Accounting for Hairdressers and Beauty Salons
A practical accounting guide for UK hairdressers and beauty salons, covering chair rental vs employment, VAT, allowable expenses, stock control and cash management.
The hair and beauty industry in the UK employs hundreds of thousands of people and generates billions in revenue, yet many salons operate on surprisingly tight margins. Getting the accounting right is the difference between a profitable business and one that struggles to pay its bills each month.
Whether you are a sole trader working from a home studio, renting a chair in someone else’s salon, or running a multi-staff high street salon, the accounting fundamentals are the same – but the details differ significantly.
Choosing your business structure
Most hairdressers and beauty therapists start as sole traders . It is the simplest option and suits the majority of independent operators.
| Structure | Best for | Key features |
|---|---|---|
| Sole trader | Independent stylists, mobile hairdressers, home-based therapists | Simple setup; file Self Assessment; unlimited personal liability |
| Partnership | Two or more people running a salon together | Shared profits; each partner files Self Assessment |
| Limited company | Larger salons, multi-site businesses | Corporation Tax; limited liability; more admin |
When to consider incorporating
If your salon profits consistently exceed £50,000, it may be worth discussing incorporation with an accountant. A limited company allows you to take a mix of salary and dividends, which can reduce your overall tax and NIC bill. However, the additional compliance costs (annual accounts, Corporation Tax return, confirmation statement) mean it is not always worthwhile for smaller operations.
Chair rental vs employment
This is the single most important accounting distinction in the salon industry. HMRC scrutinises the hair and beauty sector heavily on this point.
Chair renters (self-employed)
A chair renter is a self-employed hairdresser who rents a space (chair) in your salon. They:
- Set their own prices
- Choose their own hours
- Bring their own clients
- Provide their own tools and products (or buy them from you)
- Are responsible for their own tax and National Insurance
The salon receives rent from the chair renter, which is the salon’s income. The chair renter’s payments from clients are the chair renter’s income, not the salon’s.
Employed stylists
An employed stylist works under your direction. You:
- Set their hours and prices
- Provide their tools and products
- Deduct PAYE and NIC from their wages
- Provide holiday pay, sick pay and auto-enrolment pension
- Control how they work
The consequences of getting it wrong
If HMRC decides that someone you have been treating as a chair renter is actually an employee, you face:
- Backdated PAYE and NIC (potentially several years)
- Penalties and interest
- Holiday pay claims from the worker
| Factor | Points to self-employment | Points to employment |
|---|---|---|
| Sets own prices | Yes | No |
| Chooses own hours | Yes | No |
| Can send a substitute | Yes | No |
| Provides own products | Yes | No |
| Has own clients | Yes | No |
| Wears a salon uniform | No | Yes |
| Salon sets a rota | No | Yes |
If most factors point to employment, treat the person as an employee regardless of what the written contract says. HMRC looks at the reality of the working relationship.
VAT for salons
Hairdressing and beauty services are standard-rated at 20% for VAT purposes. You must register for VAT once your taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 in any rolling 12-month period.
Chair rental and VAT
If you receive rent from chair renters, this is income that counts towards your VAT threshold. If you are VAT-registered, you charge VAT on the rent.
The chair renters themselves have their own separate VAT obligations based on their own turnover. Many individual hairdressers remain below the threshold.
Retail product sales
Selling shampoos, conditioners, styling products and beauty items is also standard-rated. Track retail sales separately from service income for better management information.
The Flat Rate Scheme
If your turnover is below £150,000, consider the VAT Flat Rate Scheme. Hairdressing and beauty services fall under category hairdressing or other beauty treatment services, with a flat rate percentage of 13% (12.5% in the first year of registration).
You charge clients 20% VAT as normal, but pay HMRC a flat percentage of your gross turnover. If your input VAT (VAT on purchases) is relatively low – which it often is in service-based salons – the Flat Rate Scheme can be advantageous.
Allowable expenses
Salon-specific expenses
- Hairdressing supplies (colour, bleach, peroxide, toner, treatments, foils)
- Beauty products (wax, tanning solution, nail products, lash adhesive)
- Towels and laundry costs
- Disposable items (capes, gloves, spatulas, couch roll)
- Equipment (scissors, clippers, dryers, straighteners, beauty machines)
Premises costs
- Rent on the salon premises
- Business rates (check for small business rates relief)
- Utilities (electricity, gas, water – salons use a lot of water and electricity)
- Insurance (public liability, employers’ liability, professional indemnity, contents)
- Repairs and decoration (keeping the salon looking fresh is a genuine business expense)
Staff costs
- Wages for employed stylists, therapists, receptionists, juniors
- Employer NIC
- Pension contributions (auto-enrolment)
- Training costs (courses, workshops, manufacturer training)
- Apprenticeship costs (if you train apprentices)
Marketing
- Social media advertising (Instagram, Facebook, TikTok ads)
- Website and online booking platform fees
- Loyalty card programmes
- Photography for portfolio and social media
Mobile and home-based hairdressers
If you work from home, claim a proportion of household costs:
| Hours worked from home per month | Flat rate deduction |
|---|---|
| 25-50 hours | £10 |
| 51-100 hours | £18 |
| 101+ hours | £26 |
Alternatively, calculate the actual proportion of home costs attributable to the business. If you have a dedicated treatment room, this method usually gives a larger deduction.
For mobile hairdressers, vehicle costs are a significant expense. Claim either the mileage allowance (45p per mile for the first 10,000 miles, 25p thereafter) or the actual running costs proportional to business use.
Stock control
Product costs can eat into margins if not managed carefully.
Tracking stock
- Count stock regularly (monthly at minimum)
- Separate professional stock (used on clients) from retail stock (sold to clients)
- Monitor colour usage – colour is often the biggest consumable cost in a hair salon
- Track usage per service to set accurate pricing
Pricing your services
Your pricing needs to cover:
| Cost element | Typical percentage of service price |
|---|---|
| Products and consumables | 10-15% |
| Staff costs (or your own time value) | 40-50% |
| Overheads (rent, utilities, insurance) | 20-25% |
| Profit margin | 10-25% |
If your product costs exceed 15% of the service price, review your suppliers, usage per client and whether you are charging enough.
Cash handling
Many salons still handle significant cash payments, though card payments have grown substantially.
- Record every cash transaction – use a till or POS system that logs each sale
- Cash up daily and reconcile against your appointment book or POS report
- Bank cash regularly – do not leave large sums in the salon
- Keep a petty cash float for small purchases, with receipts for everything
- Separate card and cash takings in your records for easier reconciliation
HMRC uses statistical analysis to identify cash-heavy businesses that may be under-reporting income. If your reported takings are significantly lower than expected for the number of clients you see, it can trigger an enquiry.
Apprentices and training
The hair and beauty industry relies heavily on apprenticeships. Accounting considerations include:
- Apprenticeship Minimum Wage (£6.40 per hour for first year; full NMW rate after that)
- Training costs are deductible business expenses
- If you pay the Apprenticeship Levy (only if your payroll exceeds £3 million), this funds training through your digital apprenticeship account
- If you do not pay the levy, the government co-funds apprenticeship training (you pay 5%, the government pays 95%)
Common accounting mistakes in salons
- Treating employed staff as chair renters – this is the biggest risk area; HMRC actively investigates salons
- Not registering for VAT on time – monitor your rolling 12-month turnover, including chair rental income
- Under-recording cash sales – every service must be recorded, even if paid in cash
- Not tracking product costs – unmonitored product usage erodes margins silently
- Forgetting to claim all expenses – towel laundering, salon decoration, trade magazine subscriptions and product training courses are all deductible
- Not reviewing pricing regularly – product and utility costs rise; if your prices do not keep pace, your margins shrink