Hi Sail and welcome
I’m not familiar with the regulations for Southern Ireland I’m afraid. I’d have assumed it was similar to the U.K. but that might be a silly assumption to make. In general Southern Ireland and Northern Ireland try and have friction free boundaries as far as possible for residents. If you trained in Ireland, ask your school for advice.
In the U.K. licensing is at the discretion of the local Council. There are no standardised National regulations. The licensing regulations apply to the business not the individual. If you want to apply for a job you will need to be working legally in that country, but that’s usually about passports snd visas rather than professional registration.
If you want some ideas about what else to study, do some market research and look at the treatment menus of the companies that would be your ideal employer. There are level 4 skincare qualifications you can study which cover the science of skin ageing. You would need at least level 4 to work in a clinic offering more science based skincare.
I’d suggest you apply for the jobs that interest you and ask what they will want from you in terms of documentation. I’ve trained in Dublin and I was very favourably impressed with the professionalism of the students. I’d always interview anyone applying to me with an Irish school training so good luck and go for
Hi Sail and welcome
I’m not familiar with the regulations for Southern Ireland I’m afraid. I’d have assumed it was similar to the U.K. but that might be a silly assumption to make. In general Southern Ireland and Northern Ireland try and have friction free boundaries as far as possible for residents. If you trained in Ireland, ask your school for advice.
In the U.K. licensing is at the discretion of the local Council. There are no standardised National regulations. The licensing regulations apply to the business not the individual. If you want to apply for a job you will need to be working legally in that country, but that’s usually about passports snd visas rather than professional registration.
If you want some ideas about what else to study, do some market research and look at the treatment menus of the companies that would be your ideal employer. There are level 4 skincare qualifications you can study which cover the science of skin ageing. You would need at least level 4 to work in a clinic offering more science based skincare.
I’d suggest you apply for the jobs that interest you and ask what they will want from you in terms of documentation. I’ve trained in Dublin and I was very favourably impressed with the professionalism of the students. I’d always interview anyone applying to me with an Irish school training so good luck and go for it!
Dear Duchess,