How a Registered Nurse (RN) Starts a Practice in Utah
State-specific scope, ownership, and aesthetic injection rules for registered nurses in Utah.
Scope of Practice for Registered Nurses in Utah
RNs do not prescribe in any state, but RNs in Utah can inject neuromodulators (Botox, Dysport, etc.) and dermal fillers under a valid standing order from a prescribing provider (NP, PA, MD, or DO).
Utah permits RN aesthetic practice under standing orders without a formal Medical Director relationship — though many RN-owned practices use one for risk management.
The prescribing provider does not need to be physically present during injection in Utah, provided the standing order and good-faith exam are properly documented.
Practice Ownership Rules
RNs in Utah can own a medical spa (LLC or corporation) but cannot own a medical practice corporation directly. The most common structure for RN-owned aesthetic practices is a Management Services Organization (MSO) model: the RN owns the LLC that handles operations (lease, equipment, marketing, scheduling), and a physician (or NP in full-practice states) owns the professional corporation that provides the medical services.
Aesthetic Injection Scope
RN aesthetic injection in Utah requires (1) a current RN license in good standing, (2) documented training in aesthetic injection (most carriers require ≥16 hours hands-on), (3) a valid standing order from the prescribing provider, and (4) a documented good-faith examination of each patient before injection.
Recommended Entity Structure in Utah
Utah has a permissive entity environment — standard LLC is widely used for medical and aesthetic practices, with no requirement for physician-only ownership.
Realistic Launch Costs & Timeline
Most registered nurse-led practices in Utah can open the doors for $40,000–$120,000 depending on real-estate footprint, equipment scope, and whether the practice starts solo or with staff. The realistic launch timeline from "I am ready to start" to "I am seeing my first paying patient" is 90–150 days for most clinicians, longer if the entity structure requires physician partnership negotiation.
That spread tracks with the breakdown taught in the My Practice Academy Practice Blueprint — entity formation, banking, EHR, malpractice, equipment financing, marketing, first-90-days operational rhythm. The course is built by Faisal Darwiche, NP, who has launched and operated three independent practices.
Common Pitfalls Specific to Utah
- Underestimating real-estate timing. Medical-use commercial leases in Utah take 60–120 days from LOI to keys. If you do not start lease negotiation in parallel with entity formation, you lose 90 days.
- Credentialing delays. If you plan to bill any insurance — even just for medical-aesthetic adjuncts — credentialing in Utah averages 90–120 days. Start the day you incorporate, not the day you open.
What to Do Next
- Pull your Utah license in good standing and confirm renewal status.
- Decide your business model — solo aesthetic, full primary care, embedded inside an existing practice, or mobile/concierge.
- Form the entity (PC, PLLC, or LLC depending on CPOM rules) and open business banking.
- Set up malpractice insurance — most carriers issue same week if you supply the entity docs and procedure scope upfront.
- Build out the patient-acquisition plan before you open. Practices that wait until opening day to think about marketing lose the first 90 days of revenue.
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