Two sources govern cosmetology in Florida: Chapter 477, Florida Statutes (the Cosmetology Act — the law itself) and Rule 61G5, Florida Administrative Code (the Board's detailed rules). The Florida Board of Cosmetology has 7 members appointed by the Governor and operates under the DBPR. Expect questions on training hours, the HIV/AIDS course, biennial renewal, continuing education, and prohibited acts.
Chapter 477 vs. Rule 61G5 — what each one governs
The single biggest reason candidates miss florida cosmetology laws and rules questions is mixing up the statute with the rule. Keep them straight:
- Chapter 477, Florida Statutes — the "Cosmetology Act." This is the law passed by the Legislature. It defines cosmetology, creates the Board, sets licensing requirements, and lists the broad prohibited acts and penalties.
- Rule 61G5, Florida Administrative Code — the rules the Board writes to carry out the law. Rule 61G5 fills in the specifics: sanitation standards, continuing education content, application details, and disciplinary guidelines.
A simple memory hook: chapter 477 is the "what," and 61G5 is the "how." On the florida cosmetology law exam you will see both cited, so know which document is the source of authority. Our study guide maps each rule to the questions you are likely to see.
The Florida Board of Cosmetology and the DBPR
Cosmetology in Florida is regulated by the Board of Cosmetology, which sits inside the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). The Board has 7 members appointed by the Governor — a mix of licensed cosmetologists, salon owners, and consumer (lay) members. The Board sets standards and discipline; the DBPR handles applications, licensing, and enforcement.
For the exam, remember the two facts that get tested most: 7 members and appointed by the Governor, operating under DBPR. If you want to see how these facts are phrased in real questions, try our Florida cosmetology practice test.
Licensing requirements and the HIV/AIDS course
To become a licensed cosmetologist in Florida you generally must:
- Be at least 16 years old.
- Complete 1,200 hours of board-approved training (a high-school equivalent program or a registered apprenticeship can satisfy this).
- Be certified by your school to test after 1,000 hours — so you can sit the exam while finishing your final hours.
- Complete a mandatory 4-hour HIV/AIDS course within the two years before you apply.
- Pass the two-part written exam.
Don't skip the HIV/AIDS course. Yes — the 4-hour HIV/AIDS course is required, and it must be completed within two years before you apply. It is also a recurring topic in continuing education. Candidates lose points assuming it is optional; it is not.
The written test is delivered by Pearson VUE in two parts — Theory and Clinical, 65 questions each (130 total), and you need 75% to pass each part. Full details are in our state board exam guide, and the how to get your Florida cosmetology license page walks the path end to end.
License types, renewals, and continuing education
Chapter 477 recognizes several license types and registrations, and they are commonly tested:
- License types: cosmetologist, facial specialist, nail specialist, and full specialist (facials and nails). Salons themselves must hold a separate salon license.
- Registrations (not full licenses): hair braiding, hair wrapping, and body wrapping each require registration rather than a cosmetology license.
Licenses renew on a biennial cycle — every 2 years. Each cycle you must complete 10 hours of continuing education, and the CE must cover required subjects:
- HIV/AIDS
- Sanitation and sterilization
- Florida laws and rules
- OSHA and the chemical makeup of products
- Workers' compensation
If a question asks how often you renew, the answer is every two years with 10 CE hours. The how to pass the Florida cosmetology exam guide turns facts like these into a study plan you can finish in a week.
Sanitation, display of license, and prohibited acts
Rule 61G5 spells out the practical rules salons and practitioners must follow day to day:
- Sanitation and disinfection: implements must be cleaned and disinfected between clients; single-use items are discarded; work surfaces kept clean.
- Display of licenses: the salon license and each practitioner's license must be conspicuously displayed at the place of business.
- Mobile and onsite services: Florida allows services outside a fixed salon under specific conditions, but the same sanitation standards still apply.
Prohibited acts and discipline are the heart of the law exam. Practicing cosmetology or operating a salon without a license is the classic violation, along with other forms of unlicensed activity. The Board can issue citations, impose administrative fines, and apply additional penalties up to suspension or revocation. When in doubt, the safe answer is almost always "you need the proper license or registration first."
Laws and rules sink a lot of test-takers — but they are easy points once you've drilled them. Check yourself, then study the gaps.
Try the free quiz Open the study guide