Complete Guide to Texas Manicurist License Renewal
If you're searching for Texas manicurist license renewal, this guide covers everything you need to know — CE requirements, fees, foot spa rules, and the step-by-step process for 2026.
Quick Answer
- What: Renew every 2 years with 4 hours of TDLR-approved CE (or 2 hours if you've been licensed 15+ years)
- Cost: $50 on time / $75 if late under 90 days / $100 if later
- Time: CE takes ~4 hours; online renewal takes about 10 minutes
- Action: Complete your CE online now →
Key Facts at a Glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| License Type | Manicurist (Nail Technician) |
| Issuing Agency | Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) |
| Training Hours Required (Initial) | 600 hours |
| Renewal Frequency | Every 2 years |
| CE Hours (Licensed < 15 years) | 4 hours |
| CE Hours (Licensed 15+ years) | 2 hours |
| On-Time Renewal Fee | $50 |
| Late Fee (expired ≤ 90 days) | $75 |
| Late Fee (expired 91 days–18 months) | $100 |
| Where to Renew | TDLR Online Services portal |
| TDLR Phone | (800) 803-9202 |
What Your Manicurist License Allows You to Do
A Texas manicurist license — also called a nail technician license — covers a specific set of services. You are licensed to perform nail treatments on hands and feet, which includes:
- Cutting and trimming nails
- Polishing, tinting, and coloring nails
- Cleansing hands and feet
- Manicuring and pedicuring
- Attaching false nails (acrylics, gels, press-on tips)
Your license does not cover hair services, facial treatments, eyelash extensions, or any other cosmetology service. A full cosmetology operator license is required for those. If you hold multiple TDLR licenses — for example, a cosmetology operator license and a manicurist license — CE completed for one license satisfies the CE requirement for the other.
Texas Manicurist License Renewal: Step-by-Step Process
Texas manicurist license renewal happens entirely online. Follow these five steps:
For a full walkthrough of the TDLR online portal, see our TDLR continuing education renewal guide.
CE Requirements for Texas Manicurist License Renewal
Texas manicurist license renewal CE requirements changed on September 1, 2025. Make sure you're following the updated rules — the old single-hour format no longer applies.
Licensed Less Than 15 Years: 4 Hours Required
| Topic | Hours |
|---|---|
| Sanitation and disinfection | 1 hour |
| Human trafficking awareness | 1 hour |
| Elective (cosmetology-related topics of your choice) | 2 hours |
| Total | 4 hours |
Licensed 15 or More Years: 2 Hours Required
| Topic | Hours |
|---|---|
| Sanitation and disinfection | 1 hour |
| Human trafficking awareness | 1 hour |
| Total | 2 hours |
Why Sanitation Hours Matter Even More for Nail Techs
The sanitation CE hour isn't just a box to check. TDLR inspection data shows that nail salons — specifically foot spa equipment — generate more sanitation violations than any other service area. Understanding proper disinfection protocols during your CE can directly protect your license. More on that in the foot spa section below.
For more detail on CE rules across all cosmetology license types, see our Texas cosmetology license renewal requirements guide.
Renewal Fees and Late Penalties
On-time renewal costs $50. If your license expires before you renew, the fee goes up — and if you wait too long, you may lose the ability to renew at all.
| License Status | Fee | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| On time (before expiration) | $50 | Standard renewal |
| Expired ≤ 90 days | $75 | 1.5x the base fee |
| Expired 91 days–18 months | $100 | 2x the base fee |
| Expired 18 months–3 years | $100 + approval | Executive Director approval required |
| Expired 3+ years | Cannot renew | Must reapply and retest ($50 application fee) |
The late fees apply in addition to any CE requirements. You still need to complete your CE hours before paying — even for a late renewal.
2026 Lawful Presence Requirement
Starting May 1, 2026, TDLR requires all license applicants and renewal applicants to provide documentation establishing lawful presence in the United States. The Texas Cosmetology Commission voted unanimously to adopt this rule on March 24, 2026.
This requirement applies to your manicurist license renewal. Here's what you need to know:
- If you are a U.S. citizen, your Social Security Number satisfies this requirement.
- If you are not a U.S. citizen, you may still qualify with a green card, immigrant visa, refugee travel document, or other acceptable document.
- If you don't have an SSN, you must renew by mail and submit your documentation directly to TDLR.
- Applications will remain pending until acceptable documentation is received. Failure to provide documentation may result in denial.
TDLR will publish the full list of acceptable documents on their website. Check tdlr.texas.gov for the most current list before you apply.
This change affects an estimated 18,000 current license holders statewide. If you have questions about your eligibility, contact TDLR directly at (800) 803-9202.
Foot Spa Documentation Rules — The #1 TDLR Violation for Nail Salons
Foot spa maintenance records are the most common violation TDLR cites in nail salon inspections. Most nail techs focus on hand sanitation and forget that foot spas have their own strict documentation requirements. Here's what you need to know.
Why Foot Spas Are High-Risk
Foot spa basins — jetted or non-jetted — can harbor bacteria like Mycobacterium fortuitum in the biofilm that builds up inside pipes and jets. Infections traced to improperly cleaned foot spas can cause serious skin infections. TDLR takes this seriously, and so does your clients' health.
The Three Cleaning Cycles You Must Document
Texas requires three separate levels of foot spa cleaning, and all three must be logged in writing:
Your log must be kept on-site and available for inspection at all times. TDLR inspectors will ask to see it. No log = violation, even if basins look clean.
What Your Log Must Include
Your foot spa cleaning log must be kept on-site and available for inspection at all times. Each log entry should include:
- Date and time of cleaning
- Which basin was cleaned
- What disinfectant product was used
- The name or initials of the person who performed the cleaning
TDLR inspectors will ask to see this log. If you can't produce it, you will be cited — even if the basins are visibly clean. The log is the proof. No log equals a violation, regardless of actual cleaning practices.
Non-Jetted Foot Spas and Disposable Liners
If your salon uses non-jetted basins with disposable plastic liners, you still need to use a fresh liner for every client, disinfect the basin itself between clients, and log each service. Disposable liners do not eliminate the documentation requirement.
A full nail salon inspection checklist is coming soon to this site. In the meantime, build your log system now — don't wait for an inspection to create one.
What TDLR Inspects in Nail Salons
TDLR conducts unannounced inspections of nail salons. Inspectors look at the establishment license and the individual licenses of every person working — including you. Here's what gets flagged most often:
License Display and Individual Licenses
- Your manicurist license must be posted at your workstation, visible to clients
- If your license is expired, even by one day, you are practicing without a valid license — a serious violation
- Inspectors will verify that every service provider holds an active, valid license
Sanitation and Disinfection
- Implements (nippers, files, pushers) must be disinfected between every client using an EPA-registered disinfectant
- Single-use items (files, buffers, toe separators) must be discarded after each client
- Implements that touch broken skin must be sterilized, not just disinfected
- Disinfectant containers must be labeled and dated
Foot Spa Documentation (see full section above)
Foot spa logs are reviewed on every inspection. This is the #1 citation area for nail salons.
Workstation Setup
- Clean and soiled implements must be stored separately
- Disinfectant jars must not contain debris (change them daily)
- All products must be properly labeled
Establishment License
The salon itself must hold a current TDLR establishment license. Individual manicurist licenses do not cover the business — that's a separate license with its own renewal and fees.
For a broader view of what TDLR looks at across all cosmetology settings, check the esthetician license renewal guide — many sanitation standards overlap.
What Happens If Your License Expires
Don't assume your license auto-renews or that TDLR will send a reminder. You are responsible for tracking your expiration date.
Here's what happens at each stage:
- 1–90 days expired: You can still renew online. Fee jumps to $75. Stop working until you renew — practicing on an expired license is a violation.
- 91 days–18 months expired: You can still renew, but the fee is $100. You may face additional scrutiny.
- 18 months–3 years expired: You can renew, but the process requires executive director approval. Expect delays.
- 3+ years expired: You cannot renew. You must submit a new application, pay a $50 application fee, and pass the licensing exam again.
See the full overview of Texas cosmetology license renewal requirements at /articles/texas-cosmetology-license-renewal-requirements/.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many CE hours do I need to renew my Texas manicurist license?
If you have been licensed for less than 15 years, you need 4 hours of TDLR-approved CE: 1 hour of sanitation, 1 hour of human trafficking awareness, and 2 elective hours. If you have been licensed for 15 or more years, you need only 2 hours: 1 hour of sanitation and 1 hour of human trafficking awareness. These requirements took effect September 1, 2025.
How much does it cost to renew a Texas manicurist license?
On-time renewal costs $50. If your license has expired, the fee increases: $75 if expired 90 days or less, $100 if expired between 91 days and 18 months. If your license has been expired for more than 3 years, you cannot renew — you must reapply and retest with a $50 application fee.
Can I work as a nail tech while my license is expired?
No. Practicing on an expired manicurist license is a violation of Texas law. TDLR can issue fines and take disciplinary action against your record. If your license has expired, stop seeing clients immediately and renew before returning to work.
Do I need to keep foot spa cleaning logs even if I use disposable liners?
Yes. Disposable liners reduce cross-contamination risk, but Texas still requires you to disinfect the basin between clients and maintain written logs. TDLR inspectors will check for logs regardless of the type of foot spa setup you use. Keep logs on-site for at least 90 days.
What if I hold both a manicurist license and a cosmetology operator license — do I need CE for both?
No. TDLR allows CE completed for one license to satisfy the CE requirement for your other license(s). You only need to complete one set of CE hours per renewal cycle, even if you hold multiple cosmetology licenses.
What is the new 2026 lawful presence requirement for manicurist license renewal?
Starting May 1, 2026, TDLR requires all license renewal applicants to provide documentation proving lawful presence in the United States. U.S. citizens can satisfy this with their Social Security Number. Non-citizens may use a green card, immigrant visa, refugee travel document, or other TDLR-accepted document. Those without an SSN must renew by mail. Applications remain pending until documentation is submitted.
Sources: TDLR.texas.gov. CE requirements reflect rules effective September 1, 2025. Lawful presence requirements reflect the rule adopted March 24, 2026, effective May 1, 2026. Always verify current requirements at tdlr.texas.gov before submitting your renewal.
