New York City is the second-largest makeup artist market in the United States, trailing only Los Angeles in raw working population but leading every city on Earth in editorial volume per square mile. Manhattan alone houses Condé Nast, Hearst, every major fashion magazine, two New York Fashion Weeks a year, Broadway, NBC and the Met Gala. The five boroughs together support roughly five thousand working makeup artists, from $200-a-face bridal pros in Queens to $5,000-a-day editorial names photographed for Vogue last week.
That density is exactly why hiring a makeup artist in New York is harder than it looks. The booking window is shorter, prices vary by a factor of ten across boroughs, and the best names disappear from public booking sites entirely once they sign with an agency. On the other side of the table, becoming a makeup artist in New York means understanding which licenses you actually need, which schools matter, and how the NYC pipeline differs from Los Angeles or Atlanta.
This guide solves both problems. It walks brides, photographers, producers and event planners through how to find and price an NYC makeup artist for any setting. Then it walks aspiring MUAs through the licensing, training, salary ranges, and break-in strategy that actually work in New York. If you are weighing the career broadly, start with the how to become a makeup artist overview. For a deeper look at the work itself, the makeup artist career guide breaks down day-to-day workflow across settings, and makeup artist salary covers earnings by city and specialty.
Every major US city has weddings, headshots, and prom. Only New York has a year-round editorial layer that hires makeup artists six days a week, fifty-two weeks a year. Condé Nast alone shoots roughly four hundred editorial pages a month across Vogue, Vanity Fair, Glamour, GQ, Allure and Bon Appétit, every one of them requiring a credited MUA.
Add Hearst (Harper's Bazaar, Cosmopolitan, ELLE), the SNL hair and makeup department, two annual Fashion Weeks each booking 200-plus assistant MUAs across 80-plus shows, the Tony Awards, the Met Gala, Broadway's 41 active houses, the Tribeca Film Festival, and the residency of half of all daytime television, and the math is obvious: NYC absorbs more freelance MUA hours than any other US city. That is also why it is the toughest market to crack from outside - the supply of trained artists is enormous.
The right place to look depends entirely on what the makeup is for. NYC bridal artists, editorial artists, on-set TV artists and headshot artists rarely overlap. A great wedding MUA may have never done a Vogue cover; a Vogue cover artist will almost certainly turn down a $400 bridal booking because their agency forbids it. Match the sector to the search channel.
Search The Knot, WeddingWire, Style Me Pretty, Zola and Yelp filtered to your borough. The Knot lets you filter by price tier, real-couple reviews, and whether they travel. Top NYC bridal names to know in 2026: Stevi Christine Bridal (Manhattan), Tash Tate (Hailey Bieber's wedding-makeup style), Andrea Tiller (Westchester to Manhattan), Hannah Watters (Brooklyn editorial-bridal), and Pam Wittman (Long Island to NYC). Expect to book 6-9 months ahead for May-October weddings, longer for September Saturdays.
These are agency-only. The relevant rosters in 2026 are The Wall Group, Forward Artists, Streeters Agency, Bryan Bantry Agency, See Management, Art Department, and Tracey Mattingly. Producers contact the booker directly with shoot date, location, talent, brand, and budget. Editorial day rates range from $500 (testing/portfolio shoots) to $2,500 (national brand campaigns) per artist.
For actor headshots and personal-branding shoots, photographers usually have a preferred MUA list. If you are sourcing independently, GlamSquad and Priv are NYC-based apps for in-home bookings starting at $150-$250. Style Seat and OneFineDay also list independent NYC MUAs with reviews. Brooklyn-based MUAs are often the best value for headshots - $150-$300 versus $400+ in Manhattan, same quality.
Union film and TV work in NYC is covered by IATSE Local 798 (Hair and Makeup) and NABET-CWA Local 16 for broadcast. Productions hire department heads through the union roster. Non-union shorts, music videos and YouTube productions hire directly through agencies like Studio Cocoon (Bushwick) and NUTV Hair & Makeup, or via personal portfolio sites. Day rates run $3,500-$5,000/week union, $500-$1,200/day non-union.
For party prep, prom, brunch shoots, or last-minute touch-ups, the in-home apps dominate. GlamSquad (NYC's largest), Priv, BeautyNow and StyleSeat list pre-vetted NYC MUAs who travel in two to four hours. Pricing: $80-$150 base + $25-$50 travel surcharge for Manhattan, slightly less in Brooklyn and Queens. Many of these MUAs moonlight as wedding artists on weekends - it is a useful entry point.
NYC pricing is two to four times the national median because cost of living, kit replenishment, agency commission, and transit time per booking are all higher. The numbers below reflect 2026 standards from actual agency rate cards and Knot Marketplace 2025 pricing data, separated by sector and adjusted for borough. If you are comparing local rates further afield, the makeup artist near me guide shows national medians by city.
Anyone planning to become a celebrity makeup artist in New York or hire one for an event needs to know who is actually working at the top of the city right now. The list below is built from 2025-2026 magazine credits, agency rosters, red-carpet bookings and the IMDb/IATSE credit databases. None of these artists take direct DM bookings; all of them are agency-represented.
Forward Artists roster. Hailey Bieber's primary MUA and the architect of the "latte makeup" trend. Based in LA but flies to NYC for Met Gala, US Open, Fashion Week, and most major Condé Nast shoots. Day rate $5,000+. Not bookable for private clients in 2026.
Streeters Agency. Editorial heavyweight - Estee Lauder global creative makeup director through 2023. Books Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, and the major fashion-week shows. Day rate $4,000-$8,000 for editorial.
Pat McGrath Labs. Not agency-bookable but leads the makeup for most major NYFW shows. Her assistant roster is the most coveted training opportunity for editorial artists in the city.
Forward Artists. Beyoncé's primary MUA, splits time between LA and NYC for editorial and brand work with L'Oréal Paris. Specializes in sculpted finishes that read on Black and brown skin under stage lighting.
UK-based but works NYC for Lancôme global campaigns and editorial. Her YouTube channel is the most-referenced free education for working makeup artists worldwide.
Forward Artists. NYC-based, books Selena Gomez, Bella Hadid, Emily Ratajkowski. Clean glowing skin + occasional graphic eye. Vogue covers regularly.
Bryan Bantry. NYC-based, books Kendall Jenner, Charli D'Amelio, Madonna. Known for monochrome bronzed finishes.
The Wall Group. NYC's editorial workhorse for Condé Nast and Hearst covers - books eight to twelve magazine shoots a month. Specializes in fresh skin and refined natural beauty.
There are three legitimate paths into the NYC market, and many working artists use a combination of all three. The first is the licensed route through cosmetology school, the second is dedicated makeup-artist school, and the third is the self-taught + apprentice path that most celebrity MUAs in the city actually followed. Each suits a different career goal.
The NYS Division of Licensing Services issues cosmetology licenses, and the license is legally required to perform makeup application in a salon or spa setting. To qualify you must be 17 or older, complete 1,000 hours at a New York State-approved cosmetology school (typically $13,000-$22,000 in tuition), and pass a written exam plus a practical exam.
Application fees total $120-$200. The license covers hair, nails, esthetics and makeup - far broader than a MUA needs but valuable if you plan to work counter or in-salon. Freelance bridal and editorial MUAs in private homes and on production sets are not enforced under this rule in practice, but anyone advertising salon makeup services should be licensed.
Dedicated MUA schools are faster and far cheaper than cosmetology school but do not issue a license. They issue a certificate of completion, which carries weight on agency-applications and counter-job applications. Top NYC options in 2026: Make-Up Designory (MUD) NYC, Make Up For Ever Academy (MUFE) on West 23rd Street, Cinema Makeup School (LA-based but with NYC workshop weeks), and Empire Beauty Schools NYC. Costs run from $2,000 (one-week intensive) to $15,000 (full 600-hour program). For more detail on choosing among them, see makeup artist training.
Most NYC celebrity MUAs - Mary Phillips, Tom Pecheux, Sir John, Hung Vanngo - did not attend dedicated makeup school. They built their kit at MAC or Bobbi Brown counters, assisted established artists for two to four years, built portfolios through unpaid editorial test shoots, and got picked up by agencies through reputation. This path is free in tuition terms but slower (5-10 years to working-celebrity tier) and requires the willingness to relocate to Manhattan or Brooklyn early in the timeline.
Bridal: The Knot, Style Me Pretty, WeddingWire, Zola, Yelp. Book 6-9 months ahead.
Editorial/Brand: Contact The Wall Group, Forward Artists, Streeters, Bryan Bantry directly.
Photoshoot/Headshot: Photographer recommendation, or apps GlamSquad/Priv/StyleSeat.
Event/Party: GlamSquad and Priv for in-home, OneFineDay for higher-end.
Film/TV: IATSE Local 798 roster for union work, direct agency for non-union.
Step 1: Decide path - cosmetology license vs MUA school vs self-taught apprentice.
Step 2: Build the kit ($1,500-$3,500 starter for bridal/event work).
Step 3: Get a Sephora, MAC, Bobbi Brown or Bluemercury counter job to learn product range and color matching on real clients.
Step 4: Build a 20-image portfolio from test shoots and friend-bridal trials.
Step 5: Apply to agencies (editorial), list on The Knot (bridal), or join IATSE Local 798 roster (film/TV).
Make-Up Designory (MUD) NYC: $2,000-$11,000. 1-week to 600-hour tracks. SoHo location, industry-aligned.
Make Up For Ever Academy: $2,500-$11,500. Chelsea. Strong editorial focus, MUFE-branded kit included.
Cinema Makeup School (NYC weeks): $3,000-$15,000. Best for film/TV/special effects.
Empire Beauty Schools NYC: $13,000-$22,000. Cosmetology license included, broadest career flexibility.
The Wall Group: Romy Soleimani, Pati Dubroff, Jamie Greenberg. Strong editorial bench.
Forward Artists: Mary Phillips, Patrick Ta, Hung Vanngo, Sir John. The dominant top-tier agency.
Streeters Agency: Tom Pecheux, Lucia Pieroni, Diane Kendal. Heavy fashion week roster.
Bryan Bantry: Sam Visser, Pat McGrath (selectively). Editorial-leaning.
See Management: Newer fashion-forward roster, good for emerging artists.
Tracey Mattingly: Strong red carpet roster.
NYC MUA income varies more than almost any other US city because the tier range is so wide. A first-year Sephora counter MUA in Queens earns $38,000-$52,000 a year before tips. A working agency-represented editorial artist in Manhattan books $150,000-$400,000 annually.
Top A-list artists working out of New York - the ones credited on Met Gala covers and Vogue features - clear $500,000 to over $1 million when brand deals are included. The progression below reflects realistic income at each NYC-specific tier based on agency rate cards, IATSE union scale, and 2025-2026 Knot Marketplace bridal data. The wider makeup artist salary guide covers regional comparison nationally.
Sephora Beauty Advisors in NYC earn $18-$24/hour + commission and tips, totaling $38,000-$58,000/year. MAC freelancers (counters at department stores) earn $19-$26/hour. Bobbi Brown and Bluemercury similar. Counter is the most common first job for working NYC MUAs because it provides product education and constant face-time with real clients.
NYC salon and spa makeup artists earn $20-$32/hour + tips, totaling $48,000-$78,000/year if working full schedule. Manhattan salons (Bumble & Bumble, Sally Hershberger, Frederic Fekkai) pay higher base, Brooklyn salons (Hayama, Spoke & Weal, Vain) pay slightly lower but offer more bridal crossover.
Strong freelance bridal MUAs in NYC working May-October peak season clear $80,000-$150,000. Top-tier bridal artists with Manhattan-and-Hamptons clientele clear $150,000-$250,000. The earnings driver is booking volume + price-per-face, not hourly rate. A bridal artist booking 90 weddings/year at an average $1,800 per wedding clears $162,000 gross.
First-year agency-represented MUAs in NYC clear $60,000-$120,000 net of agency commission. Mid-tier (3-7 years in) earn $150,000-$300,000. Top-tier (10+ years, recurring brand campaigns) earn $300,000-$800,000+ with one or two brand-ambassador deals on top.
The fewer than 20 NYC-based artists working at the Mary Phillips / Tom Pecheux tier clear $500,000 to $1,500,000 annually, with the largest share coming from brand-ambassador deals (Patrick Ta Beauty, Charlotte Tilbury, L'Oréal, Lancôme) rather than direct face fees. For the full breakdown of how celebrity income stacks, see the celebrity makeup artist career guide.
Highest pricing, highest competition, most editorial. Every agency office, every fashion magazine, every Broadway theater. Best for editorial career building and high-end bridal. Highest rent - artists usually live in Brooklyn or Queens and commute in.
Fastest-growing market 2020-2026. Williamsburg, Bushwick and DUMBO host the largest concentration of indie-photographer studios and edgy editorial production. Bridal pricing 20-40% below Manhattan but quality matched. Best entry-point borough for new MUAs.
Strongest in cultural-specific bridal work - South Asian, East Asian, Caribbean and Latin American wedding traditions. Diverse client base. Lower pricing ($200-$600/face bridal) but high volume and strong word-of-mouth referrals.
Smaller MUA markets but consistent local bridal demand. Many MUAs based in the Bronx travel to Manhattan for events and back to local clients on weekends.
Twice a year - early September and mid-February - NYFW books 200-plus assistant MUAs across 80-plus runway shows. Pat McGrath, Tom Pecheux, Diane Kendal, Sam Visser and other key MUAs lead teams of 8-20 assistants per show. Pay is minimal ($150-$400/show + brand-products take-home) but the resume value is permanent. Assistant call-outs go through agency websites (Streeters, Bryan Bantry, Wall Group) and CAA Beauty in July (for September) and December (for February). Many working NYC editorial MUAs trace their first agency signing to a fashion-week assist that went well.
Choose path: cosmetology license, MUA school, or self-taught counter route. Build $1,500-$3,500 starter kit.
Counter job (Sephora/MAC/Bobbi Brown) + 2-3 unpaid test shoots per month. Build 20-image portfolio.
List on The Knot/WeddingWire. Begin bridal bookings ($300-$700/face). Assist established MUA 1-2 days/week.
First editorial bookings ($300-$500/day). Apply to lower-tier agencies. Build Instagram to 10K+ followers.
Agency representation (See Management, Tracey Mattingly tier). Editorial day rate $500-$1,500. NYFW assistant work for top MUAs.
Working celebrity tier ($1,500-$5,000/day). Magazine covers. First brand-ambassador deal possible. A-list reach with right pipeline.
New York is one of the stricter states for personal-service businesses. Any MUA working in a fixed-location salon, spa or barbershop must hold a New York State cosmetology license. Freelance bridal, editorial and event MUAs operating in private homes, hotel suites, or production sets technically fall under a 2022 NYS Division of Licensing interpretation that does not require licensure for off-premises makeup services - but most professional venues and photographers require proof of $1,000,000 general liability insurance regardless of license status.
Plan to carry liability insurance from year one. Hiscox, Beauty & Bodywork Insurance (BBI), and Insure Beauty are the most common providers for NYC MUAs, running $200-$400 per year.
For union film and TV work, IATSE Local 798 (East Coast Hair & Makeup) is the gatekeeper. Joining requires either a sponsoring journeyman MUA already in the union OR completing 30 days of qualifying work on a covered production within a year. Initiation fee is approximately $7,000-$10,000 with quarterly dues. The union scale is the reason NYC film MUAs out-earn most freelance bridal artists.
Five concrete strategies are working in 2026 based on signed-agency interviews and public NYFW assistant-roster data. None of them require a celebrity connection.
First, post consistently to Instagram and TikTok using the technique-first format - eyeliner placement videos, contour shapes, lash band cutting in 15 seconds with trending audio. Show technique, not just finished looks. Tag every product. Mary Phillips, Patrick Ta, and Hung Vanngo all attribute substantial bookings to content reach. To understand the broader career pipeline this content feeds into, see makeup artist jobs.
Second, take any unpaid editorial test shoot in your first two years. One NYC test shoot per month for twelve months = an editorial-ready book. Photographers who shoot models for agencies (NEXT, IMG, Wilhelmina) often need MUAs free of charge and will tag you when the work runs.
Third, send five cold-DMs per week to working NYC celebrity MUAs at tiers above yours - not the A-list, but the working pros at the $1,500-$3,000/day tier - offering free assist days. Two solid years of assisting builds the references that agency reps will call.
Fourth, work the wedding networking circuit. The NYC Wedding Industry Network, NY Wedding Planners Association, and StyleMePretty's NY directory all host monthly mixers. Photographers refer MUAs they trust without competition - one good photographer relationship can deliver 15-30 bookings a year.
Fifth, apply to NYFW assistant teams every July and December. Pat McGrath, Tom Pecheux and Diane Kendal hire 50-100 assistants per cycle and the resume value of working three to four shows at NYFW is permanent. Many working NYC editorial MUAs got their first agency offer through an NYFW assistant week. For more on building this side of the career, see the makeup artist certification overview, and to grab the free study materials, the makeup artist practice test PDF covers core MUA knowledge.