Annual refresher training reinforces safety knowledge, updates employees on regulatory changes, and addresses gaps identified through incident reports and observations. OSHA requires annual retraining for several safety topics including bloodborne pathogens, and state cosmetology boards mandate continuing education hours that often include safety-related content. Without regular refresher training, safety knowledge degrades over time, complacency develops, and new hazards go unrecognized. This guide covers annual refresher training requirements for salon staff.
Employees who received thorough safety training during onboarding gradually lose proficiency in procedures they do not use frequently. Emergency response procedures, chemical spill protocols, and exposure incident procedures are examples of critical knowledge that fades without practice and reinforcement. Studies consistently show that safety training effectiveness diminishes significantly within six months without reinforcement.
OSHA specifically requires annual retraining for bloodborne pathogens under 29 CFR 1910.1030. The annual training must be provided within one year of the employee's previous training and must cover the same topics as initial training, with updates reflecting any changes in exposure risks, procedures, or regulations. Hazard communication training must be updated whenever new chemical hazards are introduced, but an annual review of the overall program is recommended practice.
State cosmetology boards in most states require continuing education hours for license renewal. The required hours, topics, and renewal cycles vary by state. Many states require specific hours in health and safety topics as part of the continuing education requirement. Failure to complete continuing education can result in license suspension or non-renewal, preventing the cosmetologist from legally performing services.
Annual refresher training is also the appropriate time to address trends identified through workplace safety data. If incident reports show an increase in chemical burns, the refresher training should emphasize chemical handling procedures. If near-miss reports indicate repeated slip hazards, the refresher should reinforce wet floor management. Data-driven training addresses actual risks rather than generic topics.
Regulatory changes that affect salon operations should be incorporated into annual training. New OSHA standards, updated state cosmetology board regulations, changes to chemical formulations, and new equipment introductions all require employee training. Waiting for the next annual cycle to address significant regulatory changes may not be sufficient. Immediate training may be needed for significant changes, with reinforcement during annual refresher training.
Annual refresher training requirements come from OSHA standards, state cosmetology boards, and state occupational safety programs.
Bloodborne pathogens annual retraining under 29 CFR 1910.1030 requires that training be provided at least annually within one year of the previous training. The training must cover the same elements as initial training and must address any new or modified tasks and procedures that affect occupational exposure.
Hazard communication updates under 29 CFR 1910.1200 require additional training when new chemical hazards are introduced into the work area. While not explicitly annual, conducting an annual review of the hazard communication program and providing refresher training is recommended to maintain employee awareness.
State continuing education requirements for cosmetology license renewal vary by state. Common requirements include a specified number of continuing education hours per renewal cycle, which typically ranges from one to three years. Some states mandate specific hours in health and safety, sanitation, or chemical safety topics.
OSHA general training obligations require that employees be trained whenever new hazards, procedures, equipment, or regulations are introduced. An annual training plan ensures systematic coverage of updates throughout the year.
Record-keeping requirements mandate documentation of all training activities, including the date, topics covered, instructor, attendees, and materials used. Training records must be maintained for the periods specified by applicable regulations.
Check your salon's hygiene score instantly with our free assessment tool →
Ongoing training reflects the professional development that the MmowW assessment evaluates. Salons that invest in annual refresher training maintain higher safety and compliance standards.
Review your training records to determine when each employee last received refresher training on bloodborne pathogens, hazard communication, emergency procedures, and other required topics. Check whether all employees have current continuing education credits for license renewal. Identify any regulatory changes from the past year that should be covered in upcoming training. Review incident reports and near-miss data to identify training priorities.
Use our free tool to check your salon compliance instantly.
Try it free →Step 1: Audit Training Records
Review training records for all employees to identify who is due for annual retraining and on which topics. Check bloodborne pathogens training dates to ensure annual compliance. Verify continuing education hours for each licensed employee. Identify any employees who missed previous training sessions and need make-up training.
Step 2: Identify Training Priorities
Analyze the past year's incident reports, near-miss reports, inspection findings, and observation data to identify safety areas that need reinforcement. Review regulatory changes that have occurred since the last training cycle. Identify new chemicals, equipment, or procedures that have been introduced. Survey employees for topics they feel need additional training.
Step 3: Develop the Training Plan
Create an annual training calendar that schedules all required refresher topics throughout the year. Consider spreading training across multiple shorter sessions rather than one long annual session. Assign specific topics to specific months. Include both mandatory topics and priority topics identified through your safety data analysis.
Step 4: Update Training Materials
Revise training materials to reflect current conditions in your salon. Update the chemical inventory and Safety Data Sheet references. Incorporate any new equipment or procedures. Include case studies from actual incidents or near-misses in your salon, with names removed. Update regulatory information to reflect current requirements. Ensure materials are accurate and relevant to your specific workplace.
Step 5: Deliver Engaging Training
Conduct refresher training using varied formats to maintain engagement. Combine presentations with hands-on demonstrations, scenario-based exercises, group discussions, and practical skill checks. Use real examples from the salon whenever possible. Encourage questions and discussion. Avoid simply reading from slides, which reduces retention and engagement.
Step 6: Document and Evaluate
Record all training activities with attendee signatures, dates, topics, and instructor information. Evaluate training effectiveness through post-training assessments, observation of workplace practices, and tracking of incident rates. Use evaluation results to improve future training. Maintain records in compliance with regulatory requirements.
At minimum, annual refresher training must include bloodborne pathogens, which OSHA explicitly requires annually. Beyond this mandatory topic, best practice annual refresher training for salons should include hazard communication review covering any new chemicals and a general program refresher, emergency action plan review including evacuation route reminders and emergency contact updates, infection control and sanitation procedure review, equipment safety refreshers particularly for any new or modified equipment, ergonomic practice reminders, and any regulatory updates from OSHA, the state cosmetology board, or other applicable agencies. If your analysis of incident reports and near-miss data identifies specific areas of concern, those topics should be prioritized in the annual training. The training should also address any changes to salon policies, procedures, or services that affect safety.
Create a tracking system that records each employee's license number, license expiration date, continuing education cycle dates, required hours per cycle, hours completed, and the topics and providers of completed training. Some states offer online license lookup that shows continuing education status. Many continuing education providers issue completion records that should be collected and filed. Set up reminders well before license renewal deadlines to ensure employees have time to complete remaining hours. As the salon owner or manager, you may provide some continuing education training in-house if it meets your state's requirements for approved providers and topics. Verify with your state cosmetology board whether in-house training qualifies for continuing education credit and what documentation is required.
Yes, incorporating safety training into regular staff meetings is an effective approach that saves time and maintains consistent safety awareness. Short, focused safety topics of fifteen to thirty minutes can be integrated into monthly staff meetings. This approach distributes the training load throughout the year rather than concentrating it in a single long session. However, certain regulatory-required training, such as annual bloodborne pathogens training, must cover all required content elements and should be documented separately to demonstrate compliance. Staff meeting safety segments are best suited for brief reinforcement of specific topics, sharing lessons learned from incidents or near-misses, introducing new procedures or equipment, and addressing seasonal safety concerns. Document the safety training component of each staff meeting separately from the general meeting notes, including the topic, duration, attendees, and materials used, to create a clear training record.
Annual refresher training keeps your team current and your salon safe. Evaluate your salon's training practices with the free hygiene assessment tool and plan your refresher training using this guide. For comprehensive salon compliance management, visit MmowW Shampoo. 安全で、愛される。 Loved for Safety.
Try it free — no signup required
Open the free tool →MmowW Shampoo integrates compliance tools, documentation, and team management in one place.
Start 14-Day Free Trial →No credit card required. From $29.99/month.
Loved for Safety.
Não deixe a regulamentação te parar!
Ai-chan🐣 responde suas dúvidas de conformidade 24/7 com IA
Experimentar grátis