Sanitary Documentation in Practice

Barbershop Sanitary Documentation: The Complete Set

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You're opening your barbershop in three weeks. Chairs ordered, sign ready, Instagram picking up steam.

You're opening your barbershop in three weeks. Chairs ordered, sign ready, Instagram picking up steam. And suddenly a friend from the industry asks: "So do you have your sanitary documentation?" Silence. Because nobody talks about it on barbering courses, yet it's the first thing Sanepid (the Polish sanitary inspectorate) asks for – both at opening and at every inspection. The good news: in a barbershop this set is simpler than it seems. The bad news: it has to exist, be consistent, and match what actually happens in the salon. This article is a map – of what you need to have so you don't trip up on the obvious things.

Why paperwork is needed at all

A sanitary inspector does not assume you are dishonest. He checks for consistency: whether what you have written down matches what you do. The basis is the Regulation of the Minister of Health of 17 February 2004 on the detailed sanitary requirements for hairdressing, cosmetic, tattoo and wellness establishments. It imposes an obligation to have procedures ensuring hygiene – for maintaining cleanliness, disinfection, sterilisation and handling linen.

Without documentation you have no way to prove that these procedures exist. "We do it, we just haven't written it down" – to an inspector that means there is no system.

There is also a second function of this paperwork that is rarely mentioned: documentation puts things in order in your head and your team's. When the rules are written down, a new barber knows what to follow from day one. There is no "everyone does it their own way". And consistency is exactly what an inspector looks for – and what builds client trust.

The full set of documents – what must be there

Here is the full list of sanitary documentation for a barbershop. A simple salon can fit it into a single binder:

DocumentWhat for
Hygiene procedures (disinfection, sterilisation, washing)describe what, with what and how often
Linen handling proceduretowels, capes – laundering, storage
Staff hand hygiene procedurewhen to wash, when to disinfect
Disinfection and sterilisation registerproof that the procedures are carried out
Staff medical clearances (sanitary-epidemiological)fitness for work
Product safety data sheetslegality and spectrum of products
Waste documents (BDO (the Polish waste register), sharps)waste management
GDPR documentation (consents, CCTV)protection of client data

Procedures – the heart of the documentation

A procedure is not an essay. It is a short, concrete description: what you do, with what, how often, who is responsible. The four basic barbershop procedures:

  • Tool disinfection – after every client, with a full-spectrum product
  • Sterilisation – for tools that make contact with blood
  • Surface disinfection – chair, worktop, washbasin
  • Hand hygiene and linen handling

We expand on each of these in separate articles – start with the staff hand hygiene procedure and disinfecting the chair and surfaces.

Registers – proof that it's alive

A procedure says "how it should be". A register proves that it is so. It is an ordinary table with entries: date, activity, who performed it, signature. The most important is the disinfection and sterilisation register – without it the procedure is dead paper. We discuss a ready-made template in our article disinfection and sterilisation register – template.

Added to this is the sanitary inspection log, in which you record the course of the inspector's visits. How to keep it is shown in our article sanitary inspection log – how to keep it.

The documents people forget

Three areas that barbershop owners most often overlook and that an inspector asks about:

The rule that saves you at an inspection

Documentation that describes a different process from the real one – that is the most common mistake. If your procedure says you disinfect tools for 15 minutes, but in practice it's after 2, the inspector will catch it. That is why the documentation must be written for your salon, not downloaded off the internet and signed without reading. A minimum of procedures, but consistent with reality. A minimum of registers, but actually kept.

How to organise the binder

Complete documentation scattered across several places is as useless as having none – because in the stress of an inspection you won't find it in time. Set up one binder with legible dividers:

  1. Hygiene procedures (disinfection, sterilisation, washing, linen, hands)
  2. Disinfection and sterilisation register – kept up to date
  3. Staff medical clearances
  4. Product safety data sheets
  5. Waste documents (BDO, contract with the collector, confirmations)
  6. GDPR (notice, consents, CCTV)
  7. Inspection log

When the inspector asks for a specific document, you reach for a divider rather than turning the whole cabinet upside down. That composure shows – and creates the impression of a salon that has the subject under control.

A common mistake: documentation "for the opening" and then silence

Many owners assemble the set before opening, file it in a binder and forget. A year later the procedures are there, but the registers are empty, the staff clearances have expired, and no one has updated the procedures since the offer changed (e.g. straight-razor shaving was added). That is dead documentation – it looks good, but it doesn't reflect the salon.

Documentation lives together with the salon. A new service, new equipment, a new employee, a new product – these are signals that it's worth reviewing the procedures and registers. A quarterly, 15-minute review is enough to keep the paperwork in step with reality.

Frequently asked questions

What sanitary documents must a barbershop have?

Hygiene procedures (disinfection, sterilisation, washing, linen, hand hygiene), a disinfection and sterilisation register, staff medical clearances, product safety data sheets, waste management documents (BDO, sharps) and GDPR documentation. In a small salon this fits into a single binder.

Can I use ready-made templates from the internet?

A template can be a starting point, but it must be adapted to your salon. The most common mistake is documentation describing a different process from the real one – an inspector compares the paperwork with practice and catches the discrepancies. Adjust the content to what you actually do.

When does Sanepid check the documentation?

At the start of operations and at inspections – both planned and interventional, e.g. after a complaint. The inspector checks whether the procedures exist, whether the registers are kept and whether the staff know the rules. The documentation must be available in the salon.

What is the most important thing in the whole set?

Consistency between the procedures and reality, and registers kept up to date, especially the disinfection and sterilisation register. A binder of procedures without entries confirming their execution is treated by an inspector as dead paper.

The whole set in one place, tailored to a barbershop. BarberReady gives you a ready-made set of sanitary documentation: procedures, registers, sheets and instructions compliant with the requirements for hairdressing establishments – so you don't have to piece it together from a dozen sources before opening or before an inspection.

See BarberReady packages

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