How Much Does a Barber Chair Cost and What Else Do You Need to Budget to Open a Barbershop
How Much Does a Barber Chair Cost and What Else Do You Need to Budget to Open a Barbershop
The barber chair is the most visible equipment purchase in a barbershop build-out, but it is rarely the most expensive line item when the full opening budget is laid out honestly. First-time shop owners typically underestimate the total capital required because they research the chair cost, estimate the rent, and assume the rest is manageable. The items they do not price out until they are already signed into a lease are the ones that delay opening and stretch the budget.
Barber Chair Cost Range
In Canada, barber chairs range considerably by quality tier:
- Entry-level hydraulic chairs: $400 to $900 CAD. Functional but typically shorter-lived under heavy daily use. Suitable for low-volume shops or secondary stations.
- Mid-range professional chairs: $1,000 to $2,500 CAD. The most common range for working barbershops. Brands in this range include Takara Belmont alternatives and import professional models. Better hydraulics, more durable upholstery, higher daily use tolerance.
- Premium professional chairs: $3,000 to $6,000+ CAD. Takara Belmont, Gamma & Bross, Maletti, and similar European/Japanese professional brands. Built for 10 to 20 years of daily use. Justify the cost in high-volume shops or premium brand positioning.
For a 3-chair shop at mid-range pricing, the chairs alone are $3,000 to $7,500 before delivery and installation.
The Rest of the Equipment Budget
Chair costs are typically 15 to 25% of total equipment spend in a barbershop opening. The remaining items:
- Mirrors and backbar: Large wall mirrors with backbar shelving and lighting run $500 to $2,000+ per station depending on whether they are custom or prefabricated.
- Waiting area furniture: $500 to $3,000+ depending on seating count and quality level.
- Reception desk / front counter: $800 to $4,000 depending on whether it is custom-built or a prefab solution.
- Shampoo bowl (if applicable): $500 to $1,500 per unit plus plumbing cost.
- Signage: Interior and exterior signage, $1,500 to $10,000+ depending on illuminated vs. non-illuminated, window vinyl, and branding complexity.
- Tools and supplies: Each barber station should be stocked with clippers (2 to 3 sets minimum), trimmers, scissors, guards, and product. Budget $800 to $2,000+ per station.
- Point-of-sale system: $500 to $2,000 for hardware plus monthly software fees.
- Leasehold improvements: Flooring, paint, plumbing modifications, electrical, HVAC adjustments. This is the most variable and most underestimated line item. A basic build-out in a space that needs minimal modification: $10,000 to $25,000. A full gut-to-finish in a raw commercial space: $40,000 to $100,000+.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to open a barbershop in Canada?
Total opening costs for a small Canadian barbershop (2 to 4 chairs, standard commercial lease) typically land between $40,000 and $120,000 CAD depending on location, lease terms, the condition of the space, and the equipment quality tier. The most common underestimation is leasehold improvement costs. Getting a contractor quote on the space before signing the lease is essential; the space condition determines whether $15,000 or $80,000 of renovation is required to reach an operational state.