29
48%
Twenty-nine hair salons operate in Greenwich โ enough to create real competition but not so many that the market is hopelessly crowded. Names like Headcase Barbershop, Kings of London, Daiva's Hair Studio, The Hairy Chair, Classics, T&G Barbers, Headlinerz Barbershop, and Bonds have carved out established positions. What stands out more than the salon count is the digital gap: only 14 out of 29 โ 48% โ have a website. That leaves over half the market essentially invisible to anyone searching online for a cut in SE10.
Greenwich also benefits from heavy surrounding foot traffic. The neighbourhood has 237 food and drink venues โ 62 restaurants, 78 cafรฉs, 50 fast food spots, 12 bars, and 35 pubs. People are already out on the high street, and that footfall matters for walk-in trade.
Competition is moderate. With 29 salons, Greenwich is neither starved of options nor oversaturated. The real divide is between salons that have claimed their digital space and those that haven't. For the 15 salons without a website, every Google search for 'hair salon Greenwich' is a missed opportunity.
Opening hours that work
Greenwich mixes commuters, tourists visiting the Cutty Sark and Royal Observatory, and long-term locals โ so salons offering early morning, late evening, or weekend slots capture business that 9-to-5 shops miss entirely.
Proximity to transport links
With Greenwich station, Cutty Sark DLR, and multiple bus routes running through the area, customers want a salon they can reach in under ten minutes without driving โ location along the main pedestrian routes from these stops matters.
Word of mouth counts
Greenwich is a neighbourhood where people know their local shops by name, and with 29 salons competing, a recommendation from a neighbour or colleague carries far more weight than any advert.
Proof of skill online
When 52% of salons have no web presence at all, customers actively check Instagram and Google reviews for the ones that do โ real photos of actual cuts, not stock images, are what get people through the door.
Styling for every hair type
Greenwich draws a genuinely diverse population โ from university students to established families โ and customers need to see evidence that a salon handles their specific hair texture and style before booking.
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 |
|---|---|
| Linda Hair & Beauty | Hairdresser |
| Ediz Barbers | Hairdresser |
| Hair E14 | Hairdresser |
| Headcase Barbershop | Hairdresser |
| Kings of London | Hairdresser |
| Elegance | Hairdresser |
| Daiva's Hair Studio | Hairdresser |
| The Hairy Chair | Hairdresser |
| Classics | Hairdresser |
| T&G Barbers | Hairdresser |
| Maritime Gents Barber & Grooming | Hairdresser |
| Fan Barber Shop | Hairdresser |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Get a website โ half your competitors don't have one
Only 14 out of 29 salons in Greenwich have a website. A basic site with your services, prices, address, and opening hours puts you ahead of 15 salons that don't exist online. Customers searching 'hair salon Greenwich' need to find you, not just walk past your shopfront.
Position near the foot traffic
With 237 food and drink venues nearby โ cafรฉs, pubs, restaurants โ Greenwich's streets stay busy. A salon near the main high street or close to the Cutty Sark area catches people already out and about, making walk-in trade far more likely than it would be on a quieter residential street.
Build a stylist portfolio on social media
In a market of 29 salons, customers compare before they commit. Ask each stylist to maintain a portfolio of their recent work on Instagram or TikTok โ tagged cuts, real clients, specific hair types. It takes ten minutes a week and gives potential customers a reason to choose your salon over the one next door.
Greenwich has 29 salons โ moderate saturation rather than a crowded mess. Established names like Headcase Barbershop, Kings of London, Daiva's Hair Studio, and The Hairy Chair have built reputations through years of serving the area, while independents and barbershops like Headlinerz and T&G compete for footfall trade. The clearest gap is digital: over half of salons lack any online presence, which means Google searches and Instagram discovery still heavily favour the 14 salons with websites. For new entrants, the path to standing out runs through online visibility, not through offering cheaper cuts. For established salons, updating your web presence is low-hanging fruit that too many are ignoring.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.