What is the complete software stack for a med spa in 2027?
Direct Answer
The complete 2027 software stack for a med spa is built around four hubs: a specialized booking-and-EMR platform (Boulevard or Zenoti) as the operating core, an integrated payments and membership engine, a marketing-and-reputation layer (Podium or Birdeye), and a lightweight CRM-and-analytics layer that ties revenue to provider and service line.
A med spa is half medical practice, half luxury retail, so the stack has to handle clinical charting and consent forms on one side and memberships, packages, and rebooking on the other. The platforms that win in 2027 — Boulevard (~$295+/month base plus per-provider) and Zenoti (custom, typically $300–$600+/month for a small location) — bundle scheduling, charting, payments, and memberships so you are not stitching five vendors together.
The single biggest mistake is running a generic salon-booking tool that cannot handle medical charting, injectable inventory, and membership recurring billing, which forces double entry and leaks both compliance and revenue.
TL;DR
A 2027 med spa runs on Boulevard or Zenoti as the core, Stripe or Square payments (often embedded in the core), Aesthetic Record or the core's charting for clinical notes and consents, Podium or Birdeye for reviews and texting, HubSpot for nurture, and QuickBooks Online for accounting.
Budget $600–$1,500/month for a single-location stack. Memberships and rebooking are the revenue engine, so prioritize tools that make recurring billing and pre-booking effortless.
Why a Med Spa Stack Is Different
A med spa straddles two worlds. It must satisfy medical-record and consent requirements like a clinic — charting injectable lot numbers, before-and-after photos, and signed consents — while running a membership, package, and retail motion like a luxury salon. Generic booking tools handle the salon half and fail the medical half; generic EMRs handle the medical half and ignore memberships and rebooking.
The economics center on recurring memberships and pre-booked packages, not walk-in volume. A patient on a monthly membership who pre-books their next treatment is worth multiples of a one-time visitor. So the stack is judged on how well it drives rebooking rate, membership penetration, and package redemption — not just whether it can take an appointment.
The Core Stack
- Operating core — Boulevard or Zenoti. Scheduling, charting, memberships, payments, and inventory in one system. Boulevard suits boutique and mid-size med spas; Zenoti scales to multi-location groups.
- Payments — embedded (Boulevard Payments / Zenoti Pay) or Stripe / Square. Card-present and card-on-file for memberships; tokenized cards make recurring billing and no-show fees automatic.
- Clinical charting — built-in or Aesthetic Record. Consents, photos, treatment notes, and injectable tracking. Aesthetic Record is a common specialized add-on where the core's charting is thin.
- Reputation and messaging — Podium or Birdeye. Two-way texting, review generation, and webchat — the dominant patient-acquisition and rebooking channel in 2027.
- CRM and nurture — HubSpot. Lead capture from the website, consultation follow-up, and lapsed-patient win-back sequences.
- Accounting — QuickBooks Online, synced from the core for revenue and Gusto for payroll.
Real Operators
A single-location injectables-and-laser med spa doing $1.8M/year typically runs Boulevard as the core with Boulevard Payments, Podium for texting and reviews, and QuickBooks Online. They live on membership penetration and rebooking rate, both surfaced in Boulevard, and use HubSpot only lightly for consultation follow-up.
A three-location group doing $7M tends to move to Zenoti for multi-site reporting, centralized inventory, and consolidated memberships, adding Birdeye for reputation at scale and a tighter HubSpot instance for cross-location nurture. The deciding factor is almost always multi-location reporting and inventory — the point where a boutique tool stops scaling.
Integration
The integration that matters most is core-to-payments-to-accounting. When Boulevard or Zenoti owns scheduling, charting, payments, and memberships natively, you avoid the double-entry that plagues stitched stacks. The remaining integrations to verify:
- Core → QuickBooks for daily revenue sync.
- Core → Podium/Birdeye so review requests fire automatically after a completed visit.
- Website → HubSpot → Core so a web lead becomes a tracked consultation and then a booked appointment without manual re-keying.
Failure Modes
- Generic salon software that cannot chart medical procedures or track injectable lots, forcing a parallel paper or second system.
- Stitched payments that break membership recurring billing and create reconciliation headaches.
- No reputation automation, leaving reviews — the top acquisition channel — to chance.
- Ignoring rebooking, treating the system as a calendar instead of a revenue engine.
- No card-on-file, which makes no-show fees and membership billing manual and leaky.
Budget
- Boutique single location: $600–$1,000/month — Boulevard (~$295+ base plus per-provider), Podium (~$300+), QuickBooks (~$90), HubSpot Starter (~$20–$50).
- Mid-size / multi-location: $1,200–$2,500+/month — Zenoti core, Birdeye, fuller HubSpot, plus per-location fees.
- One-time: data migration, photo/consent setup, and staff training — budget a few thousand dollars.
30-60-90 Day Rollout
- Days 1–30: Implement Boulevard or Zenoti; migrate patient records, consents, and memberships; enable card-on-file.
- Days 31–60: Turn on Podium/Birdeye review automation and HubSpot consultation follow-up; train staff on rebooking at checkout.
- Days 61–90: Sync QuickBooks, build the revenue-by-provider and membership-penetration reports, and lock the rebooking-rate target into daily operations.
FAQ
Boulevard or Zenoti for a med spa? Boulevard for boutique and mid-size single locations that value design and ease; Zenoti for multi-location groups needing centralized inventory and reporting.
Do I need a separate EMR like Aesthetic Record? Only if your core's charting is too thin for your procedures. Many med spas run charting inside Boulevard or Zenoti and skip a separate EMR.
What drives the most revenue in the stack? Memberships and rebooking. Prioritize tools that make recurring billing, card-on-file, and pre-booking at checkout effortless.
How important is texting and reviews? Critical. Podium or Birdeye two-way texting and review generation is the dominant 2027 acquisition and rebooking channel for med spas.
What does a single-location stack cost? Roughly $600–$1,500/month depending on add-ons, plus one-time migration and training.
Sources
- Boulevard 2027 med spa platform and payments pricing documentation
- Zenoti multi-location spa and med spa platform documentation
- Aesthetic Record EMR and charting product documentation
- Podium and Birdeye reputation and messaging platform pricing, 2026–2027
- American Med Spa Association (AmSpa) 2026 state-of-the-industry operational report
- QuickBooks Online and Gusto small-business integration documentation
Med spa software stack review / reviews / rating / review 2027 / review of med spa tech stacks