Anonymous wrote:I pay something like $175 before tip for a haircut. It’s a “curly” cut, and it does seem like a lot, but otoh she’s very skilled. I don’t do color or Botox/filler so I figure the haircut is important.
Anonymous wrote:I stopped going during Covid and trained my husband pretty well on my cut. But now I want a different one that's outside his skill set and am struggling to find a stylist who charges under $80 as their floor. I don't need a wash, I don't need it blow dried or styled, I definitely don't need dye, I just need someone who can cut layers better than a 40 year old male scientist who learned from YouTube. Maybe I'll wind up at Haircuttery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else read this article in the Post about hairstylists now charging by the hour and/or a la carte for services (like a blow dry costs extra, etc.)? I have definitely seen a huge increase in prices. My long-time stylist owns her own studio and up until recently charged $85 and I paid her $100 in cash for a wash, cut, and blow dry. My hair takes at most 45 minutes, usually closer to 30. I went back this week and it turns out she now charges $125!! I just saw her in December and it was $85 and she didn't say anything about increasing her prices. I'm all for hair stylists making a living, but that's a HUGE increase without any notice. thoughts?
My thoughts are:
1. You weren't tipping her enough when you were paying her $100 for an $85 bill.
2. $125 is still pretty cheap around here (and by "here," I say that for the exurb I'm in, not even just D.C.).
DP. $100 for $85 is close to 20%. What amount of tip would be acceptable?!
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else read this article in the Post about hairstylists now charging by the hour and/or a la carte for services (like a blow dry costs extra, etc.)? I have definitely seen a huge increase in prices. My long-time stylist owns her own studio and up until recently charged $85 and I paid her $100 in cash for a wash, cut, and blow dry. My hair takes at most 45 minutes, usually closer to 30. I went back this week and it turns out she now charges $125!! I just saw her in December and it was $85 and she didn't say anything about increasing her prices. I'm all for hair stylists making a living, but that's a HUGE increase without any notice. thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else read this article in the Post about hairstylists now charging by the hour and/or a la carte for services (like a blow dry costs extra, etc.)? I have definitely seen a huge increase in prices. My long-time stylist owns her own studio and up until recently charged $85 and I paid her $100 in cash for a wash, cut, and blow dry. My hair takes at most 45 minutes, usually closer to 30. I went back this week and it turns out she now charges $125!! I just saw her in December and it was $85 and she didn't say anything about increasing her prices. I'm all for hair stylists making a living, but that's a HUGE increase without any notice. thoughts?
My thoughts are:
1. You weren't tipping her enough when you were paying her $100 for an $85 bill.
2. $125 is still pretty cheap around here (and by "here," I say that for the exurb I'm in, not even just D.C.).
DP. $100 for $85 is close to 20%. What amount of tip would be acceptable?!
Yeah, add $2 and it’s good. But if tipping the shampoo person as well, it’s really fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did anyone else read this article in the Post about hairstylists now charging by the hour and/or a la carte for services (like a blow dry costs extra, etc.)? I have definitely seen a huge increase in prices. My long-time stylist owns her own studio and up until recently charged $85 and I paid her $100 in cash for a wash, cut, and blow dry. My hair takes at most 45 minutes, usually closer to 30. I went back this week and it turns out she now charges $125!! I just saw her in December and it was $85 and she didn't say anything about increasing her prices. I'm all for hair stylists making a living, but that's a HUGE increase without any notice. thoughts?
My thoughts are:
1. You weren't tipping her enough when you were paying her $100 for an $85 bill.
2. $125 is still pretty cheap around here (and by "here," I say that for the exurb I'm in, not even just D.C.).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Already been discussed here.
A link would be helpful.