WordPress Developer for Beauty Salons — Websites That Fill Chairs
Your salon sells an experience — but most salon websites feel like a template with a logo swapped in. I build salon and spa websites that look like the space feels, and turn visitors into booked appointments. I built exactly that for Blush Dry Bar, a US blowout salon.

What Salon Websites Get Wrong
After building for beauty businesses, the pattern is clear. Here's what your website needs — and what I build into every salon site:
Booking-First Design
Every page should lead to your booking system — GlossGenius, Square, Fresha, whichever you use. I integrate it so appointments flow straight into your calendar, not into a contact form nobody checks.
A Look That Matches Your Space
Clients judge the salon by the website before they ever walk in. Generic templates undersell you — I design from your actual branding so the site feels like the experience.
Service Menus That Sell
Blowouts, styling, color, bridal — presented with clear pricing and the right photography, structured so every service can rank and every visitor knows what to book.
Instagram Is the Portfolio, the Website Closes
Your Instagram brings the audience; the website converts it. I connect the two — feed integration, gallery, and a booking path from every photo they fall in love with.
Chair Rental & Stylist Recruiting
Growing salons make money from chairs too. I build dedicated rental pages with application forms — a second revenue stream handled by the website, like I did for Blush.
Local 'Near Me' Visibility
"Blowout near me" searches are won with local SEO: Google Business integration, location schema, and area-targeted structure so you show up when it counts.
Real Work: A Salon Brand Built From Scratch
Here's a US beauty salon I actually built for — no bloated themes, custom everything:
“We gave him our branding and some sites we liked, and he came back with a Figma design that instantly felt like us — warm and clean, not like a generic salon template. The website finally matches the experience we give clients in the salon.”
Aliza Vayani, Owner @ Blush Dry Bar
How I Help Salons & Beauty Businesses
Dry bars, hair salons, spas, nail studios, barbershops — here's what I build:
Why Not Just Hire An Agency?
Fair question. Here's the honest, side-by-side answer — the same quality, without the machinery you'd be paying for:
A Typical Agency
any of them, really
- Who you talk toAccount managers relaying your words to people you'll never meet.
- Who does the workWhoever happens to be free on the bench that week.
- Turnaround6–12 weeks of process, meetings, and sign-off layers.
- Changes & requestsA ticket in a queue, billed by the hour.
- After launchLocked into a monthly retainer to keep their attention.
- What you're paying forOffice rent, sales teams, and agency margins.
Typical cost
$10,000 – $50,000+
Working With Me
Salman Ahmed — developer & designer
- Who you talk toDirectly with me — the person actually designing and building your site.
- Who does the workThe same developer from the first call to launch. 120+ sites, one pair of hands.
- Turnaround2–6 weeks typically — first design mockup within days.
- Changes & requestsA WhatsApp message away. Fast, direct, no ceremony.
- After launchFlat $200/mo maintenance — or just call me when you need something.
- What you're paying forThe build. That's it — no overhead hiding in your invoice.
Same quality, from
$800 — pricing published openly
Faqs
Questions From Beauty Salons
Yes — Blush Dry Bar, a US blowout and beauty salon. Built completely from scratch around their existing branding: service presentation, booking integration, and custom chair-rental pages that opened a second revenue stream. The full case study is on this site.
Yes — GlossGenius, Square Appointments, Fresha, Vagaro, Calendly, or whichever system you use. Appointments flow straight into your existing calendar; the website's job is getting clients to that booking screen with as little friction as possible.
Instagram brings the audience; the website converts it. Clients check your site for services, pricing, and booking before committing — and unlike Instagram, the website ranks on Google for 'salon near me' searches, belongs to you, and never changes its algorithm.
A professional salon website typically runs $800–$1,500, with larger builds (booking flows, rental pages, promo landing pages) up to $3,000. My pricing is published openly — or get an instant range from my website cost calculator.
Yes — I built exactly this for Blush Dry Bar: dedicated chair-rental pages with application forms, so interested stylists apply directly through the website. If renting chairs or hiring is part of your growth plan, the site can handle it.
Ready for a website that fills your chairs?
Let's start with a free 20-minute discovery call — show me your Instagram and your space, and I'll show you exactly what I'd build. No obligations.
Also building for accounting firms, insurance agencies and contractors & home services.


