Best Salon POS Software for Small & Growing Salons: Features, Pricing & Benefits Compared
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2026/04/07
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Picking a POS for your salon sounds simple until you actually try.
You think you are buying a checkout screen. Then you realize you are also choosing your booking system, your client database, your staff payroll habits, your reports, your marketing automations, and the thing that will break at 6:03 PM on a Friday when someone wants to split-pay with a gift card.
In this guide, I will walk through the best salon POS software options for small and growing salons, what they are good at, what to watch out for, and how pricing usually works. Not every tool is perfect. Some are “great but expensive”. Some are “cheap but clunky”. The goal is to pick the one that fits how your salon actually runs.
What Salon POS Should Include (or it is not really a salon POS)
A real salon POS setup is more than taking card payments. At a minimum, most salons want:
If a POS does payments really well, but makes scheduling painful. You will feel it every day.
Quick comparison (who each one is best for)
Here is the “if you only read one section” list.
Now let’s go one by one.
1. Point of Sale GCC
Point of Sale GCC is popular because it tries to be the all-in-one platform at a price that still feels doable for smaller businesses. Scheduling, POS, marketing, forms, and membership tools. It is a lot.
Best for: small to mid-sized salons that want one system for everything
Standout features:
Pricing: usually a monthly subscription that scales with the number of staff and features. Payment processing fees apply if you use their payments.
The catch: because Point of Sale GCC does so much, some screens can feel busy. Not hard, just… a little “everything everywhere”. Training your team matters.
2. Square (Square POS + Square Appointments)
Square is often the first POS people try because it is easy to start. You can be up and running quickly, take payments, sell retail, and layer in appointments.
Best for: solo stylists, small salons, budget-conscious teams who want something reliable
Standout features:
Pricing: typically a monthly software fee for appointments (or free tiers in some regions) plus payment processing fees per transaction. Hardware is extra.
The catch: Square can feel like a POS first and a salon system second. It works, but if you want advanced salon workflows (packages, memberships, super detailed staff commission rules, deep client history), you may hit limits and start stacking add-ons.
3. Clover (with a salon POS app)
Clover is more of a hardware plus payments ecosystem, and then you choose a salon scheduling app from their app market to complete the setup.
Best for: salons that want a countertop POS device experience and are okay with choosing the software layer
Standout features:
Pricing: hardware + payment processing + monthly software (Clover plan + the salon app you choose).
The catch: it can become a “Frankenstack” if you are not careful. Make sure the scheduling app and POS workflow feel seamless together. Test refunds, gift cards, packages, tips. The boring stuff.
How to choose (the questions that save you later)
Before you pick anything, answer these. Literally write them down.
The real benefits (what changes after a good POS)
When the POS is right, you notice it in small ways.
Fewer checkout mistakes. More rebooked appointments. Cleaner staff payouts. Less time hunting for client notes. More retail add-ons because inventory is not a mystery. And the front desk no longer feels like crisis management.
That is the point.
If you want the safest starting picks: Square for simple and fast, Point of Sale GCC for all-in-one value, and Clover for serious scale. Then demo two—run real-world scenarios, not just the happy path, but the frustrating ones too.