Hair and beauty businesses often use flexible working models. A salon may have employees, chair renters, mobile stylists, freelance beauty therapists, and room renters working under one roof.
That flexibility can work well, but it also creates tax risk.
The key issue is not just what a contract says. The real working arrangement matters too. As per the hair and beauty tax rules, workers in this industry are either employed or self-employed, and that status affects income tax, national insurance, and VAT responsibilities.
For salon owners, barbers, nail technicians, beauty therapists, and chair renters, this is now a good time to review contracts, payment flows, client ownership, and VAT treatment.
At Apex Accountants, we help hair and beauty businesses get these areas right before small issues become expensive problems.
What the new tax guidance for hair and beauty services
The latest focus is on how people actually work in salons, barbershops, and beauty studios.
There is no special new tax rate for hair and beauty services. The real change is clearer guidance on employment status and VAT treatment.
This matters because the wrong setup can affect the following:
| Area | Why it matters |
| Employment status | It affects who pays Income Tax and National Insurance. |
| Chair rental | It can create VATable income for the salon. |
| Client payments | It affects who reports sales and VAT. |
| Self-Assessment | Freelancers may need to file tax returns. |
| Making Tax Digital | Some sole traders now need digital records. |
The main lesson is simple. A business model must match daily working practice.
HMRC employment status guidance for the hair and beauty industry – employment or self-employed
Employment status is one of the biggest tax issues in hair and beauty.
A person may be called ‘freelance’, ‘self-employed’ or a ‘chair renter.’ That label is not enough. The actual working pattern must support it.
The contract and the daily setup both matter.
| Working point | More like employed | More like self-employed |
| Hours | Salon sets hours | Worker chooses hours |
| Days worked | Salon decides | Worker decides |
| Clients | Salon provides clients | Worker finds own clients |
| Products | Salon provides products | Worker buys or chooses products |
| Tasks | Salon controls duties | Worker manages own work |
| Pay | Fixed wage or rate | Worker sets own prices |
| Time off | Salon controls leave | Worker chooses leave |
When a worker is likely to be employed
A worker is more likely to be employed if the salon controls their working day.
This may include:
- setting start and finish times
- deciding which days they work
- booking clients for them
- setting prices
- providing products
- assigning tasks
- monitoring performance
- paying a fixed hourly rate or salary
Employees have income tax and national insurance deducted through PAYE. Apprentices in salons will normally fall into this employed category.
When a worker is likely to be self-employed
A worker is more likely to be self-employed if they run their work like their own business.
This may include:
- choosing when and where they work
- finding their own clients
- keeping their own client records
- buying products and equipment
- setting their own prices
- taking payments from clients
- paying rent or commission to the salon
- working at more than one salon
- only earning money when they have appointments
Chair renters, mobile stylists, and beauty therapists who visit clients at home can fall into this category, but only where the facts support it.
Mixed work is common
Some people work in more than one way.
For example, a stylist may be employed by a salon during the week and also have private clients outside those hours. In that case, they may have employment income and self-employed income.
This means the tax treatment may be split.
The PAYE income is handled by the employer. The private client income may need to be reported through self-assessment.
Why getting employment status wrong is risky
Wrong status can lead to unpaid tax, National Insurance, interest, and penalties.
The risk is higher where a salon treats someone as self-employed but still controls their work like an employee.
Salon owners should review:
- contracts
- rotas
- pricing control
- client ownership
- product supply
- booking systems
- payment handling
- rent or commission agreements
The aim of the HMRC employment status guidance for the hair and beauty industry is to make the paperwork match the business model.
VAT rules for chair rental
Chair rental is one of the most important VAT areas for salons.
Where a salon rents chair space to self-employed stylists, the supply to those stylists is subject to VAT. This rule can apply even if the stylist has a licence to occupy the chair space.
This is because chair rental often includes more than space. It may include access to washbasins, reception areas, waiting areas, and other salon facilities.
A VAT-registered salon must treat this income correctly on its VAT return.
Read: Zero-Rated VAT on Hair Loss Treatments: Mark Glenn Ltd v HMRC Explained
Who accounts for VAT on client takings
VAT treatment depends on who supplies the service to the client.
| Business model | VAT treatment |
| Stylists are employees | The salon supplies the service and accounts for VAT on gross takings. |
| Self-employed stylists supply services to the salon | The salon accounts for VAT on gross takings. The stylist may also have VAT duties if registered or required to register. |
| Stylists supply services direct to their own clients | VAT depends on the stylist’s own takings and VAT position. Payments passed to the salon are payment for the salon’s own supplies, such as chair rent. |
This is why the payment flow matters. The answer changes depending on whether the client belongs to the salon or the self-employed worker.
Signs that a stylist supplies clients directly
A self-employed model is stronger when the stylist is genuinely trading on their own account.
Useful indicators include:
- Stylists keep their own books and records
- they set their own prices
- they have their own clients
- client pays the stylist
- stylist handles complaints
- the stylist controls bookings
- stylist carries business risk
- salon charges rent or commission
- the written agreement reflects the real setup
If the salon controls the client relationship, prices, and payments, the tax position may be different.
VAT registration for salons and beauty businesses
A beauty and hair business must register for VAT if taxable turnover goes over £90,000 in the last 12 months.
Registration is also needed if taxable turnover is expected to go over £90,000 in the next 30 days.
For salons and beauty businesses, taxable turnover may include:
- hair services
- beauty treatments
- nail services
- barbering
- product sales
- chair rental income
- room rental income
- commission from self-employed workers
A business can also register voluntarily if turnover is below £90,000. Once registered, VAT must be charged on taxable supplies from the date of registration.
Also Read: Do Hairdressers Charge VAT in the UK?
Flat Rate Scheme for hair and beauty
Some smaller VAT-registered businesses may use the Flat Rate Scheme.
For hairdressing or other beauty treatment services, the flat rate percentage is 13%. A business may pay 16.5% if it is classed as a limited-cost business. This scheme can be useful, but it is not always the best choice.
Before using it, salon owners should check:
- expected turnover
- product costs
- equipment costs
- VAT on purchases
- chair rental income
- whether the limited cost business rule applies
A quick VAT review can help avoid choosing a scheme that costs more than expected.
Self-Assessment for freelancers
Self-employed stylists, barbers, nail technicians, and beauty therapists may need to file a tax return.
A sole trader must usually send a self-assessment tax return if they earn more than £1,000 before deducting expenses. Untaxed tips and commission can also create a filing requirement.
Self-employed workers should keep records of:
- client payments
- chair rent
- room rent
- stock and product costs
- equipment costs
- travel costs
- training costs
- insurance
- phone and booking software costs
- business bank transactions
Tax is paid on profit, not sales. Good records help show the real profit figure.
Tips in hair and beauty
Tips need careful handling. Income tax applies to tips. Whether National Insurance applies depends on how the tips are paid and managed.
| Tip type | Tax treatment |
| Direct tip kept by the worker | The worker must report it. Income Tax applies. National Insurance is not usually due. |
| Tip paid through the employer | Tax is deducted through wages. National Insurance may apply depending on the setup. |
| Tips paid through a tronc | Tax is handled through the Tronc system. National Insurance depends on employer involvement. |
| Compulsory service charge | Treated like wages if paid to the worker. |
Cash tips should not be ignored. They still form part of taxable income.
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax
As making tax digital for income tax now affects some sole traders.
It applies in stages based on qualifying income from self-employment and property:
| Qualifying income | Start date |
| Over £50,000 in 2024 to 2025 | 6 April 2026 |
| Over £30,000 in 2025 to 2026 | 6 April 2027 |
| Over £20,000 in 2026 to 2027 | 6 April 2028 |
This can affect freelance stylists, mobile beauty therapists, nail technicians, and barbers who trade as sole traders.
Those in scope need compatible software and digital records.
This is important because many hair and beauty businesses still use notebooks, spreadsheets, or booking apps that are not linked to tax records.
Business rates for salon premises
Physical salons in England may also need to review business rates.
Retail, hospitality, and leisure relief can no longer be newly claimed. From 1 April 2026, business rates are calculated using rate multipliers.
Hair and beauty salons are listed among service businesses that can fall within the retail, hospitality, and leisure multiplier rules, where the property meets the conditions.
This can affect:
- hair salons
- nail bars
- beauty salons
- tanning shops
- salons offering non-surgical cosmetic procedures
- piercing salons
This applies to England only.
Common mistakes to avoid
Hair and beauty businesses should avoid these errors:
- treating all freelancers as self-employed without checking the facts
- using chair rental agreements that do not match daily practice
- missing VAT on chair or room rental
- counting only profit when checking VAT registration
- ignoring cash tips
- mixing personal and business payments
- failing to keep client payment records
- waiting too long to prepare for Making Tax Digital
- assuming a contract is enough on its own
Good tax compliance in this sector starts with clear records and a working model that makes sense.
How We Help Businesses Stay Compliant with HMRC’s New Tax Guidance for Hair and Beauty Services
At Apex Accountants, we support hair and beauty businesses with practical tax and accounting advice.
Our services include:
- employment status reviews for salons and barbershops
- chair rental and room rental tax checks
- VAT registration advice
- VAT return support
- Self-assessment for stylists and beauty therapists
- bookkeeping for salons and freelancers
- payroll for salon employees
- Making Tax Digital setup
- year-end accounts
- business structure advice
We help salon owners and freelancers build a tax setup that reflects how they actually work.
Conclusion
Hair and beauty tax rules are not just about filing returns on time. The real risk sits in the business model.
Salon owners need to know whether workers are employed or self-employed. They also need to check VAT on chair rental, client takings, tips, self-assessment, and digital reporting.
Freelancers need to know when to register, what records to keep, and how their income should be reported.
Apex Accountants can help hair and beauty businesses review their contracts, VAT position, payment flows, and tax records so the business stays compliant and is easier to manage.
FAQs About Tax Rules for Hair and Beauty Businesses
Am I self-employed if I rent a chair?
Renting a chair does not automatically make you self-employed for UK tax purposes. Your status depends on whether you control clients, prices, hours, bookings, and payments and operate independently. HMRC’s CEST tool and hair-and-beauty guidance should be used to confirm status.
Does chair rental include VAT?
If the salon is VAT-registered, chair rental to self-employed stylists is normally standard-rated for VAT, especially when facilities like reception, washing, or bookings are included. Pure land/property rent can be exempt, but most salon “chair rentals” are included as taxable.
Do beauty therapists need to register for VAT?
Beauty therapists must register for UK VAT if their taxable turnover exceeds £90,000 in any rolling 12-month period or if they expect to exceed it. Voluntary registration is allowed below the threshold and may help a month-long period reclaim input VAT on business costs.
Do mobile hairdressers need a tax return?
Self-employed mobile hairdressers must file a self-assessment tax return if their gross trading income exceeds £1,000 in a tax year, after using the £1,000 trading allowance. Below this, no return is needed unless they have other reportable income or gains.
Are tips taxable?
All tips and gratuities are subject to UK Income Tax. How they are reported depends on whether customers pay you directly or via the salon; National Insurance may also be due where the employer allocates or manages the tips under PAYE or a tronc.
Does Making Tax Digital apply to beauticians?
MTD for Income Tax applies to self-employed beauticians with qualifying business or property income over £50,000 from April 2026, with the threshold falling to £30,000 in 2027 and £20,000 in 2028. They must use compatible software and send quarterly updates to HMRC.