Florida does not limit medical spa ownership to physicians. Who can own a medical spa in Florida depends on what the business does and who performs its procedures, not on the owner’s license alone. Physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, estheticians, and non-clinical investors can all qualify, each under different conditions covered by owner type below.
Key Takeaways
- Physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, and non-clinical investors can all own a medical spa in Florida. (Jump to Section)
- Clinical owners still answer to their individual scope of practice, no matter their ownership stake. (Jump to Section)
- Non-clinical owners need a physician collaboration structure built in from day one, since they cannot perform or supervise procedures themselves. (Jump to Section)
Ownership Eligibility by Owner Type
Florida law separates who can hold equity in a medical spa from who can legally perform or supervise its procedures, and conflating the two is the most common ownership mistake. A non-clinical investor can own 100 percent of the business but cannot direct patient care, while a licensed clinician’s ownership stake never expands their individual scope of practice. The five owner types below each face a different set of conditions for correctly structuring the split.
Physician Owners
A licensed Florida physician (MD or DO) can own a medical spa outright. Physicians already have the authority to perform and supervise most of the procedures a med spa offers, so the practice does not need to hire a separate medical director. Board certification in a relevant specialty, such as dermatology or plastic surgery, strengthens the role even when not strictly required.
Nurse Practitioner Owners
Nurse practitioners can own a Florida medical spa under the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012, which governs NP licensure. The 2025 Florida Statutes 464.0123 grants certain advanced practice registered nurses autonomous practice authority, but only in primary care, general pediatrics, and psychiatric settings, so an NP owner still practices under a standard collaborative agreement with a physician for med spa procedures. That agreement must specify which procedures the NP can perform and under what level of physician oversight before the spa opens.
Registered Nurse Owners
Registered nurses can hold ownership in a Florida medical spa. An RN owner cannot serve as a medical director and cannot perform procedures beyond the RN scope, such as certain injectables or laser treatments, without a physician’s delegation. That delegation must exist as a documented standing order or protocol before the RN performs any procedure.
Estheticians and Other Non-Clinical Owners
Estheticians and other non-clinical professionals can own a medical spa and run the business side: marketing, billing, staffing, and daily operations. They cannot perform or supervise any procedure requiring a medical license. Every clinical service the spa offers still needs a separately licensed provider attached to it, regardless of the owner’s title.
Investor Group Owners
Private equity groups, franchise operators, and other corporate entities can own medical spas, typically through a Management Services Organization. The MSO holds the non-clinical assets and handles administrative functions. A separate professional entity, owned by a licensed provider, holds the clinical side and contracts with the MSO for those services.
Clinical Owners Still Answer to the Scope of Practice
Ownership does not expand what an individual clinician is licensed to do. An NP who owns 100 percent of a medical spa still cannot perform a procedure reserved for physicians, and an RN owner still needs a physician’s delegation before performing an injectable treatment. A clinician’s license, not their equity stake, determines which procedures they can legally perform or supervise. Confirm the specific structure against current Florida med spa ownership rules before finalizing who performs which service.
Non-Clinical Owners Need a Collaboration Structure
A non-clinical owner cannot supervise medical procedures, so a collaborating physician has to be in place before the spa opens. That physician relationship needs written delegation protocols specifying which procedures require direct supervision versus general supervision. Collaborating physician fees vary by scope of oversight and typically run as a flat monthly rate, a per-procedure fee, or a percentage of revenue. Locking in the terms before signing a lease gives an owner more room to negotiate.
The One Rule That Applies to Every Owner Type: The Health Care Clinic License Test
Regardless of who owns the spa, Florida requires every medical spa to pass the same checkpoint: the Health Care Clinic license test administered by the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration. The test asks two things. Does the business provide services that meet the statutory definition of a health care clinic, and does it qualify for an exemption, such as being wholly owned by licensed providers delivering care within their own scope?
A spa that bills for medical services and does not meet an exemption needs a Health Care Clinic license before it opens. Review the current AHCA licensing requirements against your ownership and billing structure before assuming an exemption applies.
How Medical Director Co. Completes the Ownership Picture With a Collaborating Physician
Every ownership structure above still requires a collaborating physician before the spa treats its first patient, and finding one independently can take months of cold outreach. Medical Director Co. works with every owner type and matches each with a vetted Florida physician who fits their specialty and practice setting. Every match includes an attorney-reviewed protocol agreement built around the owner’s specific scope, plus ongoing compliance checks that keep the agreement current as regulations or staffing change. Pricing starts at a flat $799 per month with no setup fees.
Don't Let a Missing Physician Sink Your Med Spa
Medical Director Co. matches every owner type, physician, NP, RN, esthetician, or investor, with a vetted, AHCA-compliant collaborating physician. Paperwork included.
FAQ
Can someone with no medical license own a med spa in Florida?
Florida does not require med spa owners to hold a medical license. The business still needs licensed providers, an RN, ARNP, PA, or physician, attached to every medical procedure it offers through a formal delegation or collaboration agreement, not just listed as staff. Operating without that agreement in place is one of the most common reasons AHCA flags a med spa during an inspection.
Do all owners of a Florida med spa need to be listed on the clinic license?
If a Health Care Clinic License applies, ownership information becomes part of that application, including any individual or entity holding a 5 percent or greater interest in the practice. AHCA also runs background screening on controlling owners as part of the licensure process. Confirm the specific requirement with AHCA, since it depends on the entity structure.
Can a physician assistant own a medical spa in Florida?
A physician assistant can own a Florida medical spa. The same ownership and licensing considerations that apply to other non-physician owners also apply here, including scope-of-practice limits on the procedures they can perform. A PA owner still needs a supervising physician on file for any procedure outside general aesthetic services, documented the same way it would be for a PA on staff.
Does owning a med spa require malpractice insurance?
Ownership alone does not require malpractice coverage. Any clinical owner who performs procedures, along with the collaborating physician, typically needs it, often at minimum limits set by the malpractice carrier or facility contract. Non-clinical owners still carry general liability and business insurance, but that is a separate policy from medical malpractice coverage.
Can out-of-state residents own a Florida medical spa?
Florida does not limit medical spa ownership by residency. Anyone performing a licensed procedure inside the spa still needs the appropriate Florida license. An out-of-state entity forming the ownership structure also needs to register as a foreign entity with the Florida Division of Corporations and maintain a registered agent in the state.
Confirming Your Ownership Structure Before You Open
Ownership eligibility for a Florida medical spa depends on license type, scope of practice, and the Health Care Clinic license test. Every structure, from a solo physician owner to a non-clinical investor group, needs a compliant collaboration or delegation plan before opening day. Confirm yours now, before a licensing question becomes a licensing problem.
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Bolton M. Harris, J.D., is a seasoned attorney with a formidable background in criminal law and a focus on healthcare law and compliance. As the in-house legal counsel at Medical Director Co., Harris brings a unique blend of prosecutorial experience and regulatory expertise to support healthcare professionals across Texas. Her career spans roles as a prosecutor in multiple counties and now as a trusted advisor on the legal intricacies of medical practice operations.
Education & Early Career
Bolton Harris completed her undergraduate studies at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in 2013. During her time at SMU, she was not only a dedicated student but also a competitive athlete on the university’s women’s swimming team. She went on to earn her Juris Doctor from Texas A&M University School of Law in 2016 and became a member of the Texas Bar that same year. Armed with a strong academic foundation and discipline honed as a student-athlete, Harris embarked on a career in criminal law immediately after law school.
Prosecutorial Experience in Texas
Bolton Harris began her legal career in public service as a criminal prosecutor. She served as an Assistant District Attorney in multiple jurisdictions, where she quickly rose through the ranks and handled a broad spectrum of cases. Some highlights of her prosecutorial career include:
- Assistant District Attorney, Dallas County, Texas: Prosecuted a high volume of criminal cases in one of the state’s busiest DA offices, gaining extensive trial experience in both misdemeanor and felony courts.
- Assistant District Attorney, Ellis County, Texas: Continued to hone her courtroom advocacy skills, known for meticulous case preparation and a tenacious pursuit of justice on behalf of the community.
- Assistant District Attorney, Navarro County, Texas: Broadened her legal expertise by handling diverse criminal matters in a smaller county, working closely with law enforcement and community leaders to uphold the law.
Through these roles, Harris built a reputation for being a tough but fair advocate. She brought numerous cases to trial and developed an in-depth understanding of the criminal justice system. This distinguished prosecutorial background laid a strong foundation for the next phase of her career in the private sector.
Healthcare Law & Compliance at Medical Director Co.
After her tenure as a prosecutor, Harris shifted her focus to healthcare law, applying her legal acumen to the medical field. She recognized that the same attention to detail and tenacity that served her in criminal law could benefit healthcare providers navigating complex regulations. Embracing this new direction, Harris became well-versed in the intricate laws governing medical practices – from licensing requirements to patient safety and privacy standards – and is passionate about helping practitioners stay compliant.
In her current role as the in-house attorney for Medical Director Co., Bolton Harris oversees all legal and compliance matters for the organization and its clients. Medical Director Co. is a nurse-owned firm that connects nurse practitioners (NPs), physician assistants (PAs), and registered nurses with qualified medical directors and collaborating physicians, offering fast placements and comprehensive compliance support for healthcare practices. Harris ensures that each of these partnerships and clinical ventures adheres to all applicable state and federal laws. She is responsible for drafting and reviewing collaborative practice agreements, advising on regulatory requirements, and providing ongoing legal counsel as clients establish and grow their clinics. Drawing on her prosecutorial eye for risk management, Harris proactively identifies potential legal issues and addresses them before they escalate, giving healthcare professionals peace of mind.
Bolton M. Harris’s multifaceted expertise – spanning high-stakes courtroom litigation to detailed healthcare compliance – makes her a formidable legal ally. Whether advocating in front of a jury or guiding a medical practice through regulatory hurdles, she remains committed to the highest standards of the legal profession. Her blend of courtroom-tested skill and healthcare law knowledge ensures that clients of Medical Director Co. receive elite-level counsel and steadfast protection in an ever-evolving legal landscape.