a 3-year term — one of the longest in the country (most states use 2 years). CE requirement is 8 hours per year, totaling 24 hours over the full 3-year cycle. Licensees with 20 or more consecutive years of active licensure are exempt from CE but must still report any courses completed. CE exemption does not apply to reinstatement applications.

Official NC licensing portals

Last verified May 2026 against the NC Board of Cosmetic Art Examiners (nccosmeticarts.com), the NC Board of Barber and Electrolysis Examiners (ncbarberboard.com), and Prov candidate materials. Fees and requirements change — always confirm current information with the relevant Board before applying. NICPrep is an independent prep resource and is not affiliated with NCBCE, the Barber Board, Prov, or the State of North Carolina.

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Study exactly what NC's exam tests.

North Carolina uses NIC exams via Prov — the same content NICPrep is built from. Try 10 real questions with full rationales, no signup required.