Why this matters before opening
The first mistake is to think it's enough to find a space and open the door. Hair salon activity is regulated: you need professional licensing, correct administrative filings and premises consistent with local and health-safety rules. Practical rules can change from state to state and city to city, so verification must be done with the competent state board and local authority before signing leases, estimates or important contracts.
The second mistake is to separate paperwork from the business model. Business registration, EIN, technical responsible, safety and privacy aren't just bureaucracy: they affect hours, staff, services offered, use of client images and consultation organization. If you want to open a salon that sells color, premium treatments and personalized journeys, you must also design how you collect consent, information and expectations.
The levers that reduce risk in the first months
The chart is a reading model, not an official statistic. It helps visualize which areas need to be solid before opening a salon or hair salon.
Practical comparison
An opening decision becomes safer when translated into controllable criteria. The table separates what must be verified from what may seem secondary but affects margins, experience and reputation.
| Verification | Concrete question | Why it impacts opening |
|---|---|---|
| Professional licensing | Who is licensed and who will be technical responsible? | Without this answer the project can stall before filing. |
| Local business license | What permit does the city require for opening, transfer or takeover? | Avoid signing for a non-compliant or incomplete space. |
| EIN and sales tax | Who files the paperwork and with what NAICS codes? | Aligns taxation, business registration and operational start. |
| Safety and privacy | How will you handle risks, client photos, records and surveillance? | Prevents operational issues and protects client trust. |
A simple sequence to apply before launch
Verify before signing
Check professional requirements, space compatibility, paperwork and recurring costs before taking on commitments hard to undo.
Design the value, not just the service
Decide how the salon will explain cut, color, treatments and maintenance. Price must be tied to a journey.
Include Saloria in the ritual
Use guided consultation to gather information, show alternatives, present the look plan and align the team.
Measure after opening
Monitor consultation conversion, average ticket, premium services sold, client return rate and protocol clarity.
What to decide before truly investing
- Opening a salon requires technical checks, not just aesthetic taste.
- The space and price list must support the type of consultation you want to sell.
- Integrating Saloria from the start helps launch with a clearer, more replicable selling method.
Opening a salon or hair salon requires balance between dream and control. The dream serves to build identity, energy and difference. Control serves to keep every choice from becoming an expense: space, furnishings, suppliers, paperwork, staff, price list and software must support the same project.
The most important point is not to postpone the consultation. Many salons think first of chairs and mirrors and only later about how they will sell complex services. But it is precisely the consultation that helps turn a new client into a loyal one: listening, analysis, proposal, plan and protocol make the salon more professional from day one.
The service to include in the new salon
Saloria enters the opening project as a consultation tool, not management software. The new salon can use it to guide the first visit, analyze the face, simulate a cautious aesthetic direction, build the look plan and generate a protocol useful to the team. This way technology isn't an accessory: it becomes part of positioning and professional selling.
To consult before deciding
These sources are reliable starting points to verify requirements, procedures and tools. For operational decisions, always run checks with state board, local municipality, accountant and technical advisors.
- SBA: 10 steps to start your business
- IRS: Small businesses and self-employed
- OSHA: Hair salons safety guidelines
- Department of Labor: State labor offices contacts
- USA.gov: State business licenses and permits
- State Cosmetology Boards directory
- FTC: Privacy and security guidance for businesses
- Google: Guidelines for local businesses on Business Profile
- LoopNet: Commercial real estate for lease and sale
- Crexi: Commercial real estate marketplace
Frequently asked questions
Does Saloria replace the salon's management software?
No. Management software handles scheduling, point of sale and client records. Saloria guides the consultation, analysis, simulation, look plan and technical protocol.
Should I add digital consultation right away or after opening?
If the salon wants to sell premium services, color, balayage or look changes, adding it from the start helps train the team and communicate value from day one.
Do these guidelines apply throughout the United States?
These are general guidelines. Requirements, paperwork and practical prescriptions should be verified with state cosmetology boards, the SBA, an accountant and local/state regulations.