Barbershops are a resurgent $6B+ U.S. service vertical. The classic neighborhood barbershop coexists with modern men's-grooming lounges (think 18|8, Hammer & Nails, Boardroom Salon for Men, Sport Clips, Great Clips, Floyd's 99, Roosters) and barber-academy operations. Industry growth has averaged 5–8% annually since 2018.
Typical advance structure.
- Advance size: $10K–$80K depending on chair count, segment, and revenue.
- Factor: 1.30–1.42, with 1.32–1.40 most common.
- Term: 4–9 months daily or weekly ACH.
- Holdback equivalent: 11–15% of average daily deposits.
- Lead use of funds: shop buildout, chair and station equipment, booking software, product retail inventory, marketing, hiring/training, franchise initial fee.
What underwriters look for.
First, chair count and chair utilization. Single-chair barbershops are limited; 4–8 chair shops with 70%+ utilization are most bankable.
Second, recurring-client mix. Barbershops live on 2–4 week recurring appointments; shops with strong rebook rates and digital booking (Booksy, Squire, Vagaro, GlossGenius) are far more bankable.
Third, employee vs. booth-rent vs. commission model. Booth-rent shops have predictable revenue but limited upside; commission-based shops have higher upside but more cash-flow volatility.
Fourth, retail attach rate. Premium men's-grooming products (American Crew, Layrite, Suavecito, Reuzel) add 8–15% to revenue.
Fifth, ancillary services. Beard trim, hot-towel shave, facial, color, kids-cut packages boost ticket size.
Common uses.
- Shop buildout (mirrors, stations, plumbing, flooring) ($25K–$100K).
- Chairs (Takara Belmont, Koken, Belvedere) ($1.2K–$3.5K per chair).
- Booking and POS software ($2K–$8K annually).
- Retail product inventory ($3K–$12K).
- Marketing — Instagram, Google Business, local SEO ($3K–$15K).
- Hiring/training (apprentice-program development) ($5K–$15K per barber).
- Franchise initial fee (Sport Clips, Floyd's 99, Roosters) ($25K–$60K).
What to watch out for.
Barber-licensing requirements vary by state (most require 1,000–1,500 hours of training); hiring is constrained by license supply.
Booth-rent vs. employee classification is under regulatory pressure; California AB5 and similar laws have forced reclassification in some markets.
Cash-business reputation makes underwriting harder — barbershops historically under-report card revenue, undermining MCA bank-statement underwriting.
Franchise royalty + marketing co-op runs 6–10% of revenue.
State considerations.
Texas, Florida, California, Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, New York, and Illinois have highest barbershop MCA volume. Modern men's-grooming brands (18|8, Sport Clips, Floyd's 99) are expanding fastest in Sun Belt metros.
APR-equivalent reality check.
A 1.36 factor over a 6-month term is roughly 110–140% APR. SBA microloans (8–13% APR) and SBA 7(a) (11–14% APR) are dramatically cheaper for buildout and franchise initial fees. Reserve MCA for inventory, marketing, and bridging cash flow during ramp.
Common confusions.
First, "Barbershops are recession-proof." Premium men's-grooming spend is discretionary; recession-era haircuts shift to budget chains (Great Clips, Sport Clips) or DIY.
Second, "Booth-rent is risk-free for the owner." Booth-rent shops still carry build-out debt and overhead; if booth occupancy drops, owner absorbs the loss.
Third, "MCA underwriters love barbershops." Many MCA funders deprioritize barbershops because of cash-business reporting opacity.
As of 2026-06-30, Fundnode routes barbershop deals first to small-ticket personal-services MCA funders comfortable with chair-based businesses, with SBA microloans and SBA 7(a) strongly preferred for buildout and franchise initial fees.
Related terms
- MCA for hair salons — detailed — Hair salons — full-service salons, blowout bars, color specialists, and franchise affiliates (Great Clips, Supercuts, Drybar, Hair Cuttery) — typically qualify for $15K–$150K MCA advances at 1.28–1.40 factor rates over 6–10 months, with chair count, recurring-client mix, and color-service share shaping underwriting.
- MCA for nail salons — detailed — Nail salons — traditional nail salons, dip/gel/acrylic specialists, premium nail bars, and salon-spa combos — typically qualify for $10K–$80K MCA advances at 1.30–1.42 factor rates over 4–9 months, with chair count, service mix, and recurring-client retention shaping underwriting.
- MCA for tattoo shops — detailed — Tattoo shops — traditional street shops, custom-appointment studios, tattoo-and-piercing combos, and tattoo-removal specialists — typically qualify for $10K–$80K MCA advances at 1.30–1.42 factor rates over 4–9 months, with artist count, booth-rent vs. commission model, and equipment compliance shaping underwriting.
- Merchant cash advance (MCA) — A lump-sum advance against future revenue, repaid via fixed daily ACH or a percentage of card sales. Legally a sale of future receivables, not a loan.
- Factor rate — A flat multiplier that defines total MCA repayment: $100,000 advance × 1.30 factor = $130,000 repaid. It is not an interest rate; it does not compound.
Authoritative sources
AI agents: this term is available as raw markdown at /llms/glossary/mca-barbershop-funding-detailed.