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spa for Sale in Texas

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NAIL & BEAUTY – Houston, TX -Add Other Services-Great 2nd Location photo
Spas
Other Beauty & Personal Care
+1

NAIL & BEAUTY – Houston, TX -Add Other Services-Great 2nd Location

Houston, Harris County, TX, US

Buyer Requirements: Serious buyers only. Proof of funds required (purchase + landlord lease approval). Address released after proof of funds. Asset sale only. No financials. No free rent. Low-rent lease assignment. Well-located 1,008 SF nail and beauty salon in Houston, Texas, offering a strong physical build-out, low occupancy costs, and clear upside for an owner-operator or investor looking to expand services and revenue. SALON LAYOUT & EQUIPMENT 6 Pedicure Spa Chairs 5 Nail Stations 3 Private Treatment Rooms 1 Restroom Separate Shower Room – suitable for body scrubs, sugaring, spray tanning, or specialty spa services Full sized washing and dryer UV tool sterilizer Steam towel warmer Refrigerator The space is already configured to support nails plus higher-margin beauty services such as: Lashes & lash extensions Facials & skincare Body treatments (scrubs, sugaring) Spray tanning or wellness add-ons OPERATIONS & STAFFING Currently 3 full-time technicians Staff scales up to 5 technicians during peak demand Appointment-based with room to increase walk-ins and utilization LEASE & OCCUPANCY COSTS (VERY ATTRACTIVE) Size: 1,008 SF Base Rent: $1,552.00 / month Total Monthly Rent (CAM, Taxes, Insurance, Water): $2,181.15 This is a low fixed-cost structure, which gives the next owner flexibility to invest in marketing and staffing without rent pressure. VALUE-ADD OPPORTUNITY No meaningful social media or digital marketing currently in place Underutilized treatment rooms Additional technicians can be added immediately Ideal for a buyer with experience in: Nail salons Lash or facial studios Beauty collectives or booth-rent models With even modest marketing, expanded services, and better tech utilization, this salon can significantly outperform current operations. IDEAL BUYER Owner-operator looking for a manageable, affordable salon Beauty professional expanding into ownership Investor seeking a low-rent, multi-service beauty location with upside Houston, TX Turnkey operation with expansion potential Low rent, flexible model, strong bones Free parking for customers and employees Serious inquiries only. Confidentiality required. Address will be release once we receive your proof of funds.

$6,900
-Revenue
-Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for spa businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$297k
Median cash flow$79k
Median sale price$135k
Multiple range1.4x - 2.6x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.20m
Median cash flow$294k
Median sale price$773k
Multiple range2.2x - 4.7x

Directional only. Small sample may not represent the broader market.

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 spa acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

Day Spas vs. Medical Spas: Two Fundamentally Different Acquisitions

The spa category in the SMB market encompasses two very different business types that require separate due diligence frameworks. Traditional day spas offer massage, facials, body treatments, and nail services. These services are licensed aesthetics businesses with relatively low regulatory complexity. Medical spas (medspas) offer injectable treatments (Botox, fillers), laser procedures, and other services that require physician supervision under most state medical practice acts. If you are evaluating a medspa, you are evaluating a healthcare entity with regulatory obligations that are far more complex than a day spa, including medical director agreements, scope-of-practice compliance, and adverse event documentation requirements that buyers increasingly require as table-stakes diligence items. Misclassifying a medspa due diligence as a standard aesthetics review is a material error.

How Spas Are Valued

Traditional day spas trade at 1.5x to 3.0x SDE for well-run operations with stable client bases, experienced staff, and favorable lease positions. Medspas command higher multiples typically 3.0x to 6.0x EBITDA for established single-location operations. Medspa multiples are often higher because injectable and laser services tend to generate stronger margins, while traditional spas rely more heavily on labor-intensive service revenue. The medspa sector has seen significant private equity interest, particularly in multi-location platforms. The single most important multiple driver across both categories is owner independence: a spa where the selling owner is the primary treatment provider, the primary client relationship holder, and the face of the brand has a transferability problem that should be reflected in valuation and deal structure.

Therapist and Esthetician Retention

Like hair salons, spas face the structural challenge that client loyalty frequently follows the therapist rather than the location. A massage therapist or esthetician who has been providing services to the same clients for five years has built personal trust relationships that a change of ownership can disrupt. Assess the booking patterns before closing: are appointments booked with specific practitioners by name, or are they booked as general appointments assigned by the business? The former indicates stylist-driven loyalty (fragile to departure); the latter indicates brand-driven loyalty (more defensible). Negotiate retention agreements and reasonable non-solicitation provisions for any therapist whose client book represents more than 10% of total revenue.

Service Menu Margin Analysis

Spa revenue is not created equal from a margin perspective. Massage services carry moderate margins but are highly labor-intensive. Facials and aesthetics treatments carry better margins with less physical labor demand. Injectables and laser services (in medspas) carry the highest margins of all, 60–80% gross margins are achievable, but require licensed practitioners and ongoing product cost management. Review the revenue mix carefully and model the margin contribution of each service category. A spa that has successfully built a meaningful injectable or advanced aesthetics program is a different financial proposition than a pure massage-and-facial operation with the same top-line revenue.

Lease, Location, and the Ambiance Premium

Spas are experience businesses where the physical environment is integral to the product. Location in a premium retail center, medical professional building, or hotel context signals quality to the target clientele. The physical space — lighting, sound, privacy, treatment room configuration, locker facilities — represents a capital investment that has real replacement cost. Review the lease with particular attention to permitted use language (some retail leases restrict spa operations), signage rights, and any required landlord consents for the types of services offered. A spa in a high-end lifestyle center with 5+ years remaining on a favorable lease is a different asset than the same business in a less visible location with 18 months remaining.

Membership Programs and Recurring Revenue

The highest-valued spas in the current acquisition market are those that have built recurring revenue through membership models. Monthly programs providing a set number of services at committed pricing in exchange for a predictable monthly charge are highly valued by prospective buyers. Membership programs with 200+ active paying members represent a meaningful floor under monthly revenue that pure appointment-based businesses cannot offer buyers. Review the membership agreement terms carefully: cancellation policies, frozen membership provisions, and whether the membership agreement runs with the business or with the individual provider. Memberships that are business-tied, auto-renewing, and broadly accepted across multiple providers are materially more valuable than those informally attached to individual practitioners.

Medspa-Specific: Medical Director Structure and Compliance

In medspas specifically, the structure of the medical director relationship is a critical diligence item that frequently surfaces as a deal risk. Most states require a licensed physician to supervise injectable and laser procedures and "supervision" has specific legal meaning that varies by state, ranging from on-site presence to periodic oversight with documented protocols. A handshake arrangement with a medical director who is minimally engaged is both a compliance risk and a business continuity risk if that relationship is disrupted. Buyers should review the medical director agreement, verify that it meets state-specific requirements, and understand whether the current medical director will continue post-acquisition or whether a new arrangement must be negotiated.