Kansas — NP Medspa Setup Guide

How to Open a Medspa in Kansas as a Nurse Practitioner

The full legal, structural, and market path for an NP-owned aesthetic practice in Kansas — in plain English. Built from Kansas board guidance, AANP scope data, and the playbook Faisal Darwiche, NP has used to open three practices over 27 years.

The short version

Kansas is a Full Practice Authority state. That means after your transition period (if any), you can own and operate an aesthetic practice solo — no career-long collaborating physician, no MSO/PC workaround required for the prescriptive piece. This is the easiest legal structure in the country for an NP-owned medspa.

1. Kansas NP scope of practice

Kansas practice authority: Full Practice Authority.

Can you own a practice solo? Yes (effective 2022 statute change). Full practice authority for licensed APRNs.

Collaborative agreement / physician relationship: No collaborative agreement required after 2022 statute.

Good-faith exam rules: A good-faith exam by a licensed prescriber (NP/MD/DO) is required before initial aesthetic medication administration. Telehealth GFE is permitted in most states subject to state-specific rules.

RN injection scope in Kansas: RNs may inject aesthetic medications (botulinum toxin, dermal fillers, fat-dissolving) under a valid prescriber order and approved protocol. Only PRESCRIBING requires a licensed NP/MD/DO. Verify with your board.

For the source-cited scope deep-dive, see /scope-of-practice/ks.

2. Medical director requirements in Kansas

Not required for NP-owned aesthetic practice after the 2022 full-practice-authority statute.

3. Corporate Practice of Medicine doctrine

Kansas enforces CPOM for traditional medical practices. NP-owned aesthetic practices typically structure as PC with the NP as the licensed owner.

4. Recommended legal structure in Kansas

PC is the most common structure. Kansas has a strict CPOM doctrine for physician-owned practices but APRNs with full practice authority operate under their own license.

Entity selection is the highest-leverage decision you make at setup. The wrong structure costs you tax efficiency at scale and can create personal liability exposure. Confirm with Kansas counsel before you file — this is one of the rare line items that pays for itself the first year.

5. Kansas market overview

Highest-demand metros in Kansas: Wichita, Overland Park, Kansas City (KS), Topeka.

Overland Park (Johnson County) is the highest-spend submarket in the state. Wichita has volume but lower price ceiling.

6. The 90-day launch path

The build sequence Faisal teaches in My Practice Academy applies across all 50 states with state-specific adjustments to entity structure and medical-director requirements. Below is the order of operations — by week.

  1. Weeks 1–2: Entity + licensing. File your PC is the most common structure. Apply for state business license. Begin medical director search (if state requires post-transition).
  2. Weeks 3–4: Insurance + compliance. Professional liability (malpractice), general liability, premises insurance. Kansas good-faith-exam protocol drafted and approved.
  3. Weeks 5–6: Suppliers + space. Allergan / Galderma / Merz accounts opened (toxin and filler authorization). Pharmacy relationships. Lease signed or build-out begun.
  4. Weeks 7–8: Systems. EMR / charting platform. Booking software. Payment processor (cash-pay focus — no Medicare billing). Patient consent forms (Kansas-compliant).
  5. Weeks 9–10: Brand + marketing. Practice name, brand identity, website, Google Business Profile. Pre-launch list building.
  6. Weeks 11–12: Soft launch. First 20 paid patients. Refine protocols, dial in pricing, gather first reviews. Then transition to public launch and paid acquisition.

Get your Kansas-specific 90-day roadmap.

The free 17-question assessment returns a Kansas-specific 90-day launch plan: entity structure, supplier sequence, build sequence, and the exact next action for your scenario. 7 minutes. No card. Built by Faisal Darwiche, NP — 27 years, three practices.

Take the assessment →

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to open a medspa in Kansas?

Real lean-launch cost band for a single-room NP-owned aesthetic practice in Kansas ranges from roughly $25,000 (small lease, used equipment, minimum inventory) to $150,000+ (build-out, multiple rooms, full equipment slate). The bigger swing is operating runway — give yourself 90 days of fixed costs in the bank before opening.

How long does it take to open a medspa in Kansas?

The 90-day path above is realistic for a focused operator who is not also working a full-time clinical schedule. If you are still clinical-full-time during build, plan 4–6 months. The two longest-lead items in Kansas are entity formation (1–4 weeks depending on filing volume) and building supplier accounts.

Do I need a medical director in Kansas?

Not required for NP-owned aesthetic practice after the 2022 full-practice-authority statute.

Can an RN open a medspa in Kansas?

An RN can own the business entity, but the RN cannot prescribe and cannot perform the good-faith exam. An RN-owned medspa in Kansas needs a prescriber (NP/MD/DO) on the medical side — either as a co-owner, medical director, or contracted prescriber. Same as in every other state. Memory: RNs inject in all 50 states under a valid prescriber order.

Neighboring states

If your service-area or patient draw crosses state lines, here are the regional guides:

Open a Medspa in Missouri
Reduced Practice
Open a Medspa in Oklahoma
Restricted Practice
Open a Medspa in Colorado
Full Practice Authority
Open a Medspa in Nebraska
Full Practice Authority

Faisal Darwiche, NP — 27 years as a nurse practitioner, three practices opened (including Panacea, sold to a strategic), faculty at The Aesthetic Show and Marquis Medical Conference. My Practice Academy is the operating system I wish someone had handed me 20 years ago.

See the full Kansas launch curriculum →

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

Online training does not constitute hands-on clinical certification.

Sources: AANP State Practice Environment (Updated: 05/2026) cross-referenced against the Kansas Board of Nursing. Verified 2026-05-13. State statutes change — reconfirm before relying on this content.

Read the Kansas scope-of-practice deep-dive at /scope-of-practice/ks. Read the master guide at /open-medspa.