Minnesota — NP Medspa Setup Guide
The full legal, structural, and market path for an NP-owned aesthetic practice in Minnesota — in plain English. Built from Minnesota board guidance, AANP scope data, and the playbook Faisal Darwiche, NP has used to open three practices over 27 years.
Minnesota 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.
Minnesota practice authority: Full Practice Authority.
Can you own a practice solo? Yes. NPs may own a solo practice.
Collaborative agreement / physician relationship: 2,080-hour collaborative agreement post-licensure, then independent.
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 Minnesota: 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/mn.
Not required for NP-owned aesthetic practice after the 2,080-hour transition.
Minnesota does not strictly enforce CPOM against NP-owned practices.
PC or PLLC. Both permitted in Minnesota.
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 Minnesota counsel before you file — this is one of the rare line items that pays for itself the first year.
Highest-demand metros in Minnesota: Minneapolis, St. Paul, Rochester, Edina.
Twin Cities suburbs (Edina, Wayzata, Eden Prairie) have very strong aesthetic demand. Rochester (Mayo Clinic patient flow) is an underserved market for elective aesthetics.
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.
The free 17-question assessment returns a Minnesota-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.
Real lean-launch cost band for a single-room NP-owned aesthetic practice in Minnesota 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.
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 Minnesota are entity formation (1–4 weeks depending on filing volume) and building supplier accounts.
Not required for NP-owned aesthetic practice after the 2,080-hour transition.
An RN can own the business entity, but the RN cannot prescribe and cannot perform the good-faith exam. An RN-owned medspa in Minnesota 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.
If your service-area or patient draw crosses state lines, here are the regional guides:
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.