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Texas manicurist license — 2026 requirements.

Everything you need to get your Texas manicurist (nail technician) license in 2026 — 600 training hours, written and practical PSI exams, approximately $181 in total fees, and the CE requirement Texas adds at renewal. Verified against the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.

Texas manicurist — at a glance

Training hours
600
TDLR-approved school required
Total fees
~$181
$55 written + $76 practical + $50 license
Exam format
Written + Practical
Both required · PSI
Renewal
Every 2 yrs
$50 + 4 hrs CE required

Texas calls this license "Manicurist" — the equivalent of what most other states call nail technician or nail tech. At 600 hours, it's more training than California's 400-hour requirement, and Texas still requires a practical exam (which California eliminated in 2022). If you're moving from a state that dropped its practical, the hands-on component is the main thing to prepare for differently.

Texas manicurist licensing is regulated by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR), which contracts with PSI Services to administer both examinations. This guide covers training requirements, both exam components, fees, CE at renewal, the combined Manicurist/Esthetician license option, and reciprocity.

The basics: who qualifies

What a Texas manicurist license covers

Under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1603, a licensed manicurist may perform:

A manicurist license does not cover facials or skin care beyond hands and feet, hair services, waxing beyond the hands/feet context, or eyelash extensions. Texas also offers a combined Manicurist/Esthetician license — see below.

The combined Manicurist/Esthetician license

Texas offers a combined Manicurist/Esthetician license that covers both nail services and skin care services. To qualify, you must either:

If you already hold both an active Manicurist license and an active Esthetician license, you can apply to upgrade to the combined license without additional training.

The Texas manicurist examination

Important · Texas uses its own exam

Texas's manicurist examination is developed for TDLR by PSI — it is not the NIC National Nail Technology Theory Examination. Domain weights and item banks are TDLR-specific. Content overlap is significant (infection control, nail anatomy, nail disorders, manicure/pedicure procedures, product chemistry), but NICPrep's nail technology question banks are calibrated to the NIC format. For Texas specifically, our content is strong supplementary study material — domain coverage matches closely — but is not a 1:1 match to TDLR's exam blueprint.

Written examination

Written exam content areas

Per the TDLR/PSI content outline, the Texas manicurist written exam covers:

Practical examination

Step-by-step: how to get licensed in Texas

  1. Complete 600 hours at a TDLR-approved school

    Verify your school's approval at tdlr.texas.gov. Students receive a TDLR student permit during training, allowing supervised client services at the school. Full-time programs typically run 3–5 months.

  2. Submit your TDLR license application and pay the $50 fee

    Apply online at tdlr.texas.gov or by mail. TDLR conducts a criminal history background check. Processing takes 1–6 weeks.

  3. Receive PSI eligibility and schedule the written exam

    PSI sends scheduling instructions by email after TDLR approval. Schedule online at test-takers.psiexams.com/tdlr or by phone at (833) 333-4741. Pay the $55 written exam fee at scheduling.

  4. Pass the written examination

    Computer-based multiple choice. You receive your score from the PSI proctor at the test center. 70% or higher is required to advance to the practical.

  5. Schedule and pass the practical examination

    Schedule the practical at a PSI site. Pay the $76 practical fee. Bring nail supplies and tools per the candidate handbook — review it closely before exam day. A temporary 21-day license may be issued at the site upon passing.

  6. Receive your two-year manicurist license by mail

    TDLR mails your full license. You may legally begin working using your temporary license while waiting.

Build your written exam foundation before you schedule.

NICPrep's nail technology question bank covers infection control, nail anatomy, nail disorders, product chemistry, and nail service procedures — the domains that drive the Texas written exam. Try 10 free questions with full rationales, no signup.

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Continuing education at renewal

Texas requires CE to renew. Requirements effective September 1, 2025:

CE completed under any one TDLR cosmetology license satisfies the requirement for all TDLR cosmetology licenses you hold simultaneously. If you hold both a Manicurist and an Esthetician license, you only need one set of CE hours to cover both.

License renewal in Texas

Your Texas manicurist license is valid for two years. Renewal fee is $50 on time. Late fees escalate: $75 within 90 days late, $100 between 91 days and 18 months. Re-application required after 3 years lapsed. Renew at tdlr.texas.gov.

Reciprocity: if you're licensed in another state

Texas calls this "license by equivalence." Required for active nail tech/manicurist license holders from states with substantially equivalent requirements:

TDLR maintains an online equivalence checker. Active license required — expired licenses do not qualify. Texas does not accept training completed through apprenticeship programs.

If you don't pass on the first try

Retakes are unlimited within a 5-year eligibility window from TDLR application approval. Wait 24 hours after a failed attempt before rescheduling. You only retake the component you failed, not both exams. Each retake requires paying the applicable fee.

Most candidates who don't pass the written exam miss on infection control (disinfection sequencing, contact times) and nail disorders (contraindications — recognizing when a service should not be performed). Both are predictable areas that respond well to targeted study.

Other Texas beauty licenses

Official Texas manicurist resources

Last verified May 2026 against the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation and PSI Candidate Information Bulletins. Fees and requirements change — always confirm current information with TDLR before applying. NICPrep is an independent prep resource and is not affiliated with TDLR, PSI, or the State of Texas.

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Study the material Texas's manicurist exam draws from.

NICPrep's question bank covers nail anatomy, infection control, nail disorders, product chemistry, and nail service procedures. Try 10 real questions with full rationales, no signup required.