Barbershop owner reviewing business finances and revenue breakdown at front desk

How Much Does a Barbershop Owner Make in Canada

June 01, 2026

How Much Does a Barbershop Owner Make in Canada

A single-chair barbershop owner in Canada who cuts hair themselves can generate $60,000 to $120,000+ in gross revenue per year, depending on service volume, pricing, and location. After chair costs, supplies, software, and other operating expenses, net income typically lands between $35,000 and $75,000 for a solo operator. Multi-chair shops with staff or booth renters can significantly exceed these figures.

The range is wide because barbershop income depends almost entirely on decisions the owner controls: how they structure the business, what they charge, how they retain clients, and whether they build a team or stay solo.

The Solo Owner-Operator Model

Most barbershop owners in Canada start by cutting hair themselves. The math looks like this:

  • Services per day: 8 to 12 for a focused barber on a full schedule
  • Average service price: $30 to $55 in most Canadian markets (higher in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary)
  • Working days per year: approximately 240 to 260 (5 days/week, some holidays)

At 10 services per day at $40 average over 250 days, gross revenue is $100,000. Typical operating costs for a solo chair: rent ($1,000 to $3,000/month depending on city), supplies ($300 to $600/month), software/booking ($100 to $200/month), insurance and licensing (varies). Net income in this scenario: $55,000 to $75,000 before personal taxes.

A solo owner cutting 12 clients per day at $50 in a mid-sized Canadian city can reach $130,000 to $150,000 gross. At those volumes, net income after overhead can approach $90,000 to $110,000 depending on rent.

The Multi-Chair or Booth Rental Model

Once an owner adds chairs, the income ceiling rises substantially:

Booth rental: The owner rents chair space to independent barbers at a flat weekly or monthly rate. Typical booth rental rates in Canada: $300 to $600/week in major markets. A 4-chair shop with 3 renters generates $900 to $1,800/week in chair rent alone, plus the owner's own cutting income. Annual chair rental revenue: $47,000 to $94,000, before the owner cuts a single client.

Commission model: The owner employs barbers on commission (typically 45 to 60% of revenue). This model requires more management and payroll overhead but gives the owner more control over the client experience and team culture. A busy 4-chair commission shop grossing $400,000 to $600,000/year might produce $80,000 to $150,000 in owner net income after barber commissions, rent, and operations.

What Separates High-Earning Barbershop Owners from Average Ones

The difference between a $45,000/year owner and a $120,000/year owner is rarely skill. It is systems.

High-earning owners have resolved four things:

1. Pricing. Most barbershop owners underprice by $5 to $15 per service and never revisit it. Raising from $35 to $45 on 3,000 services per year is $30,000 in additional gross revenue with no change in volume. Many owners have not raised their prices in 3 to 5 years despite significant cost increases.

2. Client retention systems. The average barbershop loses 20 to 30% of clients per year to no-shows, lapsed visits, or moving away. Shops with automated rebooking reminders and consistent follow-up recover 30 to 50% of those lost clients. Retention has a higher ROI than new client acquisition for most shops.

3. Revenue per visit. A barber who upsells one beard service per day at $25 adds roughly $6,000 per year in gross revenue. Product sales, treatments, and add-on services compound quickly at volume.

4. Staff structure. Owners who stay solo are capped by their own hours. Owners who build teams with the right commission or rental structure remove the ceiling. The challenge is hiring, training, and retaining good barbers, which requires systems the owner must build intentionally.

Barbershop Owner Income vs. Employed Barber Income

An employed barber in Canada typically earns $35,000 to $55,000 per year on commission or hourly. A booth renter working in someone else's shop typically nets $50,000 to $80,000 depending on chair volume and costs. An owner-operator in a good location with a solid system can clear $80,000 to $120,000+ and eventually build a business that generates income without requiring their personal presence behind the chair.

That last point is the operational goal most barbershop owners never reach: a business that runs without them being the barber. It requires systems, trained staff, a reliable client pipeline, and a management layer. Most owners know they need this. Very few have a structured path to get there.

The Education and Coaching Side of the Business

A growing number of barbershop owners in Canada and the US have added education revenue. Hosting masterclasses, mentoring apprentices for pay, or licensing their brand to other operators creates income that does not depend on standing behind a chair. CADMEN's barbershop owner coaching program was built from the operational systems behind CADMEN's own award-winning locations and is designed specifically to help owners build these structures into their businesses.

What CADMEN's Coaching Program Covers

The CADMEN Barbershop Owner Business Coaching program ($4,000 USD) addresses the four variables that determine owner income directly: pricing strategy, client retention systems, team structure, and the operational infrastructure that makes a shop run without the owner as the bottleneck. The program draws from CADMEN's experience building and selling multiple GTA locations, completing a full franchise development process, and serving 20,000+ clients across multiple award-winning shops.

Details and application at academy.cadmen.ca.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a barbershop owner make in Canada per year?

A solo owner-operator in Canada typically nets $35,000 to $75,000 per year after expenses. Owners with multiple chairs generating booth rental income or running a commission team can reach $80,000 to $150,000+. The range depends on pricing, service volume, location, and whether the owner has built systems that generate revenue beyond their personal chair.

Is owning a barbershop profitable in Canada?

Yes, but profitability depends on pricing, location, and business structure. A single-chair owner in a high-traffic location with a full book can clear $60,000 to $90,000 net. Multi-chair shops with stable staff structures can be significantly more profitable. The shops that struggle are typically underpriced, under-retaining clients, or entirely dependent on the owner as the sole revenue source.

How many clients does a barbershop need to be profitable?

A solo barbershop cutting 8 to 10 clients per day at $35 to $45 average generates $100,000 to $130,000 gross annually. After rent, supplies, and software, that typically produces a viable livelihood. For a multi-chair shop, profitability depends on occupancy: each rented chair at $400/week covers roughly $1,600 to $2,000/month in overhead on its own.

What is the profit margin for a barbershop in Canada?

Solo owner-operators typically see profit margins of 40 to 60% of gross revenue, depending on rent costs. Commission-model shops with employees typically run 20 to 35% net margins after barber pay, rent, and operations. Booth rental models can push higher if chair occupancy is strong, since variable costs are minimal once rent is covered.

How do barbershop owners increase their income?

The highest-leverage moves are: raising prices (most owners are underpriced by $5 to $15 per service), improving client retention through automated rebooking systems, adding upsell services (beard work, treatments, products), and eventually adding chairs with booth renters or trained staff. Most of these are systems problems, not skill problems.

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