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You asked if it is was illegal, and several knowlegable professionals told you it was illegal.
You replied with "prove it". Someone did, and you still don't believe it.
If you are too lazy to look up the regulations in your own state - which I did before even opening my businesses, and Samantha did even though she lives in IDAHO and has no interest in what goes on in FL - maybe you should re-think you level of motivation.
Put in a little effort -- you had to get a license, so you know where to find the state's website regulating your profession.
Asking advice or guidance is one thing. Asking people to do the work for you is lazy.
Pick up, the phone, call the cosmetology board and ask them yourself. Do I need to look up the number for you?
Point made...
It's probably just me, but the number of people on this forum who are going mobile or out of their homes concerns me.
Many of them DON'T check into their state's regs - and even when they know it's prohibited they do it anyway. For the people who put real effort into complying, I think that's awesome!
For those of us who have gone to the trouble to obtain an establishment license and conform to the regs, this is a slap in the face. It can undermine the entire profession (operating a business outside regs and scope of practice). In my state I can do home visits BUT I have to have a real establishment and the home visit must be on my office schedule...this is what the state inspector told me. I don't do any services out of MY home OR clients home...and no spa parties...but I know people who do.
This practice could lead to more restrictive regs for ALL of us...and that worries me! If you are not operating within your state regs then your insurance will not cover you if something happens. If there is a claim you stand to lose your license, your business, and all your assets.
Just to give you an idea of how bad this situation is, American Spa ran a feature a year or two ago about a spa that did in-room services at the hotel in which they were based as a way of creating capacity when their spa was booked.
Problem was, no one at American Spa bothered to check the regs. Not only are mobile skin care services prohibited in this state, but so are mobile nail care services. AND the hotel in which the spa was based is part of the Marriott family of hotels, and in 2010, Marriott banned in-room massages at all of their properties after the nasty Craigs List Killer at the Boston Hotel (not that this had anything to do with massage, it was prostitution, but try telling a lawyer that)
I am with you.
On the massage-side of the business, many licensing board and certainly AMTA code of ethics, obligates a practitioner to report unlicensed activity.
In California, I believe it is legal to have a mobile unit, pull up outside someone's house, they can come into your mobile but you can't take anything into they're house. it is for sanitation inspection purposes. the state has to be able to inspect your place of work.
This is only partially true.
You can do in-home services that are "non-invasive" -- no steamer, no manual extractions, no peels.
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