Board Certified Dermatologist

What training does a dermatologist have?

When it comes to diagnosing and treating conditions that affect the skin, hair, and nails, no one has completed more training than a board-certified dermatologist. Before they can begin practicing, dermatologists receive more than a decade of training, including:

  • Four years of college to earn a bachelor’s degree

  • Four years of medical school to become a medical doctor

  • A year-long internship in medicine

  • Three years of residency in dermatology, working alongside experienced doctors and completing 12,000 to 16,000 hours of treating patients.

What is a board-certified dermatologist?

To become board certified in dermatology requires:

  1. Going to medical school and becoming a doctor

  2. Successfully completing residency training in dermatology

  3. Passing the board exam, a challenging exam that tests the dermatologist on the knowledge and skills acquired during their years of training

Passing the board exam means the dermatologist is board certified. Board certification comes from the American Board of Dermatology. When you see that your dermatologist is board certified by the American Board of Dermatology, you know you are receiving care from someone who has received the most rigorous education in the field. There are many different kinds of boards, and other certifications do not reflect the same level of training and expertise.