What should a hair salon website include?
A hair salon website needs five essentials: online booking that works around the clock, a services-and-prices menu, stylist profiles, a gallery of real work, and your hours, location and contact details. The booking is what turns a visitor into a filled chair — everything else builds the trust to click it.
Reviewed 18 June 2026 by the Sitepresso team
- 1
Online booking
Most people decide to book outside opening hours. If they cannot do it on your site, they call the salon that lets them.
- 2
A services and prices menu
Clients want to know what a cut, colour or treatment costs before they commit. Hiding prices loses the cautious ones.
- 3
Stylist profiles
People book a person, not a building. Names, photos and specialities help them choose who to sit with.
- 4
A work gallery
Your colour and cuts are the product. Real photos sell the appointment better than any description.
- 5
Hours, location and contact
Unglamorous, but the most-visited part of any local site. Keep it current and easy to find.
- 6
Reviews and a short about section (optional)
Social proof and a little of the salon’s story close the gap for first-timers.
Sitepresso’s Hair Salon template ships with all of this already built, so you fill in your details instead of starting from a blank page. It can be live the same day, with no code.
Want this built for you, ready to edit?
See the Hair Salon template →Related questions
Do I really need online booking, or is a phone number enough?
A phone number alone loses the bookings that happen at night and on weekends. Online booking captures those and sends reminders, which cuts no-shows.
Should I show my prices?
Yes. Clear pricing filters in the right clients and saves you fielding “how much is…” messages all day.
How long does it take to build?
With a ready-made salon template you are editing text and photos, not designing — most owners are live within an afternoon.