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hair salon and barber shop for Sale in Arizona

Similar businesses sell at 1.1x to 3.7x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

Luxury Barbershop – Established, Profitable, Commission Model photo
Hair Salons & Barber Shops
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Luxury Barbershop – Established, Profitable, Commission Model

Peoria, Maricopa County, AZ, US

Price Reduced - Considering All Reasonable Offers Well-established, profitable barbershop located in a high-visibility westside retail corridor. This is a turnkey operation with consistent year-over-year revenue, clean financials, and a scalable commission-based model designed for strong owner cash flow. Revenue & Profit History 2023 Revenue: $341,968 2023 Net Income: $42,801 2024 Revenue: $304,175 2024 Net Income: $43,761 2025 Revenue: $310,651 2025 Net Income: $51,342 2025 reflects margin expansion and improved operational efficiency. Owner Benefits In addition to reported net income, ownership receives: • Approx. $27,600 annually in vehicle and insurance expenses (discretionary benefit) • Member profit distributions This increases total economic benefit to an owner-operator beyond stated net income. Business Overview Step into a premier, high-end barbershop designed and branded at a true franchise level — without the franchise fees. This barbershop delivers a modern masculine atmosphere with top-of-the-line leather barber chairs, cherry-wood interiors, and a polished corner location that offers unbeatable visibility and marketing exposure. This turnkey operation has been built to a national brand standard yet remains privately owned, allowing for full creative and financial freedom. Every inch of the shop has been custom-designed to attract an upscale clientele while maintaining efficient flow and high chair utilization. The space presents exceptionally well and competes visually with major franchise concepts while avoiding royalty and marketing fee burdens. Business Model • 2 ownership partners (1 silent, 1 active full-time barber) • Active partner open to remaining post-sale under negotiated terms • 3 additional producing barbers Compensation Structure: • Barbers retain 60% of service revenue • Ownership retains 40% commission • No chair rent • No booth lease structure This commission model keeps labor variable, reduces fixed payroll risk, and aligns incentives with productivity. Revenue scales directly with chair output. Why This Opportunity Stands Out High-end buildout without franchise fees Established brand presence Strong visibility corner location Clean books and consistent profitability Efficient commission model Option for transition support from active partner Scalable for owner-operator or multi-unit expansion Presented confidentially by Hub AZ Brokers, an affiliate of Sunbelt Business Brokers of Arizona. All information to be verified by the buyer during due diligence.

$170,000
$310,600Revenue
$78,940Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for hair salon and barber shop businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$326k
Median cash flow$63k
Median sale price$90k
Multiple range1.1x - 2.6x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.69m
Median cash flow$361k
Median sale price$750k
Multiple range1.7x - 3.7x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about hair salon and barber shop acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating hair salon and barber shop acquisitions.

You're Buying Client Relationships — Not Just a Location

The most important due diligence question in any salon or barbershop acquisition is deceptively simple: do the clients come for the stylist or do they come for the shop? In commission-based salons, the business typically owns the client relationship through booking systems, loyalty programs, and brand reputation. In booth rental models, the stylists own their client relationships entirely and when a stylist leaves, their clients leave with them. Before closing, understand the ownership structure, whether clients are booked through the salon's system or the individual stylist's personal booking, and what happens to those clients if a key stylist departs post-acquisition. This distinction is the most material factor in both valuation and post-closing performance.

Commission Model vs. Booth Rental: The Structural Difference

These are two fundamentally different business models with distinct risk profiles. Commission-based salons pay stylists 40–50% of service revenue; the salon retains client relationships, scheduling, and brand identity. Booth rental operations charge stylists a flat weekly or monthly fee for use of a chair; stylists operate as independent contractors owning their own clientele and pricing. Commission salons command higher multiples (typically 2.0x–3.5x SDE) because the client base is more defensible post-transition. Booth rental operations carry lower multiples because the "business" is largely a real estate play with service income dependent entirely on stylist retention. Verify the correct worker classification under IRS and state labor authority guidelines; the misclassification of employees as contractors is a material compliance risk that can create substantial post-closing liability.

How Salons Are Valued

Hair salons and barbershops nationally trade in a range of 1.0x to 2.5x SDE depending on model type, client retention metrics, lease quality, and owner independence. Data shows that valuations reached recent highs in 2024 before moderating in 2025, with the median sale price increasing 57% year-over-year in 2025 driven by above-average revenue growth. Recurring revenue like memberships, service packages, and retail product sales adds meaningful value above the base multiple. Goodwill, which represents brand reputation and client loyalty, typically accounts for 20–40% of total salon valuation and is the component most sensitive to ownership transition risk.

Stylist Retention and Employment Agreements

The departure of one or two key stylists in the first six months post-acquisition can wipe out 30–50% of a commission salon's revenue. Address this directly in the purchase agreement: negotiate retention bonuses funded at closing for key stylists, employment agreements with reasonable non-solicitation provisions, and an earnout or price adjustment mechanism tied to stylist retention metrics. Ask each stylist individually, with seller present and consent, about their plans post-acquisition. Stylists who are planning to leave, open their own salon, or have ambiguous commitments are better to know about now than three months after closing. Stylists who are enthusiastic about the new ownership and express a desire to stay long-term are worth compensating to lock in.

Licensing and Regulatory Compliance

All 50 states require cosmetologists, barbers, and estheticians to hold active state-issued licenses. The salon itself also requires a separate facility license from the state cosmetology board. Verify that all current staff hold valid, unexpired licenses and that the salon facility license is in good standing and transferable. Keep in mind, some states require a new facility license application rather than a simple transfer when ownership changes. Health and safety compliance is a meaningful ongoing requirement: sanitation standards, chemical storage, ventilation, and equipment sterilization are all subject to state board inspection. Review inspection records for the last three years and any outstanding violations.

Retail Product Revenue and Vendor Relationships

Professional hair care retail (shampoo, conditioner, styling products) is a high-margin revenue stream that successful salons cultivate deliberately, with gross margins of 40–60% on retail product sales. Verify that current vendor relationships with product lines (Redken, Aveda, Olaplex, etc.) are transferable to new ownership, as some brand distribution agreements require re-qualification. Salons with active retail programs and strong product attachment rates among their clientele have a meaningful revenue diversification advantage over service-only operations. Assess whether the retail program is owner-driven or embedded in stylist culture; the former is fragile, the latter is durable.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Commission-based salons with structured transitions typically retain 60 to 80% of active clients at 12 months post-close. Poorly managed transitions see that drop to 40 to 50%. The practices associated with higher retention are consistent. The seller personally introduces the new owner to clients during overlapping visits in the first 30 to 60 days. Key stylists stay through the transition. The name, decor, and core service menu don't change for at least six months. And the new owner is visibly present on the floor from day one. The single worst thing a new owner can do is be absent in the first 90 days. Clients form impressions of new ownership quickly. Those impressions are hard to reverse.