19
58%
Nineteen hair salons operate within Leslieville โ a dense concentration that puts real pressure on every operator in the neighbourhood. The competitive picture gets sharper when you look at digital readiness: only 11 of those 19 (58%) have a website. The remaining 8 are essentially invisible to anyone searching "hair salon Leslieville" before leaving the house.
Established names like Glassbox Barbershop, Starks Barber Company, Emerald Hair & Beauty, Maral Salon, and Hair by Banks & Co have secured their online presence. That creates a clear divide between salons that can be found, compared, and booked digitally โ and those that can't.
Leslieville's commercial ecosystem adds context. The neighbourhood supports 57 restaurants, 29 cafes, 33 fast food outlets, 6 bars, and 10 pubs, which means heavy foot traffic on Queen Street East and surrounding blocks. Hair salons benefit from this foot traffic, but they also compete with it โ customers have plenty of reasons to be in the area, and salon visibility (both physical and digital) determines whether they walk through your door or the one next to it.
For any salon entering this market, the bar for entry is low but the bar for survival is rising. Nineteen competitors in a single neighbourhood means customers have options, and the ones who can't be found online are already starting behind.
Findable with a quick search
With 42% of Leslieville salons lacking a website, customers default to whichever salon they can actually find and vet online before walking in.
Walking distance from Queen East
Leslieville is a walkable neighbourhood โ customers want a salon that fits into their regular route past the cafes and shops, not a destination trip.
Barber or full-service clarity
The neighbourhood has dedicated barbershops (Glassbox, Starks, Hastings) alongside beauty salons (Maral, Emerald), so customers want to know immediately which type you are.
Stylist work they can preview
With 19 salons competing in one area, customers compare Instagram feeds and lookbooks to find a stylist whose aesthetic matches theirs before committing.
Neighbourhood-appropriate pricing
Leslieville draws a mix of young professionals and long-time residents โ customers want to see pricing that feels right for the area without surprises at the register.
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 |
|---|---|
| Joseph's Barber & Hairstyling | Hairdresser |
| Broadview Beauty Parlour/George's Barbershop | Hairdresser |
| Glassbox Barbershop | Hairdresser |
| Textรผr | Hairdresser |
| Starks Barber Company | Hairdresser |
| Emerald Hair & Beauty | Hairdresser |
| Top Cuts | Hairdresser |
| Maral Salon | Hairdresser |
| Hair by Banks & Co | Hairdresser |
| Hair Code | Hairdresser |
| Little London Barbershop | Hairdresser |
| Italy Hair Design | Hairdresser |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Get online โ half your competitors aren't
Only 58% of Leslieville salons have a website. Publishing a basic site with your services, hours, and booking link immediately separates you from the 8 salons that don't have one. In a neighbourhood this competitive, invisibility online is a self-inflicted disadvantage.
Position near the foot traffic, not against it
With 57 restaurants and 29 cafes nearby, Leslieville draws heavy pedestrian traffic โ but that traffic has plenty of options. Make your storefront and signage work hard, and consider cross-promotions with nearby food businesses to capture customers already in the area.
Pick a clear lane and own it
Nineteen salons is a crowded field. The ones getting remembered โ like Glassbox for barbering or Maral for styling โ have a defined identity. Trying to be everything to everyone in a neighbourhood this saturated makes you easy to overlook.
Nineteen hair salons in one neighbourhood is crowded. The market splits between dedicated barbershops like Glassbox and Starks and full-service salons like Maral and Emerald. The biggest gap is digital: 42% of salons have no website, meaning customers searching online see fewer competitors than actually exist. Standing out here requires either a strong online presence, a clear specialty, or both. The salons that combine a defined identity with discoverability will pull ahead โ the rest are relying on walk-ins in an area where customers already have 18 other options.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.