How Much Does It Cost to Open a Barbershop in Ontario
How Much Does It Cost to Open a Barbershop in Ontario
The range people quote for opening a barbershop in Ontario is wide: $10,000 to $150,000. That spread is not useful without knowing what drives it. The real answer requires separating the fixed startup costs (what you spend before you serve a single client) from the ongoing monthly costs (what you need to cover to stay open) and from the optional-but-real costs that determine whether you open a professional shop or a bare-minimum setup that limits your pricing power from day one.
One-Time Startup Costs
Leasehold improvements and build-out. This is typically the largest variable and the one most new shop owners underestimate. If the space is a blank commercial unit (raw walls, no plumbing for barber chairs, no specialized lighting), you are looking at $20,000 to $80,000+ in build-out depending on the size of the space, number of stations, and quality of finishes. If the space has prior salon or barbershop infrastructure, that number drops meaningfully. The mistake most people make: accepting the landlord's build-out contribution and not accounting for what the contribution does not cover.
Barber chairs. Professional barber chairs in Canada range from $600 to $3,000+ per chair. A 3-chair shop at mid-range ($1,200/chair) is $3,600 in seating alone before any other equipment. Buy quality chairs; the seat is what your clientele assesses every visit and what determines your physical comfort over a full working day. Budget-chair churn is a cost center, not a saving.
Mirrors and styling stations. $400 to $1,500+ per station depending on build quality and whether they are custom-built or prefab. A 3-station shop with wall mirrors and vanities: $1,500 to $4,500.
Backwash units / shampoo bowls. $500 to $2,000+ per unit depending on whether they are built-in plumbing units or mobile. Plumbing connection adds installation cost.
Autoclave and sterilization equipment. Required by Ontario's health regulations for equipment used on clients. Entry-level autoclaves: $800 to $2,500.
Tools and initial supplies. Clippers ($150 to $600+ each for professional grade), trimmers, scissors, capes, neck strips, disposables, barber poles (optional), waiting area furniture. Budget $3,000 to $8,000 for a 3-station shop fully stocked for opening.
Signage and branding. Exterior sign ($500 to $3,000+), window vinyl, menus, printed materials. $1,500 to $5,000 for a complete branded exterior presence.
POS / booking software setup. One-time setup costs are usually minimal for cloud platforms; ongoing monthly fees are the real consideration (see below).
Total estimated startup range, 3-chair Ontario shop, mid-market: $35,000 to $80,000. Boutique/premium shops with high-quality finishes in strong-traffic locations approach and exceed $100,000. Shops opening in already-fitted spaces or sharing space in an existing salon can start below $25,000.
Monthly Operating Costs
Rent. The largest ongoing expense. Mississauga and GTA commercial retail: $25 to $50+/sq ft annually, depending on location quality and street-level versus plaza interior. A 1,000 sq ft shop at $30/sq ft = $2,500/month base rent before TMI (taxes, maintenance, insurance). TMI typically adds 30 to 60% to base rent in Ontario commercial leases. Budget $3,000 to $6,000/month total occupancy cost in GTA suburban markets for a modest-sized shop.
Payroll or chair rent. If employees: $15 to $20+/hr for entry-level barbers; experienced barbers earning $25+ hourly or commission-based. Chair rental models: $300 to $800+/month per chair or a daily/weekly rate. Chair rental shifts overhead risk to the barber but reduces owner control over service standards.
Supplies and consumables. $500 to $1,500/month depending on volume.
Insurance, software, utilities, marketing: $1,000 to $2,500/month.
What Most Budgets Undercount
Three months of operating costs in the bank before opening. The assumption that the shop will break even in month one is the cause of most barbershop failures in year one. Build in the cushion. The shops that survive their first two years have enough capital to operate at below break-even while building clientele, not just enough to open the door.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money do you need to open a barbershop in Ontario?
For a 3-chair shop in the GTA or Mississauga area, expect $40,000 to $80,000 in startup capital plus 3 months of operating reserves ($10,000 to $18,000 depending on the shop's cost structure). A bare minimum solo-chair setup in a low-rent location can be done for less; a premium multi-chair boutique exceeds $100,000. The number that matters is not just the opening cost but whether you have enough capital to operate below break-even for the first 3 to 6 months while building a client base.
Is a barbershop a good investment in Ontario?
Barbershops are service businesses with strong demand and moderate margins. A well-run shop with consistent clientele, controlled labour costs, and a retail component can generate 15 to 25% net margins. The risk factors are high fixed rent, difficulty maintaining service quality as staff turns over, and competition density in urban markets. Shops that fail typically do so in year one due to undercapitalization or year two due to owner burnout. The model is sound when properly financed and staffed; the execution is the variable.