How Do I Budget a Nail Salon Buildout?
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Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Leases, TI, NNN & buildouts — negotiated in your favor</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>
How Do I Budget a Nail Salon Buildout?
Direct Answer
A nail salon is a plumbing and ventilation problem disguised as a beauty business, and that's exactly where the budget blows up. A standard nail salon buildout runs $75–$150 per square foot for a basic fit-out and $150–$250 per square foot for a high-end space, so a typical 1,000–1,500 sq ft salon lands at $90,000–$300,000 all-in.
The two line items that wreck first-timers are manicure/pedicure plumbing (every pedicure chair needs dedicated hot/cold supply and drainage — budget $1,500–$3,500 per chair just for rough-in) and source-capture ventilation to pull acetone, MMA/EMA monomer, and acrylic dust away from technicians.
The single biggest money move: make the landlord deliver plumbing and HVAC capacity, or give you a fat TI allowance to install it, because retrofitting drain lines and a dedicated exhaust system into a shell that wasn't designed for it can add $30,000–$80,000. Negotiate a tenant improvement allowance of $25–$60 per square foot and free rent during construction, get the exhaust and make-up air designed by a mechanical engineer before you sign, and confirm your state cosmetology board's specs (sink count, ventilation, square feet per station) so you don't build it twice.
Used pedicure chairs at $800–$2,000 versus new at $2,500–$6,000 are the easiest place to save real cash without customers noticing.
The Real Cost Breakdown
Where the money actually goes on a 1,200 sq ft salon:
- Plumbing rough-in: $1,500–$3,500 per pedicure station; $600–$1,200 per manicure sink. A 6-chair pedicure row alone can hit $15,000–$20,000.
- HVAC + source-capture ventilation: $12,000–$35,000. Source capture at each station plus general exhaust and make-up air is non-negotiable for technician health and code.
- Electrical: $8,000–$20,000 for stations, UV/LED lamps, water heaters, and lighting.
- Flooring (slip-resistant, water-rated): $5,000–$15,000.
- Pedicure chairs: $2,500–$6,000 new, $800–$2,000 used.
- Manicure tables/stations: $300–$1,200 each.
- Reception, retail, millwork: $8,000–$25,000.
- Permits, design, contingency: 15–25% of hard costs — always.
Ventilation — The Code Item That Saves Lawsuits
OSHA and most cosmetology boards now demand serious air handling because acrylic monomer vapor and acetone are respiratory and exposure hazards. Build it right or get cited:
- Source-capture ventilation at each nail station pulls vapor at the source — far more effective than a ceiling fan and increasingly required by code.
- Local exhaust must vent to the exterior, not recirculate, and you need balanced make-up air so the system actually moves air instead of starving itself.
- Spec a system that delivers strong air changes per hour; a mechanical engineer should size it. Retrofitting later costs 2–3x doing it during the buildout.
Cutting this corner risks board citations, OSHA fines, and technician turnover — all more expensive than the system.
Used vs New — Where To Actually Save
Spend on the invisible infrastructure, save on the furniture:
- Buy used pedicure chairs in good condition ($800–$2,000) and refurbish — customers don't track chair model years.
- Buy new on anything with a motor or pipe you can't easily service, and on UV/LED lamps for warranty.
- Phase the retail and reception millwork — open with functional, upgrade with cash flow.
- Never cheap out on plumbing, exhaust, or electrical — these are buried in walls and ruinous to redo.
How Not To Get Screwed By The Landlord
Beauty-use tenants get squeezed because plumbing and venting are expensive to deliver:
- The "as-is" shell trap. A landlord delivers a dry shell with no plumbing stub-outs or rooftop exhaust capacity, then expects you to eat a $40,000+ retrofit. Negotiate a written base-building delivery condition specifying water, sewer, gas, electrical capacity, and a roof penetration path for exhaust.
- TI allowance that's really a loan. Some landlords "give" you TI then amortize it back into rent at 8–10% interest. Get the allowance as a true contribution or a free-rent period, not financed rent.
- The restoration clause. Salon buildouts are heavily customized; a clause forcing you to remove plumbing and venting and restore base building at lease-end can cost $15,000–$40,000. Strike it or cap it.
- Use and exclusivity gaps. Confirm the lease permits a nail salon (some prohibit "odor-producing" or chemical uses) and negotiate co-tenancy/exclusivity so the landlord can't lease the next unit to a competing salon.
- Percentage-rent and CAM surprises. Watch for CAM (common area maintenance) that balloons and percentage-rent clauses. Cap CAM increases at 3–5% annually and audit the reconciliation.
A Quick Build Framework
- Pull your state cosmetology board specs first — sink counts, square feet per station, ventilation rules drive the whole design.
- Get a mechanical engineer to size source-capture exhaust and make-up air before signing.
- Make the landlord deliver plumbing/HVAC capacity or fund it via real TI.
- Bid three GCs on a fixed-price set with a unit-price schedule.
- Save on used furniture, never on buried infrastructure.
FAQ
How much does it cost to build out a nail salon? A basic fit-out runs $75–$150 per square foot and a high-end space $150–$250 per square foot, putting a typical 1,000–1,500 sq ft salon at $90,000–$300,000 all-in. Plumbing rough-in ($1,500–$3,500 per pedicure chair) and source-capture ventilation ($12,000–$35,000) are the line items that most often blow the budget.
Why is the plumbing so expensive in a nail salon? Every pedicure station needs dedicated hot and cold supply plus drainage, and many jurisdictions require specific drain and backflow configurations. A six-chair pedicure row can carry $15,000–$20,000 in rough-in alone, and retrofitting drain lines into a shell never designed for them is the single most common cost overrun.
What ventilation does a nail salon need? OSHA guidance and most cosmetology boards push source-capture ventilation at each station that exhausts acetone and acrylic monomer vapor to the exterior, paired with balanced make-up air. Have a mechanical engineer size it; building it during the fit-out costs 2–3x less than retrofitting after a citation.
Can I save money buying used equipment? Yes — used pedicure chairs in good condition run $800–$2,000 versus $2,500–$6,000 new, and customers rarely notice. Save on furniture and reception millwork, but never cut corners on plumbing, exhaust, or electrical, which are buried in walls and brutally expensive to redo.
Should the landlord pay for the buildout? Push hard for it. Negotiate a tenant improvement allowance of $25–$60 per square foot plus free rent during construction, and get a written base-building delivery condition covering water, sewer, gas, electrical, and a roof exhaust path.
Otherwise an "as-is" shell can saddle you with a $40,000+ infrastructure retrofit.
Sources
- U.S. OSHA — Nail Salon health hazards, ventilation, and chemical exposure guidance.
- U.S. EPA — Protecting the Health of Nail Salon Workers (ventilation best practices).
- RSMeans (Gordian) — commercial tenant build-out unit cost data.
- JLL — Retail Tenant Improvement and fit-out cost guides.
- CBRE — Retail construction cost and TI allowance market reports.
- Professional Beauty Association (PBA) — salon design and compliance resources.
- NAILS Magazine — salon buildout and equipment cost benchmarks.
- BOMA International — base-building delivery and CAM reconciliation standards.
