NP / RN / PA Aesthetic Practice FAQ

Can RNs inject Botox without an NP?

RNs can inject Botox in all 50 states under a valid prescriber order from an NP, MD, or DO. The order can come from a prescriber who is not physically on-site at the moment of injection, but a licensed prescriber must establish the patient relationship, perform or supervise the good-faith exam, and issue the order.

Yes — RNs can inject aesthetic medications (neuromodulators, dermal fillers, fat-dissolving injectables) in all 50 states. This is a frequently misunderstood point. RN injection scope is broad; what RNs cannot do is prescribe.

The chain looks like this: a licensed prescriber (NP, MD, or DO) establishes the patient relationship, performs a good-faith examination, determines the treatment plan, and issues an order for the specific aesthetic medication and dose. The RN then administers the medication consistent with that order. The order doesn't require the prescriber to be physically on-site at the moment of injection (this is where most confusion comes from) — but the prescriber-patient relationship and the order have to exist.

State-by-state variation centers on: - Whether the good-faith exam can be done by telehealth (most states yes; a few require in-person for first treatment) - Whether there are specific delegation rules in the state Nurse Practice Act - Whether the practice setting requires specific protocols, charts, or supervision documentation

What an RN cannot do anywhere: prescribe the medication, issue the order, perform the good-faith exam (with rare exceptions in states that explicitly delegate that function), or own a medical practice that bills for prescribing-and-injecting as a single service without a prescriber attached.

What this means practically: an RN can be the injector in an NP-owned or MD-owned medspa. An RN cannot be the only clinical license-holder in a practice that does aesthetic injections — there has to be a prescriber attached, either as owner, employed clinician, collaborating prescriber, or contracted medical director.

If you're an RN considering aesthetic practice ownership, the typical paths are: (1) partner with an NP or physician who serves as the prescribing clinician, (2) hire a prescribing clinician as your medical director, or (3) advance your own license to NP. Each path has trade-offs. My Practice Academy covers all three.

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Related questions

Can nurse practitioners own medspas?
Can RNs own a medspa?
Do NPs need a medical director to inject Botox?
What is a good-faith exam in a medspa?
How do I become an aesthetic nurse practitioner?

General guidance only. Not legal advice. Verify with your state nursing board and counsel.

Online training does not constitute hands-on clinical certification.

Read the full state-by-state guides at /open-medspa and /scope-of-practice.