How one overlooked client segment can transform your booking calendar
Look at your client list right now. What percentage is male? For most sugaring specialists, the answer is under 10%. Yet men's hair removal is one of the fastest-growing segments in professional beauty — and the gap between demand and supply has never been wider. That gap isn't a problem. It's an opportunity.
The market reality
Male clients are already looking for hair removal solutions. They're just not finding their way into sugaring salons — because most sugaring salons haven't invited them in.
The demand is real and growing:
- Body hair removal for men has shifted from niche to mainstream in the past decade
- Chest, back, and shoulder appointments are growing year on year across markets
- Male clients who discover professional sugaring tend to become consistent, loyal bookings
The question isn't whether men want this service. It's whether you're positioned to offer it. |
Why sugaring suits male clients better than wax
This is where the science matters — and where sugaring has a clear advantage. Male skin is structurally different from female skin:
- It's thicker — typically with 25% greater collagen density
- It produces more sebum, leading to oilier texture and larger pores
- It's significantly more prone to folliculitis (ingrown hairs) in areas like the back and chest
- It experiences more post-treatment irritation with resin-based waxes
These characteristics make male clients harder to treat with wax — and excellent candidates for sugaring.
Because sugaring paste contains no resins, it doesn't bond to the skin surface. It removes hair from the root without the micro-tearing that traditional waxing causes. For thicker, more reactive male skin, this distinction matters.
Clients who've had poor experiences with wax — inflammation, persistent ingrowns, irritation — often respond remarkably well to their first sugaring treatment. When you use a paste formulated with prebiotic ingredients, you're also actively supporting the skin microbiome during treatment, which is particularly relevant for male clients whose barrier function can be compromised by frequent shaving.
The business case, in plain terms
Male clients bring a booking pattern that works in a specialist's favour:
- Sessions are longer — a back and shoulders treatment runs 60–90 minutes vs 30–45 for a half-leg
- Price sensitivity is lower — men have often paid more for inferior wax treatments and know it
- Referrals skew male — men who find a service they trust refer other men, who are equally underserved
- Seasonality is lower — male grooming appointments are more evenly distributed across the year
One male client booking a back treatment every 6 weeks generates more annual revenue than two female clients booking a half-leg on the same schedule. The maths are straightforward.
The conversation most specialists avoid — and how to change it
Many specialists feel uncertain about how to introduce men's services, or how to communicate about the treatments.
Some practical starting points:
- Lead with results, not process. Male clients typically care about outcome: no ingrowns, lasting smoothness, no irritation. Save the detailed science for returning clients who ask.
- Treat it as unremarkable. Specialists who approach men's services matter-of-factly — as a professional service like any other — tend to attract clients who feel the same way.
- Price with confidence. Research what equivalent wax treatments cost in your market, and price at or above that level. Sugaring is demonstrably gentler and longer-lasting — the price should reflect it.
- Brief existing clients. Word of mouth within households and relationships is one of the most effective referral channels for men's services. Your female clients know men who need this.
Where to start
You don't need to overhaul your business to add men's services. Start with one clear step:
- Add it to your booking menu explicitly — if it's not listed, male clients assume you don't offer it
- Create one piece of content showing a male client result — our top Instagram post last month was men's back hair removal, outperforming every other post that week
- Choose one treatment to master first — back, or chest and stomach — get confident, then expand
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Over to you
Men's sugaring isn't a trend waiting to happen. It's already happening — in the salons of specialists who decided to open the door. Are male clients currently part of your service menu? If yes — what's worked? If not — what's holding you back?
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