Friday, July 30, 2010

Training nail technician. do i have to pay 4 insurance 2 practise?

i have been training as a nail technichian and another girl on the course said that when we ';graduate'; and go to work elsewhere, we will have to pay an insurance policy in our own names, is this right???Training nail technician. do i have to pay 4 insurance 2 practise?
if you work for your self then yes get insurance it is not expensive from 50 to 拢85 for a year it is Worth it you will need public liability insurance this is even if you are mobile and not in your own salon. I have been running a hair and beauty business for 10 years and never needed it but i still get it every year just in case you will be covered for 拢1000,000 hope the following links help.Training nail technician. do i have to pay 4 insurance 2 practise?
Yes if you have premises.
Whilst training your college will pay your insurance (if u go for work experience etc) after you have qualified u won't be able to treat clients without insurance...well of course, u WILL but for your own back up you will need to be insured....ie...a customer complains and tries to sue...if u work for a company then the company will proably cover the insurance and u wont need to pay
only if you are working for your self, do not with you are working for someone else.
It is not especially likely, but a nail technician can certainly get sued for injuring a client. I am not in your business, but imagine the worst possible thing that could happen to a client under your care.





So, either your employer buys liability insurance that covers you if you are sued as an individual (not merely if the employer is sued), or else you need to buy your own. It is probably not expensive, but if this is your chosen career, you want to be safe.
well technocliy no cuz i think ur boss pays for that
if you work for someone else you wouldn't have to pay insurance, but if it is your own buisness you would have to pay insurance.
I trained with Creative Nail Design ... had to pay for an insurance policy before ';graduating';.

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