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Home / Schedules & Flexibility

Time & Scheduling Guide

How long does barber school take? Full-time vs. weekend.

In New York, becoming a licensed barber means completing 500 training hours — the same requirement no matter how you schedule it. What changes is the pace: about 4 months full-time, or roughly 6–7 months on weekends. This guide helps you pick the track that fits your job, budget, and life — and plan your start date around it. New classes begin the first Monday of every month.

Morning Afternoon Weekend Same 500-Hour License
500
licensed hours
4
months full-time
3
flexible tracks
1st
Monday monthly start

The Short Answer

Full-time vs. weekend: which fits you?

Both tracks lead to the exact same Master Barber license — the 500-hour requirement never changes. Full-time finishes in about 4 months; the weekend track takes roughly 6–7 months. The only trade-off is how quickly you finish versus keeping a weekday income while you train.

"Employers care that you're licensed and skilled — not which schedule you used to get there."
Track Typical hours Time to finish Best for
Morning full-time
Plan A
Mon–Fri, 8 AM–2 PM~4 monthsFastest route; free afternoons
Afternoon full-time
Plan B
Mon–Fri, 2 PM–8 PM~4 monthsMorning commitments; same fast pace
Weekend
Plan C
Sat–Sun, 9 AM–7 PM~6–7 monthsKeeping a weekday job while you train

Each track maps to a tuition plan — see exact pricing on tuition & funding, or read the full curriculum in the 500-hour Master Barber program.

Pick Your Pace

Choose the track that fits your life

The license is identical across all three. What matters is which schedule you can realistically commit to right now.

Choose full-time if…

You can dedicate weekdays to training and want to be licensed and earning as fast as possible — roughly four months from your first day. Morning (Plan A) and afternoon (Plan B) run the same pace; pick the half of the day that's free.

Choose weekend if…

You're changing careers without quitting your job first. Weekends (Plan C) let you finish the same 500 hours over about 6–7 months while a paycheck keeps coming in.

Either way…

The credential is the same New York Master Barber license, and every track starts the first Monday of the month. Funding — GI Bill®, ACCES-VR, or weekly payments — applies to all three.

Planning Your Start

When can you actually begin?

Classes start the first Monday of every month, so you're rarely more than a few weeks from a start date once you decide. Use the calendar to plan your training around work, tuition, and family.

2026

  • Jan · Mon, Jan 5
  • Feb · Mon, Feb 2
  • Mar · Mon, Mar 2
  • Apr · Mon, Apr 6
  • May · Mon, May 4
  • Jun · Mon, Jun 1
  • Jul · Mon, Jul 6
  • Aug · Mon, Aug 3
  • Sep · Mon, Sep 7
  • Oct · Mon, Oct 5
  • Nov · Mon, Nov 2
  • Dec · Mon, Dec 7

2027

  • Jan · Mon, Jan 4
  • Feb · Mon, Feb 1
  • Mar · Mon, Mar 1
  • Apr · Mon, Apr 5
  • May · Mon, May 3
  • Jun · Mon, Jun 7
  • Jul · Mon, Jul 5
  • Aug · Mon, Aug 2
  • Sep · Mon, Sep 6
  • Oct · Mon, Oct 4
  • Nov · Mon, Nov 1
  • Dec · Mon, Dec 6

2028

  • Jan · Mon, Jan 3
  • Feb · Mon, Feb 7
  • Mar · Mon, Mar 6
  • Apr · Mon, Apr 3
  • May · Mon, May 1
  • Jun · Mon, Jun 5
  • Jul · Mon, Jul 3
  • Aug · Mon, Aug 7
  • Sep · Mon, Sep 4
  • Oct · Mon, Oct 2
  • Nov · Mon, Nov 6
  • Dec · Mon, Dec 4

Plan Around Closures

Federal holidays to factor in

Most schools close on U.S. federal holidays. Build a little buffer into your timeline when you map out your 500 hours.

2026

  • New Year's Day · Thu, Jan 1
  • MLK Day · Mon, Jan 19
  • Presidents' Day · Mon, Feb 16
  • Memorial Day · Mon, May 25
  • Juneteenth · Fri, Jun 19
  • Independence Day · Sat, Jul 4
  • Labor Day · Mon, Sep 7
  • Columbus Day · Mon, Oct 12
  • Veterans Day · Wed, Nov 11
  • Thanksgiving · Thu, Nov 26
  • Christmas Day · Fri, Dec 25

2027

  • New Year's Day · Fri, Jan 1
  • MLK Day · Mon, Jan 18
  • Presidents' Day · Mon, Feb 15
  • Memorial Day · Mon, May 31
  • Juneteenth · Sat, Jun 19
  • Independence Day · Sun, Jul 4
  • Labor Day · Mon, Sep 6
  • Columbus Day · Mon, Oct 11
  • Veterans Day · Thu, Nov 11
  • Thanksgiving · Thu, Nov 25
  • Christmas Day · Sat, Dec 25

2028

  • New Year's Day · Sat, Jan 1
  • MLK Day · Mon, Jan 17
  • Presidents' Day · Mon, Feb 21
  • Memorial Day · Mon, May 29
  • Juneteenth · Mon, Jun 19
  • Independence Day · Tue, Jul 4
  • Labor Day · Mon, Sep 4
  • Columbus Day · Mon, Oct 9
  • Veterans Day · Sat, Nov 11
  • Thanksgiving · Thu, Nov 23
  • Christmas Day · Mon, Dec 25

Common Questions

Timing & scheduling FAQs

Can I finish barber school faster than 4 months?

The 500-hour requirement sets the floor — you can't shortcut the hours. Full-time attendance is the fastest legitimate path, landing you at roughly four months.

Can I train on weekends only?

Yes. The weekend track (Plan C) spreads the same 500 hours over about 6–7 months, which is how many career-changers train without leaving their current job.

When exactly do classes start?

New classes begin the first Monday of every month. The calendar above lists the exact start date for each month through 2028, so you can plan around work and family.

Do holidays and closures extend my timeline?

Slightly. Schools typically close on federal holidays, so build a little buffer into your plan — the calendar above shows the closures to expect.

Does the schedule affect what I pay?

Each track maps to a tuition plan: Plan A (morning) is $5,600, Plan B (afternoon) and Plan C (weekend) are $4,600. All use a $500–$550 down payment plus weekly payments. See tuition & funding for the full breakdown.

Picked Your Track?

Start your 500 hours on the next first Monday

Once you know which schedule fits your life, the next step is enrolling. American Barber Institute runs morning, afternoon, and weekend tracks and starts new classes the first Monday of every month.

Classes begin the first Monday of each month

Ready to Become a Licensed Barber?

Next class starts soon. Seats fill fast — start your barber school enrollment, request a call, or speak with admissions in English or Spanish.

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