This page is for hairdressers

Hairdressing is creative, skilled, and deeply human work but it’s also physically demanding, emotionally intense, and often undervalued.

We created this page to reflect the real patterns we see and hear, without blaming individuals. If you’re a hairdresser (current or former), we hope you feel understood here.

What we’re seeing?

Hairdressers aren’t leaving because they “don’t care.” Many leave when the job becomes unsustainable physically, emotionally, or financially.

Why it matters?

When experienced professionals leave, the whole industry feels it: unstable teams, limited appointments, and reduced consistency for clients.

How this page helps?

We’ve collected the most common questions people ask quietly and answered them in a friendly, honest, professional way.

Note: This page describes common patterns not stereotypes. Every salon and every hairdresser’s journey is different.

“Most of us don’t quit hair. We quit what the job demands from our bodies and lives.” --- a common theme we hear

Honest questions. Real answers.

These are the conversations that often happen quietly in break rooms, in DMs, or after a long day. We’re putting them in the open, respectfully.

1

Why are so many hairdressers leaving the profession?

Most people don’t leave because they stop loving hair. They leave when the work becomes hard to sustain long-term physically, emotionally, or financially.

Many hairdressers carry constant pressure: tight schedules, high expectations, and the feeling that one mistake can affect their reputation.

Over time, the job can shift from creative and energizing to exhausting and stressful.

2

Why is there a growing shortage of hairdressers?

The shortage isn’t only about hiring it’s about retention. Fewer people enter the industry, and many who do leave within the first few years.

Training can be expensive, early-career pay may not match the workload, and the “reality gap” hits hard: long hours, demanding clients, and slow progress before income becomes stable.

3

Why does hairdressing cause burnout so quickly?

Hairdressing combines physical strain with emotional labor. You’re on your feet, repeating movements for hours, staying focused, and managing social energy all day.

Add late cancellations, packed bookings, and pressure to deliver “perfect” results every time it becomes easy to feel like you’re always performing, with little time to recover.

4

Why is the financial reality so difficult for many hairdressers?

Income can be inconsistent, especially early on or during slower seasons. Commission structures, tips, or targets can create stress rather than stability.

Many hairdressers also cover ongoing costs tools, products, education, and sometimes even appearance-related expenses while working overtime that isn’t always properly reflected in pay.

5

Why do many hairdressers feel undervalued or disrespected?

Hairdressing is highly skilled work, but it’s often treated like “just a service.” Some clients underestimate the expertise behind timing, chemistry, color theory, consultation, and correction work.

Respect also depends on workplace culture hairdressers thrive where their time, boundaries, and craft are taken seriously.

6

Why is salon culture such a deciding factor in staying or leaving?

Two salons can look identical online and feel completely different behind the scenes. Supportive leadership, fair policies, realistic scheduling, and a healthy team environment make a huge difference.

When culture becomes toxic gossip, favoritism, unclear expectations, poor training, or constant pressure people often leave even if they love the work.

7

Why don’t more hairdressers see a long-term future in the industry?

Many worry about the long-term physical demands and what happens if their body can’t keep up. Some don’t see a clear path beyond “work more to earn more.”

Without a realistic plan for growth education roles, leadership, specialty pricing, or healthier schedules the future can feel uncertain, especially as responsibilities outside work increase.

8

Why are reviews and reputation more stressful than helpful?

Reviews can help clients choose, but they can also create pressure that feels unfair. A review rarely includes context: unrealistic expectations, hidden hair history, rushed timelines, or client behavior.

When reputation affects bookings and income, hairdressers can feel they have to say “yes” to everything, even when boundaries would protect their health and quality of work.

9

What happens to the industry if these problems stay ignored?

When experienced professionals leave, everyone feels it hairdressers, salons, and clients. Salons struggle to hire, teams become unstable, appointment availability drops, and quality becomes harder to maintain.

Ultimately, the industry becomes less sustainable for the very people who make it work.

10

Why is Rate My Hair talking about this?

We sit between clients, salons, and hairdressers and over time we see repeating patterns in what people praise, what they complain about, and what makes professionals stay or leave.

This page exists to reflect those patterns honestly and respectfully. We’re not here to blame we’re here to listen, learn, and help create more transparency.

11

What can realistically improve without blaming anyone?

Small changes can have big impact: clearer policies around cancellations and late arrivals, realistic appointment timing, fair compensation structures, respect for boundaries, and better education for clients about what results are possible.

Progress often starts with honest conversations and hairdressers being heard.

Your experience matters

If you’re a hairdresser (or were one in the past), we’d love to learn from you. Your answers are anonymous and help us understand what needs to change for professionals, salons, and clients.

It takes 2–3 minutes. No names required.

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