The best salon booking software in 2026 (an honest comparison)
A neutral, owner-trusted look at the real salon booking platforms - Fresha, Booksy, Square, GlossGenius, Vagaro, Mangomint and Acuity - with price, best-for and booking channel in one table, plus the gap every booking page dodges: none of them answers the phone.
For most small salons in 2026, the best salon booking software is Fresha (free core, pay-as-you-go), Square Appointments if you already run card payments through Square, GlossGenius for solo stylists who want booking and payments in one slick app, and Mangomint or Vagaro once you grow into a multi-chair team. Below is a real price-and-features table - the part every vendor page leaves out.
Most "best salon software" roundups are written by the people selling one of the tools, so they quietly rank themselves first and skip the prices. This is the neutral version: who each tool actually fits, what it really costs, and the one job none of them do.
How to choose salon booking software
Before you look at any tool, get clear on four things. They decide which platform fits, and they are the columns in the table below.
- Price model. Is it a flat monthly fee, a free base with paid add-ons, or "free" that earns its keep through card-processing and marketplace fees? The sticker price and the real cost are often very different.
- Booking channel. Does it bring you new clients through its own marketplace (Fresha, Booksy), or is it purely a calendar your existing clients book into (Square, GlossGenius)? A marketplace fills gaps but takes a cut.
- No-show tools. Deposits, card-on-file and automated reminders are what actually protect your chair time. If you lose money to no-shows, weight this heavily - and see what salon no-shows really cost you before you decide how much to pay for it.
- Who it fits. A solo stylist and a six-chair salon with a front desk need very different tools. Match the platform to your size, not to its marketing.
The comparison every other page skips
Here are the real tools side by side. Prices are indicative starting points - always check the current rate, since card-processing and marketplace fees change.
| Tool | Price model | Best for | Booking channel | Free tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresha | Free base + marketplace and card fees | Solo and small salons watching costs | Own marketplace + your own page | Yes (core) |
| Booksy | Monthly subscription | Salons wanting a client-facing app | Booksy customer app | No |
| Square Appointments | Free booking + card processing fees | Salons already taking card payments | Your own page + Square POS | Yes (single location) |
| GlossGenius | Flat monthly subscription | Solo stylists and booth renters | Your own page + texts | No (free trial) |
| Mangomint | Monthly subscription (higher) | Established multi-chair salons and spas | Your own page + automations | No |
| Vagaro | Monthly subscription (per staff) | Salons chasing new-client volume | Vagaro marketplace + your page | No (free trial) |
| Acuity (Squarespace) | Monthly subscription (tiered) | Growing salons wanting clean scheduling | Your own page | No (free trial) |
The tools in detail
Fresha
The default starting point for most independents because the core is genuinely free - calendar, client records, online booking, basic reminders. Fresha earns its money two ways: a commission on new clients who find you through its marketplace, and card-processing fees when you take payment. For a small salon that mostly rebooks existing clients, that can stay very cheap. Just know that "free" is a sliding scale, not a fixed promise.
Booksy
Booksy leans on its consumer app - clients download it, browse local salons and book. That is great for discovery if your clients already use it, less useful if they do not. It is a paid subscription rather than free, and you are buying into its ecosystem and customer app as much as the calendar itself.
Square Appointments
If you already use Square to take card payments, its booking is the obvious add-on: free at a single location, plugged straight into your card reader and POS, with one place for payments and appointments. It is less salon-specific than Mangomint or GlossGenius - no deep stylist-by-column scheduling or beauty marketing suite - but for a simple operation that wants payments and bookings in one tool, it is hard to beat on cost.
GlossGenius
A US-built app aimed squarely at solo stylists, nail techs and booth renters, with a polished booking page, built-in payments and text reminders in one flat monthly fee. If you run your own chair and want booking, payments and a tidy client list in one place without piecing together add-ons, GlossGenius is worth a serious look.
Mangomint
Mangomint is the grown-up option: built for established, multi-chair salons and spas that want slick automations, two-way texting, reporting and integrated payments alongside the calendar. It costs more, and the feature depth only pays back once you have the staff and client base to use it. Overkill for a one-chair salon, a strong fit for a busy team.
Vagaro and Acuity
Vagaro is part calendar, part marketplace - it lists you to new clients and charges per staff member, so it is a customer-acquisition channel as much as a booking system. Acuity (part of Squarespace) is a clean, tiered scheduler popular with growing salons that want a simple booking flow that plugs into a website. Both are credible; just be clear whether you are buying a calendar or buying access to new clients.
Best free salon booking software
If "free" is your filter, two names matter: Fresha (free core) and Square Appointments (free at a single location). Both are real, but free is never the whole story:
- Fresha is free to run the calendar and take bookings, then charges a marketplace commission on new clients and a card-processing rate on payments.
- Square Appointments is free at one location; you pay only the standard card-processing fee when a client pays by card.
- GlossGenius is not free, but its flat monthly fee folds in payments and texts, which can work out cheaper than a "free" tool with metered add-ons once you do the math.
The honest rule: a free booking system pays for itself somewhere - usually in card fees, marketplace commission, or capped reminders. Work out where, and whether that math fits how your salon actually takes money.
Best for a small salon
For a one or two-chair salon, the right pick is almost always the one with the lowest fixed cost and the simplest setup. From the table, that means Fresha (free base), Square Appointments (free booking if you already take cards), or GlossGenius if you are a solo stylist who wants booking and payments bundled. Skip the heavier tools - Mangomint and the premium Vagaro tiers earn their fee on volume and features a small salon will not touch yet. You can always move up when you have the chairs to justify it.
The gap every booking tool leaves: the phone
Here is the thing no booking page will tell you, because none of them fix it.
Booking software is great at the online channel. But a big share of salon inquiries still come by phone, and they arrive at the worst moment - while you have your hands in someone's hair and cannot pick up. The booking app does nothing for that caller. They call, it rings out, and they book the salon down the block instead. That missed call is often a brand-new client lost before they ever existed in your calendar, which is exactly the leak we cover in what salon no-shows and missed calls cost you.
That is the layer to add on top of whatever booking tool you choose. Jodie is not a booking system and does not replace Fresha, Square or GlossGenius - it is the always-on phone-answering layer that sits alongside them. When a call comes in and nobody can get to it, Jodie picks up, answers questions, captures the booking details and texts them straight to you, so the inquiry lands in your hands instead of your competitor's.
Pick the booking tool that matches your size and how you take money - Fresha or Square Appointments for most small salons, GlossGenius for solo stylists, Mangomint or Vagaro once you scale. Then close the one gap they all share by making sure the phone gets answered too. For the full picture on how that works for a salon, see how Hey Jodie works for salons.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the best free salon booking software?
- Fresha is the strongest genuinely free option. The core scheduling, calendar and client records cost nothing; Fresha makes its money on a new-client marketplace fee and on card processing, so "free" really means "free until you take payments or new bookings through it". Read those rates before you commit.
- Is there free salon scheduling software in the US?
- Yes. Fresha offers a free core plan, and Square Appointments has a free single-location tier. Both are real, but the cost lands somewhere else - marketplace commission on new clients, card-processing rates, or paid add-ons for text reminders and reporting. Check how each one makes its money before you switch.
- What is the best salon booking software for a small salon?
- For a one or two-chair salon, pick the lowest fixed cost and the simplest setup: Fresha (free base), Square Appointments (free booking that plugs into its card reader), or GlossGenius if you are a solo stylist who wants booking and payments in one polished app. Skip the heavier tools (Mangomint, Vagaro premium tiers) until you have several chairs to justify the monthly fee.
- Does booking software answer the phone or missed calls?
- No. Booking software handles the online channel - clients self-serve through an app or web page. It does not pick up the phone when someone calls mid-service, and it does not chase a no-show. Phone inquiries and missed calls need a separate answering layer that runs alongside whatever booking tool you choose.
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