Our waxing course is open to students across Dallas and the rest of Texas, and covers the technique fundamentals that apply regardless of exactly how Texas regulates the service locally. Dallas currently has 4 beauty schools listed with us. Lessons cover hard wax and soft wax application, proper skin preparation, safe removal technique, aftercare guidance, and building a body and facial waxing service menu. Many Dallas students pair the course with esthetics or cosmetology licensing, since waxing is a common add-on service; others use it as a standalone specialty where Texas rules allow it without a broader license. Dallas sits in North Texas, the northern half of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. Ogle School Hair Skin Nails-North Dallas and Buckner Barber School are among the real schools we have on file for Dallas; see the full local list below.
Many Dallas waxing specialists work under an esthetics license or add waxing to a broader beauty menu. Confirm Texas rules before you advertise body waxing from a home studio.
Dallas sits in North Texas, the northern half of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex.
We list 4 beauty schools in Dallas - confirm program hours with admissions.
Local Checklist for Dallas
Check whether your state requires esthetics, cosmetology, or a wax-only license
Find schools whose curriculum includes board-approved waxing hours
Practice sanitation and contraindication knowledge before working on clients
Research typical waxing prices and rebooking cycles in your city
Decide if waxing is a standalone career or an add-on to esthetics
Training Path in Dallas
The typical training path for waxing in Dallas follows the same order most Texas students use: cover theory before anything else, using either our self-paced online waxing course or an accredited school's own material, then progress to the in-person or hands-on portion Texas requires for licensing. Dallas has 4 accredited schools on file with us, a solid starting point for comparing in-person programs. Completing the theory portion online first, before you commit to a specific school or supervised setting, tends to save both time and tuition, since you arrive already familiar with the fundamentals instead of learning them for the first time in a classroom. If Dallas does not have what you need locally, Houston, San Antonio, Fort Worth are other Texas metro areas we track in the same way.
Texas Licensing Snapshot
Texas requires an Esthetician License to legally offer waxing services, issued through Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). The state requires 750 hours of approved training before you can sit for licensing. In-person clinical hours required at a licensed school. Renewal cycles and continuing education rules vary, so confirm the current cycle directly with the board. See the full Texas waxing licensing guide for exam details, renewal rules, and links to approved schools.
Study with Aida Khazieva online while you plan school or licensing steps in Texas. The course covers wax types and products, body waxing techniques, facial waxing, and more, all at your own pace.
We do. Students in Dallas use the online waxing course alongside their local school or licensing research anywhere in Texas, and access never expires.
Check the full list of Texas beauty schools we track, or reach out and we can point you toward options near Dallas.
Texas's requirement is 750 hours of training before you can sit for the licensing exams. The Texas licensing guide breaks down the board process in full.
Most Dallas students begin with theory, check the schools listed here, then confirm exact requirements on the Texas waxing overview page.
Hard wax hardens on the skin and is removed without strips, gentler for sensitive areas and coarse hair. Soft wax is applied thin and removed with a strip, better for larger areas and finer hair. Our course covers both in detail.
Explore other cities in Texas or pick another state to compare licensing rules and training options for waxing.
Waxing licensing in Texas
750 hours of training, plus state exams. Licensing board: Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). In-person clinical hours required at a licensed school.