Alabama SB183 Deregulates Natural Hair Styling Effective Oct 1, 2026
Summary
The Alabama Legislature passed SB183, which removes natural hair styling from Board regulation effective October 1, 2026. Individuals performing only natural hair styling (braiding, twisting, weaving, locking) are no longer required to hold a license or be regulated by the Board. A voluntary license remains available for those who wish to demonstrate professional credentials. The Board retains authority over regulated cosmetology, esthetics, and nail technology services.
What changed
SB183 removes natural hair styling from cosmetology regulation in Alabama. Individuals who perform only natural hair styling services no longer need a Board-issued license, and businesses providing only these services are exempt from Board inspection. The Board will no longer investigate complaints or take enforcement actions related solely to natural hair styling.
For affected individuals and businesses, the practical effect is that natural hair styling services operate outside Board oversight as of October 1, 2026. Those who wish to maintain professional credentials may still obtain a voluntary Natural Hair Stylist license. Any business providing regulated cosmetology services alongside natural hair styling must still maintain proper licensure and is subject to inspection for regulated services.
Archived snapshot
Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Important Law Update: Natural Hair Styling Changes
The Alabama Legislature has passed Senate Bill 183 (SB183), which makes important changes to the regulation of certain hair services in the state. This update is intended to help individuals, businesses, and licensees understand what services are regulated by the Board and what services will no longer be subject to licensure or oversight once the law takes effect on October 1, 2026.
What Has Changed?
Under SB183, natural hair styling is no longer regulated under Alabama cosmetology law. This means individuals who perform only natural hair styling services are not required to hold a Natural Hair Stylist license and are not regulated by the Board.
What is considered Natural Hair Styling?
Natural Hair Styling generally includes techniques that do not involve the use of chemicals and may include:
- Braiding
- Twisting
- Weaving
- Locking
- Similar natural hair techniques
Voluntary Natural Hair Stylist License Option
SB183 provides an option for individuals to obtain a voluntary Natural Hair Stylist license. Individuals who choose to become licensed must meet all Board requirements for licensure. Once licensed, these individuals remain under the regulatory authority of the Board.
Licensed Natural Hair Stylists are subject to:
- Applicable laws and rules
- Inspection (if operating within a licensed establishment)
- Disciplinary action, if necessary This option allows individuals to demonstrate professional credentials while remaining compliant with Board standards.
What this means for individuals
If you perform only natural hair styling, you are not required to be licensed by the Board.
If you perform any regulated cosmetology services, you must be licensed.
What this means for businesses
Businesses that provide only natural hair styling services do not need a Board-issued license and are not subject to inspection by the Board.
Businesses that provide both natural hair styling and regulated cosmetology services must maintain proper licensure and are subject to inspection for regulated services only.
What this means for consumers
Consumers should be aware that Natural Hair Styling services will no longer be regulated by the Board as of October 1, 2026. The Board will no longer investigate complaints or take enforcement actions related solely to these services. The Board can take action when regulated services (such as chemical treatments or skin care) are involved.
The Board's ongoing role
The Alabama Board of Cosmetology and Barbering remains committed to protecting public health and safety by:
- Licensing qualified professionals
- Inspecting regulated establishments
- Enforcing laws related to cosmetology, esthetics, and nail technology. If you have questions about whether a service requires a license or falls under Board regulation, please contact our office for guidance.
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Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from AL Cosmetology Board.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
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