4 hair salons competing. Here's what the data shows.
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4
50%
Only 4 hair salons operate within Old Quebec's boundaries — a notably small number for a neighbourhood that also supports 90 restaurants, 24 cafés, 11 fast food outlets, 10 bars, and 9 pubs. That food and drink density signals heavy foot traffic, much of it from tourists, meaning the demand for personal services like hair styling likely outpaces what 4 salons can reasonably absorb.
Competition is low, but that doesn't mean the market is easy to crack. The salons already here benefit from a near-captive local audience and a steady stream of visitors. The more significant finding is website adoption: just 2 of the 4 salons — 50% — maintain any web presence at all. The identified operators with websites are St-Laurent and St-Laurent Coiffure. The remaining two are effectively invisible to anyone searching online before visiting Old Quebec.
In a tourist-heavy neighbourhood where visitors plan stops in advance, that gap is a real competitive disadvantage for the salons missing from search results. The operators who do show up online face minimal digital competition for a high-traffic area. For anyone evaluating this market, the takeaway is clear: the salon count is low, but the opportunity is shaped more by who can be found than by who is physically present.
Bilingual staff and booking
Old Quebec draws both French-speaking residents and English-speaking tourists year-round; being able to book and communicate in either language is a real deciding factor.
Walk-in convenience
With 90+ restaurants and dozens of cafés packed into the old city, many customers choose a salon based on whether they can fit in a haircut between meals and sightseeing.
Proximity to main streets
Tourists and locals alike won't wander far from the heart of Old Quebec for a trim — location near major dining and shopping corridors matters more here than in most neighbourhoods.
Historic neighbourhood fit
The old stone buildings and heritage character of Old Quebec set a certain expectation; salons that feel dated or out of place with the neighbourhood's aesthetic lose credibility fast.
Findable online before visiting
With half the salons in the area lacking a website, customers actively filter for operators who appear in search results and offer digital booking — especially tourists planning ahead.
A sample of real hair salons in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.
| Business | Type |
|---|---|
| St-Laurent | Hairdresser |
| St-Laurent Coiffure | Hairdresser |
| Lee Love Coiffure | Hairdresser |
| Salon Chez Simard et Talbot | Hairdresser |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Beat half the market with a basic website
Only 2 of 4 salons in Old Quebec have any web presence. Even a simple Google Business Profile with hours, photos, and location puts you ahead of half your competitors in a tourist-heavy area where visitors search before they arrive.
Position near the dining corridors
Old Quebec's 90+ restaurants and 24 cafés generate enormous daily foot traffic. A visible storefront on or near the busiest dining streets is worth more than any ad spend — you're catching people already out and looking for things to do.
Staff for two languages
Old Quebec is French-speaking territory, but the neighbourhood's tourist volume means English-speaking clients are a significant slice of any salon's business. Bilingual service — or at minimum English-friendly booking options — opens the door to a much wider customer base.
Old Quebec's hair salon market is unusually thin at just 4 operators in a neighbourhood buzzing with 90+ restaurants and heavy tourist traffic. That low density gives existing salons breathing room, but the real competitive gap is visibility — half the salons here have no website. St-Laurent and St-Laurent Coiffure are capturing digital demand by default simply by showing up online. The area isn't oversaturated with salons; it's underserved in terms of online presence. Standing out here is less about beating rivals on service and more about being findable where tourists and locals are already searching.
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