South Carolina Waxing License Requirements - Hours, Exams & Steps
To legally offer waxing services in South Carolina, you need an esthetician license. Below is what the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR) expects and the path to get it.
To practice waxing in South Carolina, you need 450 hours through a path approved by the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR). This page covers the eight criteria that matter most: training hours, exams, fees, timeline, renewal, reciprocity, minimum age, and license type.
22 beauty schools in South Carolina are listed in our directory. Cross-check every detail with the board before you enroll - rules change. Our course builds theory so you arrive at school ahead of the curve.
South Carolina Waxing licensing requirements at a glance
| Required hours | 450 hours |
| License type | Esthetician License |
| Licensing board | South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR) |
| Exams | NIC written exam (PSI testing centers) |
| Estimated fees | Varies - confirm with board |
| Typical timeline | 3-6 months |
| Renewal | Typically every 1-2 years; CE hours may apply - confirm with the board |
| State notes | The curriculum dedicates 50 hours specifically to hair removal, covering depilatories, tweezing, waxing, and threading. Requires a 75 percent passing score on NIC exams. |
Requirements verified against official board sources. Rules change - confirm with the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR) before you enroll.
Step by Step: How to Get Licensed in South Carolina
Prepare with our online Waxing course
Because South Carolina requires in-person training hours, our online course builds theory before or during your school program - it does not replace board-required clinical hours.
Four enrollment plans from $1,380. 12-module program taught by Aida Khazieva with lifetime access on Advanced plans and above.
Also see Waxing training overview in South Carolina for local schools and city guides.
Want us to guide you through South Carolina licensing?
Figuring out hours, approved schools, paperwork, and exam timing on your own takes real time. Aida's team offers hands-on licensing support - guidance and coordination, never a shortcut. Only your state board issues the license.
- 60-90 minute 1:1 strategy session
- Written roadmap for South Carolina waxing licensing
- Shortlist of approved schools near you
- Exam and timeline overview
- Everything in the Licensing Roadmap
- School application and board paperwork prep
- Document review before you submit
- 90 days of email and WhatsApp support
- Everything in Guided Application Support
- Regular check-ins until your license is issued
- Mock practical exam prep with Aida
- Priority same-day support
Not sure which package fits South Carolina?
Contact Us →Licensed schools & studios in South Carolina
Compare accredited beauty schools on record for South Carolina, or browse practicing electrologists where applicable.
Schools in South Carolina
Frequently asked questions - South Carolina Waxing
South Carolina requires 450 hours through a path approved by the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR).
The curriculum dedicates 50 hours specifically to hair removal, covering depilatories, tweezing, waxing, and threading. Requires a 75 percent passing score on NIC exams.
Our online course can prepare you for the material, but South Carolina requires in-person hours through the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR). Online study does not replace those hours.
Reciprocity rules vary by state and are not automatic. Contact the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR) directly to ask about transferring an existing license.
You will need to complete 450 hours through an approved path, plus time to prepare for and pass the required exam. Total timelines vary based on your school's schedule.
South Carolina does not publish a single combined fee on the data we have. Application, exam, and license fees are set by the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR) and can change, so confirm the current amounts directly with them.
Most states require periodic renewal, typically every one to two years, sometimes with continuing education hours. South Carolina's exact renewal cycle is not detailed in our data, so confirm it directly with the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR).
In most states, including South Carolina based on our data, you complete your required hours and pass your exam before working independently. Some schools allow supervised clinic work on real or model clients as part of training itself. Confirm what counts as work under South Carolina rules with the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR).
Financial Aid and Government Support
Several real federal and state programs can help cover the cost of beauty education. Federal Pell Grants and the Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (FSEOG) are available to eligible students at accredited schools through the FAFSA. Veterans and their families may be able to use GI Bill benefits at VA-approved programs. Some states also offer workforce funding through WIOA, administered by local American Job Centers, though eligibility for cosmetology and esthetics programs varies by region.
Important: these programs apply to your accredited in-person school, where you complete your required hours, not to our online preparation course directly. Contact your chosen school's financial aid office or your local American Job Center to find out what you qualify for.
Sourced from the South Carolina Board of Cosmetology (SCLLR). Verified July 2026. Licensing rules can change - always confirm current requirements with the board before enrolling or applying.