
Running a salon means you’ve got to spin a lot of plates, and most of the conversations salon owners dread having are ones where expectations were never properly set in the first place. A question about commission that’s unclear, confusion over how a cancellation fee works, or different interpretations of what counts as enough notice for time off.
None of this comes from bad intentions. It comes from a gap between what everyone assumed they understood and what was actually communicated. Clear salon policies close that gap, and make sure your salon runs as smoothly as possible.
This guide covers what to include, how to write it clearly, and how to make it accessible to your whole team. It works well alongside our guides to building salon culture and hiring new salon staff, since all three shape how your team experiences working with you.

Salon policies are the agreed standards and procedures that govern how your business runs day to day. They cover how pay works, what happens when a client cancels, expectations around scheduling and attendance, how your team represents the salon, and more.
Think of them less as a rulebook and more as a clarity tool. The salons that operate most smoothly are almost always the ones where everyone, owners and team members alike, knows exactly what to expect. Policies make that possible. They take the guesswork out of conversations that would otherwise require someone to make a judgement call on the spot.
The Society for Human Resource Management consistently notes that documented workplace policies protect both employers and employees by making expectations explicit and giving everyone a shared reference point. In a salon context, that shared reference is what keeps small things from becoming bigger ones.
Not every policy needs a formal document. But a handful of areas benefit enormously from being written down, simply because they come up regularly, and clarity here prevents some friction later.
None of these need to be long. A paragraph per topic, in plain language, is enough. The goal is that everyone has read them, understands them, and knows where to find them.
Pay and commission are the areas where clarity matters most. When team members understand exactly how their earnings work, trust follows naturally. Written policies here make the biggest practical difference, because the details are specific and the stakes feel real.

Your pay policy should cover: how base wages are calculated, when pay runs happen, how commission is structured across services and retail, and how hours and timesheets are tracked.
Fresha makes the operational side of this straightforward. You can set up wages for each team member, configure customised commission structures for services, retail, gift cards and memberships, and run payroll directly through the platform. The pay run overview in the Help Centre walks through each step. When your team can see exactly how their commission is calculated in real time, the policy becomes self-evidently transparent.
On the legal side, both the UK government's employment rights guidance and the US Department of Labor's wage and hour rules are worth familiarising yourself with, since pay policies need to comply with local employment law.
A clear booking and cancellation policy is one of the most practical things you can put in writing. It benefits your team directly, by reducing the revenue impact of no-shows, and it sets client expectations clearly from the moment they book.
The key things to cover: how much notice is required for a cancellation, whether a deposit is taken at the point of booking, how late arrivals are handled, and what happens in the event of a no-show. The specifics are up to you and your salon's setup. What matters is that the policy is visible, consistent, and communicated upfront.
Fresha's payments and booking protection tools make this easy to enforce automatically. You can require card details at booking, take deposits, and apply cancellation fees without any manual chasing. The policy is embedded into the booking flow itself, which means your team never has to be the one to bring it up.
Once you have your policies, turning them into a handbook is simpler than most owners expect. It doesn't need to be designed beautifully or run to dozens of pages. It needs to be clear, complete, and findable.
Here's a practical approach:

How Fresha makes your salon policies easier to run in practice
Policies only deliver their value when the operations behind them are consistent. Fresha brings the operational layer together so your policies are backed up by the platform rather than relying on everyone remembering what was agreed.
Timesheet track hours automatically, so your attendance policy has a clear record behind it.
Access permissions mean the right people see the right information. You can set permission levels per team member, so confidentiality is built into how the platform works, not just stated in a policy document.
And Fresha's scheduling tools give everyone a clear, real-time view of shifts and availability. When your scheduling policy is clear and the calendar reflects it accurately, the day-to-day runs more smoothly for everyone.
Core salon policies typically cover: service standards and client care expectations, scheduling and attendance, pay and commission structures, booking and cancellation terms, professional conduct, social media guidelines, and confidentiality. A clear paragraph per topic in plain language is enough for most salons. The key is that your team can find them easily and knows they exist.
Legal requirements vary by location. In the UK, employees are entitled to a written statement of employment particulars. In the US, requirements differ by state. A full handbook isn't always legally required, but it is strongly recommended. The SHRM notes that written policies protect both employers and employees by making expectations explicit.
Most salons require 24 to 48 hours' notice for cancellations without a fee. For longer or specialist appointments, 48 to 72 hours is common. The most important thing is that the policy is visible before the client books, communicated clearly at the point of booking, and applied consistently. Fresha's payment protection tools allow you to require a card at booking or take a deposit, so the policy is enforced automatically.
As long as it needs to be and no longer. Most independent salons can cover everything in two to five pages. The test is not length but usefulness: can a new team member find everything they need to know about working in your salon? If yes, it's the right length.
Walk through it together when someone joins. Make it part of your induction rather than a document left to be read independently. Keep it somewhere genuinely accessible — a shared digital document or a pinned message in your team channel. And when it changes, tell people directly rather than just updating the file.
Once your policies are written down and accessible to your whole team, you'll notice how much smoother the day-to-day becomes. Not because the rules changed, but because everyone is working from the same page. That's time and energy back for the things that matter most.
👉 Start with the areas where clarity would make the biggest difference right now. Set up your wages and pay structure in Fresha, configure your commission rates, and use Fresha's payment protection tools to enforce your cancellation policy automatically. Get those foundations in place first. Everything else follows naturally.
If you're not yet using Fresha to run your salon, find out what's included or get started for free.
