Barbershop owner conducting a working interview with a barber candidate who is demonstrating their fade technique on a model showing the skills assessment approach that reveals real ability before making a hiring commitment

How to Hire Barbers for Your Shop: What to Look For and How to Avoid Costly Mistakes

July 16, 2026

How to Hire Barbers for Your Shop: What to Look For and How to Avoid Costly Mistakes

A bad hire in a barbershop costs more than the time and money spent recruiting. A barber who produces inconsistent cuts, treats clients poorly, or damages the shop's culture and reputation creates client attrition that takes months to reverse. Most bad hires are predictable and preventable with a better pre-hire process. The effort invested in evaluating the right things before making a hiring decision is paid back many times over in avoided turnover costs and client loss.

What to Evaluate Before Hiring

Technical skill, observed directly. The resume tells you where someone has worked. A working interview (paid, structured) tells you what they can produce. Every candidate should demonstrate their core technique on a model before any offer is made. Watch for: consistency across the cut (not just the best section), how they handle a difficult section (thick cowlick, uneven hairline, awkward head shape), client interaction during the cut, and how they respond to being observed. Reviewing a portfolio of photos tells you what their best work looks like; a working interview tells you what their average work looks like. You are paying for their average.

Client service behavior. Technical skill without client service behavior creates a barber who produces good cuts and drives clients away through poor communication, disengagement, or an off-putting attitude. Ask behaviorally in the interview: "Tell me about a client interaction that went wrong and how you handled it." Listen for ownership and resolution versus blame and dismissal. A barber who cannot recall a single difficult client interaction either has not worked much or does not reflect on their performance.

Reliability indicators. Late to the interview without communication, vague about availability, non-committal answers about schedule flexibility. These behaviors in a candidate are what you will get in an employee. Reliability in barbering is the product promise to every client who books at your shop: if the barber is late or absent, the client waits or leaves without their cut.

Common Hiring Mistakes

Hiring from desperation. A shop with open chairs and a line of waiting clients becomes less selective under pressure, hiring a marginally adequate barber rather than waiting for the right one. The mediocre hire fills the chair and then underperforms or creates problems; the chair is filled but the shop's quality floor has dropped.

Not checking references beyond the first contact. A barber's previous shop owners will tell you more about their day-to-day behavior than any interview will. Ask specifically about reliability, client retention, and whether the previous employer would rehire them. Vague or hedging answers to that last question are informative.

Skipping the working interview. "I saw their Instagram portfolio and it looked great" is not an assessment. The working interview is non-negotiable for any technical hire.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where do barbershop owners find barbers to hire in Canada?

Active paths: posting on barbering-specific social media groups (Facebook groups for barbers in your province, Instagram outreach to barbers who follow local shop accounts), posting at barber schools and colleges that have placement programs, referrals from your current barbers (barbers know other barbers in the market), and posting on Indeed and LinkedIn with a clear description of the working environment, compensation structure, and shop culture. Passive paths: barbers who follow your shop on social media and reach out. Investing in making your shop visible as a good place to work (consistent, fair, well-managed, good culture) generates inbound interest from barbers who are unhappy at their current shop.

How do you know if a barber is the right fit for your shop?

The working interview addresses technical fit. Cultural fit takes longer to assess but can be estimated from: how the candidate talks about their previous employers (tone and respect), whether they ask questions about the shop's culture and expectations (engaged candidates do), and how they interact with existing staff if you can arrange a meeting. A barber who is technically strong but culturally mismatched to your shop can harm team cohesion, client relationships, and your own daily experience running the business. Both dimensions matter.

Back to Blog