
A salon suite is a private, lockable room inside a multi-tenant facility where you operate your own licensed mini-establishment. Booth rental is a station on a shared open floor inside someone else’s salon. In Lewisville, the gap between those two options costs roughly $70 to $150 per week more for the suite, depending on the facility and size. That difference buys you privacy, full brand control, 24/7 access, and the ability to charge premium rates your shared-floor neighbors cannot justify.
Here is the short version for stylists who are price-checking right now: Lewisville booth rental runs $70-$250 per week depending on the salon. A private salon suite in the DFW area runs $160-$350 per week, with all-inclusive pricing that bundles utilities, WiFi, equipment, and 24/7 building access into one flat weekly payment. Venus Salon Suites on Highway 121 starts at $199 per week all-inclusive, with a promotional discount of $100 per week off for the first six weeks. Both models classify you as an independent contractor, not an employee, and both let you keep 100% of your revenue. Neither model requires a commission split. Texas treats them differently for licensing: booth rental requires only your cosmetology license, while a suite requires that license plus a separate TDLR mini-establishment license for the space itself.
Who should rent a booth: stylists still building their client base who want lower financial risk and do not mind a shared floor. Who should rent a suite: stylists with a steady book who want privacy, full control over their brand, and the scheduling freedom that comes with 24/7 building access. The sections below break down exactly how each model works and how to apply the 30% income rule to figure out which one makes financial sense at your career stage.
Booth rental puts you on a shared floor inside someone else’s salon. You rent a station that typically includes a styling chair, mirror, and access to shared shampoo bowls and a waiting area. Texas classifies booth renters as independent contractors, not employees. You set your own prices, keep your own client list, and pay the salon owner a flat weekly fee rather than a percentage of your revenue.
In DFW, booth rental runs $70-$250 per week. Introductory rates at some Lewisville salons start as low as $75 per week. Three payment structures exist: a flat weekly fee (the most common), a commission split where 40-60% of your revenue goes to the salon owner, and a hybrid that combines a lower flat fee with a smaller commission on high-earning weeks. The flat-fee model is what most stylists mean when they say “booth rental.”
The honest trade-off: booth rental is lower risk when you are still building your client base. The disadvantages are real. Many salon owners impose soft restrictions on which product lines you can use, what hours the building is open, and how the shared brand looks to walk-in clients. You cannot control the decor, the music, or the overall client experience. Your client sits 10 feet from three other stylists and all their conversations.
Walk-in traffic gets cited as a booth advantage, and it used to be more significant. In 2026, most clients book online before they walk through a door. Walk-in volume at independent salons has declined enough that it is not a reliable revenue stream to build a business plan around.
A private salon suite is your own space, separated from every other tenant by walls and a locking door. You run your own mini-salon inside a professionally managed facility. The suite comes equipped: styling chair, large mirror, shampoo bowl, hair dryer with dryer chair, towel cabinet, and storage. All-inclusive pricing bundles utilities, WiFi, 24/7 secure building access, kitchen, laundry facilities, and parking into one flat weekly payment. No add-on fees, no utility surprises.
What you bring: your tools, your products, your decor, your pricing, and your brand. You choose what hangs on the walls, what music plays, what products sit on the shelf, and what you charge for your services. From the moment a client walks into your suite to the moment they leave, the entire experience is yours to design.
Venus Salon Suites Lewisville is home to more than 40 licensed professionals, including hairstylists, barbers, nail techs, estheticians, lash artists, and massage therapists. That density generates referrals directly: a nail tech recommends a stylist, an esthetician sends a client down the hall for a lash fill. Isolation is a common concern about suite life; a facility with 40-plus active tenants addresses it directly.
On profitability: suite tenants keep 100% of revenue and can price the private experience at a premium that shared-floor stylists cannot justify. Suite companies often market claims like “double your income,” but those numbers are directional, not verified across all tenants. The 30% rule is the cleaner test: if your weekly gross covers rent at 30% or under, and the private environment supports higher service prices, a suite is the stronger model. If it does not, booth rental is the lower-risk starting point.
Venus Salon Suites starts at $199 per week, which works out to roughly $860 per month. The promotional rate of $100 per week off for the first six weeks brings that to $99 per week during the introductory period. The full DFW suite market ranges from $160-$350 per week ($690-$1,510 per month) depending on facility, suite size, and included amenities.
Quick Check: The 30% Rule
Keep rent at or under 30% of your weekly gross income. If the number is higher, the workspace costs more than it should at your current revenue level.
Apply this formula to booth rental too. A $150/week booth with separate equipment fees adds up faster than the base price suggests.
For booth rental in Lewisville, $70-$250 per week is the active market range. The national mid-range by specialty, according to 2026 industry data: hairstylists average $800-$1,600 per month; barbers $500-$1,200 per month; estheticians $600-$1,400 per month; nail technicians $400-$1,200 per month. A room share option, where two professionals split a suite on different days or hours, typically runs around $85 per week and serves as a practical middle step between booth rental and a full suite.
One detail that changes the comparison: most DFW booth rentals do not include all equipment. If you are renting a station that requires you to pay separately for shampoo bowl access, laundry, WiFi, or supplies, the real cost of booth rental moves up. All-inclusive suite pricing removes that uncertainty.
The 30% income rule is the standard benchmark used across the beauty industry: keep rent at or under 30% of your weekly income. If you gross $800 per week, $199 is 24.9% of that. If you gross $500 per week, $199 is 39.8%, which is too high. Apply the same formula to booth rental. A $150 per week booth plus separate equipment fees adds up faster than the sticker price suggests.
For current suite pricing and available suites at Venus Salon Suites in Lewisville, the suite availability and pricing page lists current openings and promotional rates.
| Factor | Booth Rental | Private Salon Suite |
|---|---|---|
| Typical weekly cost (DFW) | $70-$250/week | $160-$350/week |
| Privacy | Shared open floor | Private, lockable room |
| Branding control | Limited (shared salon brand) | Complete (your name, decor, pricing) |
| Schedule flexibility | Independent, but constrained by salon hours | Independent + 24/7 building access |
| Revenue retention | 100% (standard flat-fee model) | 100% |
| Equipment included | Shared shampoo bowls, shared tools | Suite-specific chair, bowl, storage |
| Licensing (Texas) | Cosmetology license only | Cosmetology license + TDLR mini-establishment |
| Client experience | Open floor, shared space | Private one-on-one from entry to exit |
| Walk-in traffic | Possible (salon-dependent) | Requires Google Business Profile and organic search |
The typical progression in the beauty industry runs: commission salon, then booth rental, then private suite. Each stage has a different risk profile and a different financial floor. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, nearly 48% of hairdressers, hairstylists, and cosmetologists are self-employed, which means most working stylists are already operating under one of these two independent models.
Most Stylists Are Already Running Their Own Business
48%
of hairdressers, hairstylists, and cosmetologists in the U.S. are self-employed, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The majority of working stylists are already operating as independent contractors. The question is not whether to go independent, it is which workspace model supports where you are in your career.
Which One Fits Where You Are Right Now?
Choose booth rental if:
Choose a private suite if:
Not quite ready for a full suite? A room share at around $85/week lets two professionals split a suite on alternating days, keeping costs lower while each builds toward full booking.
Booth rental makes sense if you are at any of these points in your career:
A private salon suite makes sense when:
The room share option at approximately $85 per week is a legitimate bridge for stylists who are close but not quite ready to carry a full suite. Two professionals sharing a suite on alternating days or separate hours keeps costs lower while each builds toward full booking. Room share works best for professionals with complementary, non-competing services, such as a hairstylist paired with a nail technician.
A note on commission versus booth rental: commission offers newer stylists built-in clients, salon management, and a guaranteed income floor. Once your book is established and you are paying 40-50% of your revenue to a salon owner through a commission split, booth rental or a suite becomes the financially smarter move.
Both booth rental and salon suite rental classify you as an independent contractor, not an employee. That means self-employment taxes, quarterly estimated tax payments, and professional liability insurance. These apply regardless of which workspace you choose.
Texas Licensing: Quick Reference
| Workspace | What You Need |
|---|---|
| Booth Rental | Cosmetology or specialty license only. Texas removed the separate booth rental permit. |
| Salon Suite | Cosmetology or specialty license plus a TDLR mini-establishment license for the suite itself. Budget a few weeks for the application before you can legally operate. |
Current requirements and forms: tdlr.texas.gov
The licensing requirements differ. For booth rental in Texas, your current cosmetology license (or applicable specialty license for barbers, estheticians, nail techs, or massage therapists) is all you need. Texas recently eliminated the separate booth rental permit that used to be required, simplifying the process.
For a salon suite in Texas, you need two licenses: your cosmetology or specialty license and a TDLR mini-establishment license for the suite itself. The suite must be physically enclosed and licensed as its own establishment, separate from the gallery (the overall suite facility). Venus Salon Suites maintains a roster of all tenant license numbers for Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation inspections, which is standard practice for suite gallery operators.
If you are moving from booth rental to a suite for the first time, budget a few weeks for the mini-establishment license application before you can legally operate. Current requirements and application forms are available directly from Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (tdlr.texas.gov). No third-party article will be more current than TDLR’s own site on this.
Not all suite facilities in the DFW area offer the same terms or the same experience. Before you sign anything, check for these:
Venus Salon Suites Lewisville: New Tenant Offer
All-inclusive private suites starting at $199/week. New tenants receive $100/week off for the first 6 weeks, bringing the introductory rate to $99/week while you build your book.
Venus Salon Suites on Highway 121 at 4770 State Hwy 121 #180, Lewisville, TX 75056 checks each of these. You can review suite availability and pricing online, including the current new tenant promotional rate. If you want to see the space before committing, tours are available by appointment at (214) 469-1615.
If you are ready to walk through a suite, schedule a tour directly with the team. Seeing the actual room, the amenities, and the community on a normal working day tells you more than any comparison article can.
Booth rental gives you a station on a shared open floor inside someone else’s salon. A salon suite gives you a private, lockable room where you operate your own licensed mini-establishment. In Texas, a salon suite requires a TDLR mini-establishment license in addition to your cosmetology license; booth rental does not. Both models classify the renter as an independent contractor, not an employee.
The main disadvantages are limited privacy, limited branding control, and soft restrictions many salon owners impose on product lines, schedules, and the shared client experience. You operate under the salon’s brand, not your own. Walk-in traffic has declined with digital booking, reducing one of the historical advantages of a shared floor. These are not fatal disadvantages, but they matter more as your business grows and your clients expect a consistent, private experience.
In Lewisville and the DFW area, salon suite rental runs $160-$350 per week, which translates to roughly $690-$1,510 per month. Venus Salon Suites Lewisville starts at $199 per week ($860 per month at base rate). A promotional rate of $100 per week off for the first six weeks is currently available for new tenants. Pricing changes over time, so check the current suite listings for the most accurate figures.
Profitability depends on your existing client base and your service pricing. Suite tenants keep 100% of their revenue and can charge higher rates because the private experience justifies a premium. Suite companies often claim tenants double their income; that is directional, not independently verified across all tenants or markets. The practical question is simpler: do you have enough clients to cover rent at 30% of weekly income, and can the private experience support higher service prices? If both answers are yes, a suite is likely more profitable than commission or booth rental.
In Lewisville and DFW, booth rental runs $70-$250 per week depending on the salon, its location, and what is included. Nationally, 2026 industry data shows mid-range booth rental by specialty: hairstylists average $800-$1,600 per month; barbers $500-$1,200 per month; estheticians $600-$1,400 per month; nail technicians $400-$1,200 per month.
Both payment structures exist. Many Texas salons charge weekly, particularly for booth renters. Some offer a monthly rate, which often includes a small discount for paying in advance. Suite facilities in Lewisville typically quote weekly rates. One practical note: a month works out to approximately 4.3 weeks, not 4, so multiply the weekly rate by 4.3 when comparing a weekly quote against a monthly one.
Pricing data current as of April 2026. Venus Salon Suites promotional rates are subject to change. Check venussalonsuites.com/suites/ for current availability and pricing.