Got mad skills styling, braiding, and caring for afro hair, but no formal license? Good news: In France, you can absolutely offer at-home afro hair services without a CAP (a professional vocational diploma), provided you meet specific conditions. This article dives into the legal requirements, Zenaba's platform policies, and how to ensure you're practicing legally.
1. What the Law Says About Home Hairdressing
In France, the law distinguishes two cases:
- Classic hairdressing with treatments (shampoo, cut, coloring): requires a vocational certificate (CAP) or an authorization to practice
- Hairstyles without treatments (braids, twists, locks, updos, etc.): no diploma required
Reference: Order of March 17, 1997, relating to Afro hairdressing activities without the use of chemical products
In other words: if you do not touch the scalp or use chemical products, you can do home hairdressing without a diploma.
2. What Zenaba Requires
Zenaba is a networking platform, not a salon. It does not require a diploma, but it does verify:
- That you know how to perform the proposed hairstyles
- That your profile is serious and complete
- That you respect basic rules (punctuality, client respect, hygiene)
You must be of legal age and have self-employed (auto-entrepreneur) status to receive payments.
3. How to Practice Legally Without a Diploma
Here are the key steps to legally do home hairdressing:
- Register as a self-employed (auto-entrepreneur) individual
- It's free and fast on autoentrepreneur.urssaf.fr
- Declare your activity
- Choose: "Personal care / aesthetic treatments without medical care"
- Specify "hairdressing without treatments" if needed
- Maintain simple accounting
- You declare your income monthly or quarterly
- You only pay charges if you collect payments
Good to know: you can start hairdressing as soon as your declaration is validated, without a diploma or a physical location.
No need for a vocational certificate (CAP) to do home hairdressing if you only offer services without treatments.
Zenaba allows you to practice freely, provided you are serious, competent, and well-organized. All while respecting current legislation.
It's not the diploma that makes the hairdresser; it's talent, rigor... and client satisfaction.