Tupelo Data Room

nail salon for Sale in Illinois

Similar businesses sell at 1.4x to 2.4x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

$17.4M Rev. - Multi-State Luxury Salon Platform photo
Hair Salons & Barber Shops
+3

$17.4M Rev. - Multi-State Luxury Salon Platform

DuPage County, IL, US

This Company is a long-standing, founder-led luxury personal services platform offering premium hair, grooming, skin, nail, massage, and adjacent wellness services to an affluent, repeat customer base across select high-income markets. Built over multiple decades, the business combines strong local brand equity, a loyal client following, experienced service professionals, and a centralized operating infrastructure that supports multi-location execution. Its model is differentiated by a high-touch, relationship-driven service approach, recurring visit patterns, premium positioning, and meaningful operating leverage from shared back-office functions, vendor relationships, training systems, and disciplined site expansion. With a blend of mature cash-flowing locations, newer units still ramping, and additional whitespace for selective growth, the platform offers a compelling combination of stability, defensibility, and expansion potential within a highly fragmented consumer services category.

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$17,400,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Well-Established Turnkey Nail Salon photo
Nail Salons

Well-Established Turnkey Nail Salon

Cook County, IL, US

Opportunity to acquire the assets of a well-established nail salon located in Cook County. The sale includes all physical assets within the salon, offering a prime opportunity to a new owner to take over the current lease. With its prime location, this business is ready for an owner that can take the business to the next level. This is a turnkey operation for anyone that would like to get into the nail salon business.

$61,750
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Beautiful Nail & Spa Salon in an excellent shopping location photo
Nail Salons
Spas

Beautiful Nail & Spa Salon in an excellent shopping location

IL, US

This thriving beauty and wellness salon is strategically located on the bustling Randall Road, surrounded by a dense population and numerous nearby homes. The area is known for its high traffic and vibrant business environment, making it an ideal spot for attracting a steady stream of customers. The shopping center where it is situated offers ample parking, enhancing convenience for patrons. As you step inside, you'll be greeted by a meticulously maintained and inviting atmosphere. The salon specializes in a wide range of services, including nail care, beauty treatments, and spa therapies, catering to the high demand in the beauty and wellness industry. This sector has seen significant growth in recent years, and this salon's financial performance reflects that trend, with impressive profitability metrics. Although under new ownership, the salon boasts a long-standing history of success, having been well-established by the previous owner. Changes in the former ownership structure have led to the sale, presenting a golden opportunity for new buyers to capitalize on the salon's growing business. The interior is thoughtfully designed to promote relaxation and comfort, featuring dedicated massage therapy rooms, a well-appointed nail spa, a welcoming reception desk, and five well-equipped stations for various beauty treatments. Known for its excellent customer service, cleanliness, and well-maintained facilities, this salon stands out as a top choice for beauty and spa services.

$75,000
$153,352Revenue
$63,778Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for nail salon businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$305k
Median cash flow$81k
Median sale price$122k
Multiple range1.4x - 2.4x

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 nail salon acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating nail salon acquisitions.

What You’re Actually Buying

A nail salon acquisition is a purchase of a lease, equipment, a client base, and most critically a technician team. The technicians are the business. Remove two key nail technicians from a $350,000 revenue salon and you have a lease and some pedicure chairs. The most common mistake in nail salon acquisitions is pricing the income statement without adequately accounting for the technician retention risk that determines whether that income statement stays intact after close. We’ve seen this play out enough times to make it the first line of due diligence, not an afterthought. The business that looks profitable on paper depends entirely on people whose names you don’t yet know.

What the Financials Need to Show

Request POS system reports alongside tax returns. Nail salons with strong cash handling practices and consistent credit card transactions should have deposit records that reconcile cleanly with the P&L. Labor cost typically runs 40–55% of revenue in nail salons; anything below 38% may indicate misclassified independent contractors or unreported cash compensation that creates tax and labor exposure. Verify that all technicians are properly classified. California, New York, and several other states have aggressive enforcement histories around nail salon labor misclassification. Buying a business with unresolved compliance exposure inherits that liability. Chemical supply cost runs 8–12% of revenue for a well-managed salon. Rent should be 10–15% of revenue. The math only works at these metrics simultaneously.

Licensing, Chemical Compliance, and Ventilation

Every technician must hold a current cosmetology or nail technician license issued by the state board. The salon facility itself requires a separate establishment license. Verify every technician’s license is current and unexpired. State licensing boards publish lookup tools to see who is licensed. Health department compliance is meaningful: ventilation requirements for acetone and acrylic chemicals are actively enforced in many markets, and a ventilation system that isn’t up to current standards can trigger a mandatory remediation order. Review the last three years of health department and board of cosmetology inspection records. Outstanding violations transfer with the lease if you don’t address them before close.

The Technician Retention Plan

Nail technicians leave for three reasons: better commission structure elsewhere, a desire to open their own shop, or a personal relationship with an owner who is departing. Meet every technician individually before close, with the seller present, and understand their intentions and their relationship to the business. Technicians who are committed to staying under new ownership and who have been there three or more years are retention assets worth investing in. Offer retention bonuses funded at close and vesting at six and twelve months. Keep the commission or pay structure consistent for the first year; changing compensation in month one of new ownership, even if it’s ultimately fair, is the fastest way to lose your technician team.

Growth and the Membership Model

The highest-valued nail salons in the current market are those that have moved toward membership models, monthly subscription programs offering a fixed number of services at a guaranteed price. A salon with 200 active monthly members generating $50–$75 per member in recurring revenue has a fundamentally different risk profile than one entirely dependent on appointment volume. If the business you’re evaluating doesn’t have a membership program, that’s a growth lever you can pull in year one. The infrastructure cost is minimal and most booking platforms like Vagaro, Fresha, and Square Appointments support membership billing natively. The revenue impact on valuation at exit is material.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Three things protect you: documentation, retention agreements, and communication sequencing. Documentation - before you close, ask the seller for a full employee list with tenure, role, compensation structure, and any non-compete or non-solicitation agreements currently in place. Know who has been there longest and who generates the most client following. Retention agreements funded at close, vesting at 6 and 12 months post-close for your top three to five technicians. The vesting amount should be meaningful like 10–15% of annual compensation minimum. Communication sequencing - the most common mistake is announcing the ownership change to staff before you're ready to commit to their compensation and working conditions under new ownership. If a technician's first question is whether their commission rate is changing and you don't have an answer, you've created unnecessary anxiety. Have a clear, documented answer to every compensation question before you make the announcement.