How Booth Rental Works in Texas Salons: 2026 Stylist's Guide

How Booth Rental Works in Texas Salons: 2026 Stylist's Guide

Admin Teamโ€ขMay 15, 2026business
Booth rental in Texas runs $150 to $400/week in 2026. Here is what is included, the tax implications, and how to compare booth rental versus commission as a stylist.

Booth rental is the dominant chair model in Texas salons in 2026, with weekly rents ranging $150 to $400 depending on city, neighborhood, and what is included. This guide breaks down how booth rental actually works in Texas, what to confirm in the contract, the tax implications, and how to decide whether booth rental or commission makes more sense for your stylist business.

How Booth Rental Works in Texas

In a booth rental setup you are an independent contractor, not an employee. You pay a fixed weekly or monthly rent to the salon owner for the right to use a chair (or a full studio suite). You set your own prices, keep 100 percent of your service revenue, book your own clients, and handle your own taxes.

2026 Texas Booth Rental Weekly Rates by City

  • Fort Worth (West 7th, TCU)
  • Shared booth (in salon): $200 to $295
  • Studio suite (private): $295 to $400
  • Fort Worth (Camp Bowie, Hulen)
  • Shared booth (in salon): $165 to $225
  • Studio suite (private): $235 to $325
  • Arlington (Cooper Street)
  • Shared booth (in salon): $165 to $235
  • Studio suite (private): $235 to $325
  • Mansfield / Burleson
  • Shared booth (in salon): $150 to $200
  • Studio suite (private): $200 to $285
  • Keller / Southlake
  • Shared booth (in salon): $200 to $285
  • Studio suite (private): $285 to $395

What Should Be Included

Standard inclusions in a Texas booth rental in 2026:

  • The chair, mirror, and styling station.
  • Use of the salon's wash sinks (usually shared).
  • Wi-fi, electricity, water, and HVAC.
  • Front-desk reception (in some salons but not all).
  • Use of the break room and restroom.

Often not included (confirm in the contract):

  • Color, product, or back-bar (you bring your own).
  • Towels and laundry (some salons provide for an extra fee).
  • Booking software (Vagaro, Booker, Square).
  • Liability insurance.
  • Credit card processing fees.

Texas Tax Implications

  1. You are a 1099 independent contractor. The salon does not withhold any taxes from your earnings.
  2. You owe federal income tax plus self-employment tax (15.3 percent for Social Security and Medicare).
  3. Texas has no state income tax, but you still file federal quarterly estimated taxes.
  4. You can deduct booth rent, product cost, education, mileage, software, and continuing education as business expenses.
  5. Most Texas booth renters work with a CPA familiar with the cosmetology industry to handle quarterly filings.

Booth Rental vs Commission: Which Pays More?

For stylists clearing $80,000 or more in annual service revenue, booth rental almost always pays more after tax than commission, even after factoring in product and tax costs. For stylists under $50,000 in annual revenue, commission usually wins because the salon absorbs the overhead. Read our full breakdown in Booth Rental vs Commission: Which Is Right for You.

What to Confirm Before You Sign

  1. Lease term (month-to-month versus 6-month versus 12-month).
  2. Notice period to terminate (30, 60, or 90 days).
  3. Whether you can take your client list when you leave.
  4. Non-compete or non-solicit clause (Texas courts often limit these but read carefully).
  5. Who owns your social media handles tied to the salon.
  6. Rent escalation policy.
  7. Shared expenses (cleaning, supplies, marketing).

CTA

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