Hair Salon Leads — Scrape Google Maps for Salons & Stylists
Hair salons run on a full appointment book, and a startling share of them fill it entirely through phone calls, walk-ins, and Instagram DMs — with no real website behind the business. That gap is exactly why salons are such fertile ground for web design, online-booking tools, and local marketing. This page turns a Google Maps search like "hair salons in Nashville" into a spreadsheet of every salon in the area: name, full address, phone, website, category, rating, and review count, one salon per row.
It is for the people who sell to salons — local marketing agencies, web and booking-site builders, and distributors of salon software, POS systems, or professional products — and for an owner scouting the neighborhood before opening a chair. Instead of collecting names by hand off Maps, you get the local field as a CSV you can sort and filter.
What's in every row
Each salon lands as one row with the same clean columns, so a search becomes a ready-to-work list the instant the run finishes:
Name & category
The business name and how Google classifies it — hair salon, barbershop, nail salon, day spa — so you can target one type or the whole beauty market.
Phone & full address
The public phone number from the listing plus the full address, the two things you need to call, text, or map a territory.
Website — or the no-website flag
The site URL when there is one, and a flag when there is not. Most salons book by phone or social — the no-website rows are prime web and booking prospects.
Rating & review count
Stars and review volume — the fast read on which salons are beloved and busy versus barely trading.
Contact columns
Public emails pulled from the salon's own website land in their own columns at no extra cost; blank when there is no site to read.
How to turn salon leads into clients
A salon with 300 five-star reviews and no website is losing every new client who searches, finds no way to book online, and taps a competitor instead. If you sell web or marketing, that is your whole pitch: a booking-enabled site (many salons happily pay monthly for one that fills last-minute cancellations), local SEO, or review generation. For the no-website salons, a demo with their services, a photo gallery, and a "book now" button already on it opens the conversation.
If you sell software or products, the same list is your route to market. Filter by rating and category to find the established salons most likely to switch booking or POS software, or to stock a professional product line wholesale — and skip the categories that are not your buyer.
Filter to the best-fit prospects
Sort by review count to lead with the salons clients already love, use the category column to split hair from barber, nails, and spa (each is a different pitch and a different demo), and flip the no-website filter so every row is a salon with a gap you can fill.
How it works
Search "hair salons in [city]"
Type a query like "hair salons in Nashville" or "barbershops in Brooklyn" — or sweep the salon category across the metro.
Set your cap
Choose how many salons you want. Starting the run holds only its worst-case cost — never more than your balance.
Watch it run live
Salons stream in with a live counter, so you always know where the run stands.
Download your CSV
Billed per salon scraped — never your full cap — the unused hold refunded, and the file opens straight in Excel or Sheets.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get salons without a website?
Yes — and for salons it is the most valuable filter, because so many book entirely by phone and social. Flip the no-website filter and the CSV holds only salons with no site on their Google Maps listing: busy, well-reviewed shops with nowhere for a new client to book online. You are billed per salon scraped; the filter keeps the matches.
How current is the data?
Every run scrapes live from Google Maps as you start it, so the names, phones, ratings, and review counts are as current as the listings — not a resold database that aged out months ago. Run the same search again any time you want a fresh list.
How much does it cost?
Runs are $8 per 1,000 results, with $5.00 in free credits on every new account — enough to pull a first city before you pay anything. You are billed per salon scraped, never for your full cap, and failed runs are refunded in full.