The three paths at a glance
| Path | Time | Cost | Credential |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full cosmetology programme | 12-18 months | $14k-$22k | CANB licence + diploma |
| Focused makeup course | 2-4 months | $3k-$9k | Private certificate |
| Self-taught + mentorship | 12-24+ months | $500-$3k | None (until licensed separately) |
Path 1 — Full cosmetology programme
What you get
A 1,500-hour comprehensive grounding across hair, skin, nails, and makeup. You leave with a recognised cosmetology diploma and the qualifying hours to write CANB licensing exams immediately. You'll also have peer relationships, an instructor network, and access to school-sponsored guest workshops and industry events.
Trade-offs
Most of your time is spent on hair and esthetics, not makeup. If you want to specialise in bridal/editorial makeup specifically, you're spending 12+ months on adjacent skills. Tuition is the highest of any path. The credential is the most portable across provinces and across career arcs (salon work, education, entertainment industry).
Best for
- Anyone considering salon-based work or hair-plus-makeup services.
- Career-changers who want a recognised diploma on the wall.
- Anyone who'd benefit from the structure of a full-time programme.
- Anyone planning to teach cosmetology eventually.
Path 2 — Focused makeup course
What you get
A 6-16 week intensive specifically on makeup. MAC Pro, Blanche Macdonald, Komplete Makeup Academy, the Vancouver Film School makeup programme — these vary widely in depth and reputation, but the best ones teach specialty technique (HD, film, special effects, editorial) that broader programmes don't. You leave with a private-school certificate and a portfolio you actually built during the course.
Trade-offs
No CANB licence at the end — you write that separately as a challenge candidate. Cost is meaningful but lower than a full programme. The quality varies enormously by school; do real research before paying. Industry recognition varies — some programmes (MAC Pro, top-tier US/UK programmes) are taken very seriously; others are not.
Best for
- Someone already certain they want to specialise in makeup, not adjacent fields.
- Someone with the budget for tuition but not the appetite for a year of school.
- Someone targeting editorial, film, or fashion work specifically.
Path 3 — Self-taught plus mentorship
What you get
The cheapest path in dollars, the most expensive in time and self-discipline. You build skill through YouTube (Lisa Eldridge, Wayne Goss, Sir John), paid online courses (Brushed by Cee, Hung Vanngo masterclasses), books (Bobbi Brown's basics, Rae Morris's brush guides), and deliberate practice on willing friends. You supplement with structured one-on-one coaching sessions with a working artist to fix bad habits and accelerate growth.
You'll also need to figure out the business side — pricing, contracts, taxes, marketing — almost entirely on your own. Many self-taught artists end up paying for coaching specifically on the business layer once they realise their technique is fine but their pricing is broken.
Trade-offs
No credential unless you write CANB challenge exams separately. No peer cohort by default — you have to manufacture one through online community. Quality varies enormously based on your self-discipline. Some self-taught artists are excellent; others have been practising for five years and are still making beginner mistakes nobody told them to fix.
Best for
- Someone already working in a related field (esthetician, salon owner, retail beauty) who needs to add makeup specifically.
- Someone with low capital but high time/discipline.
- Someone who wants to test the career before committing to full schooling.
- A parent or career-changer who can't take 12 months off for school.
Why one-on-one coaching matters regardless of path
Coaching isn't a fourth path — it's a multiplier on any of the three. Even students in a full cosmetology programme often hire coaching for makeup specifically, because their school's makeup module is shallow. Self-taught artists use coaching to fix mistakes their YouTube watching won't catch. Working artists use coaching to break plateaus or systematise their business.
What coaching specifically gives you that other paths can't:
- Real-time feedback on your technique — a working pro watching you apply, catching the foundation streak you can't see, the brush angle that's adding 5 minutes to your application, the eye-blending pattern that's not photographing well.
- Foundation-matching across skin tones — the hardest skill in makeup and the one most under-taught in schools. A working pro can take you from "I can match my own skin tone" to "I can match anyone in 90 seconds" in 3-4 focused sessions.
- Business systems — what to charge, when to raise rates, how to write a contract, what your booking flow should look like, when to invest in equipment vs. marketing.
Amanda offers private coaching for makeup artists at every career stage. Reach out if you want to talk through which path is right for where you are.
How to decide
A few honest questions:
- Do I want to do hair too, or just makeup? Hair-yes pushes you toward cosmetology. Makeup-only opens up focused-course and self-taught paths.
- What's my budget? < $3k: self-taught with selective coaching. $3k-$9k: focused course. $14k+: full programme.
- How much time can I commit full-time vs. part-time? Full-time student-life: cosmetology programme is feasible. Working a job already: focused-course or self-taught.
- Do I need the credential for my goal? Salon work: yes. Freelance bridal/editorial: helpful but not required. Content creation: not needed.
- What's my risk tolerance for unstructured learning? Low: school. High: self-taught.
There's no objectively best path — only the right path for your goals, budget, and learning style. Honest answers to these five questions point you at the path that won't waste your money or your time.