Barbershop Sanitation Standards in Canada: What the Rules Require and Why It Matters for Your Business
Barbershop Sanitation Standards in Canada: What the Rules Require and Why It Matters for Your Business
Barbershop sanitation is regulated at the provincial level in Canada, with each province setting the standards that barbershops must meet for tool disinfection, surface cleaning, and personal protective practices. Non-compliance exposes a shop to health inspection citations, temporary closure, and reputational damage that is disproportionate to the cost of maintaining proper protocols. Beyond regulatory compliance, consistent sanitation protects clients from cross-contamination risks, protects barbers from occupational exposure, and signals to clients that the shop operates professionally.
The Core Sanitation Categories
Tool disinfection between clients. All tools that contact a client's skin or hair must be disinfected between uses. In Ontario, the Regulated Health Professions Act and Public Health guidelines require that tools be cleaned (debris removed), then disinfected with an approved hospital-grade disinfectant. For clippers, this means brushing the blade clean, spraying with blade wash (which functions as both disinfectant and lubricant), and allowing the appropriate contact time. For scissors, combs, and razors, disinfection in an approved solution between uses. Consult your provincial public health authority for the specific product and contact time requirements in your jurisdiction.
Single-use items. Items that penetrate the skin or are in direct contact with mucous membranes must be single-use and disposed of between clients. This includes straight razor blades, wax applicators, and any item used during a service that cannot be fully disinfected. Using single-use blades for straight razor services eliminates the sterilization requirement that would otherwise apply to fixed-blade razors.
Surface disinfection. The barber chair, armrests, and headrest should be disinfected between clients. Workstation surfaces that contact tools or products should be cleaned and disinfected at a frequency that maintains a consistently clean environment. The floor around the chair should be swept between clients; accumulated hair on the floor presents both a slip hazard and a visual indicator of shop cleanliness that clients notice.
Hand hygiene. Barbers should wash hands with soap and water before each client and after removing capes or handling soiled items. Hand sanitizer between clients is supplemental, not a replacement for handwashing at the start of each service.
The Business Case for Consistent Sanitation
Clients notice cleanliness. A clean, organized workstation and visibly disinfected tools signal professionalism and care. A workstation with accumulated product residue, tools left out without visible cleaning, or hair from the previous client visible on the chair signals the opposite. The sanitation standard you maintain is visible to every client who sits in your chair; it affects their confidence in the service and their likelihood of returning and referring.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the hygiene rules for barbershops in Ontario?
Ontario barbershops are inspected by local public health units under the Ontario Health Protection and Promotion Act. Inspectors look for: proper tool disinfection between clients, clean and organized workstations, appropriate disposal of single-use items, adequate handwashing facilities, and general cleanliness of the premises. Specific requirements are detailed in your local public health unit's guidance documents for personal services settings. Contact your local public health unit for the current inspection criteria applicable to your location.