Website Accessibility for Salons: Quick Fixes That Help Every Client (and Help SEO)

Blog home

Your salon’s digital presence should feel like walking into your studio on a good hair day, easy, welcoming, and zero stress. But if someone can’t read your service menu, tap your booking button, or understand your hours, they’re not “being picky.” They’re being blocked.

Website accessibility for salons is basically removing little roadblocks so more people can use your site, including clients with low vision, hearing loss, mobility limits, ADHD, dyslexia, migraines from bright contrast, or just a cracked phone screen in the Target parking lot.

The best part is that many accessibility fixes also make your site easier for Google to understand, boosting Search Engine Optimization. Improving accessibility is a key part of Local SEO and Search Engine Optimization to help neighbors find your studio. So yes, you can do the right thing and get more bookings. Love that for us.

A senior woman gets a relaxing hair wash at a vibrant, modern salon setting.Photo by Artem Podrez

What salon website accessibility, user experience, and user-friendly design really mean (in real life)

Accessibility isn’t about making your website “plain” or boring. It’s about making it usable for more humans, in more situations, with less frustration. Think of it like a salon ramp or wider doorway. It doesn’t change your talent, it just helps people actually get in.

On a website, the most common issues for salon clients show up in a few hot spots:

Service Menu: tiny fonts, light text on light backgrounds, or prices baked into images.
Online Booking System: buttons that don’t look like buttons, forms that aren’t labeled, or a calendar that’s impossible to tap on mobile.
Contact info: missing hours, vague location info, or an address you can’t copy and paste.

If you want a solid baseline for what “accessible design” includes, the W3C accessibility design tips break it down in a way that doesn’t make your brain melt.

Here’s the plain-English version: your site should work with a keyboard (not just a mouse), make sense when read aloud by a screen reader, stay readable when someone zooms in, and be mobile responsive on phones and tablets. Your content should also be clear without relying on color alone (because “tap the pink button” doesn’t help if someone can’t see the pink button).

Accessibility also includes cognitive ease. If your site reads like a perfume ad, people can’t quickly find what they need, which hurts search engine optimization. And salon clients are usually using the Online Booking System between work calls, school pickup, and a drive-thru line, all while trying to fulfill their search intent. Give them a break with clear content that boosts search engine optimization.

Quick accessibility fixes you can do today (no tech spiral required)

You don’t have to rebuild your whole site to improve accessibility. Start with the changes that make your site mobile-friendly and remove friction fast, especially on mobile. If you’re on Showit (hi, same), these are very doable.

Here are the quick wins that make the biggest difference:

  • Increase font size (and line spacing): Body text should be comfy at a glance. If someone has to pinch-zoom just to read your policies, they’re gone. Aim for readable paragraphs, not cute-but-microscopic captions.
  • Fix color contrast: Cream text on a blush background looks pretty, until it disappears. Darken the text, lighten the background, or both. Your brand can still be soft and luxe, it just needs to be legible.
  • Stop putting important text inside images: Service names, pricing ranges, and “Book Now” should be real text when possible. Screen readers can’t “see” text that’s baked into a graphic, and Google doesn’t love it either for Search Engine Optimization.
  • Use clear Header Tags: Headings aren’t just for looks. They help screen readers and skimmers understand the page while aiding Technical SEO. Use a clean structure for sections like Services, Pricing, Policies, and Location, and maintain a clean URL Structure to help both users and search engines.
  • Make links and buttons obvious: If your booking link is a tiny word in the middle of a paragraph, people will miss it. Use buttons that look clickable with enough padding so they’re easy to tap with a thumb, and incorporate internal linking for better navigation.
  • Add Image Alt Text to images that matter: Image Alt Text is a short description for screen readers. For decorative images, you can keep it minimal. For images that show work or info, describe what’s there (example: “blonde balayage on shoulder-length hair”). Optimizing images with proper Image Alt Text also helps with Page Speed.

Want a bigger punch list to work from? The Yoast accessibility checklist is a handy guide for catching the common stuff that slips through.

One more Showit-specific note: watch for “design-first” choices that hurt function, like text overlapping on mobile, hidden buttons, or click targets that are too small. If your thumb can’t tap it, your client can’t book it.

Why accessibility helps salon Search Engine Optimization (and gets more bookings)

Accessibility and Search Engine Optimization overlap because both are trying to answer the same question: “Can people and machines understand this website?”

When your site uses real text, clear headings, and descriptive links, search engines can read it better. When your pages load faster and feel easier to use, people stick around longer. And when clients can actually complete your booking flow, they book. Revolutionary concept.

Here’s what often improves when you focus on accessibility:

Better page clarity: Clear headings and scannable sections help Google understand what the page is about (and help a human find your extension pricing in five seconds). This boosts Local SEO and positions your salon higher in Local Search Results.


More content Google can index: If your service list is one big image, you’re hiding your keywords from search engines. Real text lets Keyword Research shine, so your terms rank. Pair this with NAP (Name, Address, Phone number) Consistency across your Google Business Profile and Local Directories to build Brand Authority.


Stronger mobile experience: Accessibility pushes you toward bigger tap targets, readable fonts, and fewer “oops” clicks. Google cares a lot about mobile usability, which ties directly into Local SEO performance and your Google Business Profile visibility.


Lower bounce rate energy: If someone lands on your site and can’t read it or navigate it, they leave fast. That’s not a vibe. An accessible site keeps visitors engaged, leading to more Customer Reviews that provide Social Proof and enhance Local Search Results.

Accessibility can protect your business

There’s also a business-protection angle here. Accessibility ties into guidelines like WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines), which you’ll see referenced in conversations about ADA and websites. If you want a clear explanation of how WCAG connects to Search Engine Optimization, Moz’s WCAG and SEO overview lays out why both marketers and site owners should pay attention. It shows how an accessible site supports your Google Business Profile, gathers more Customer Reviews, and strengthens Local SEO.

Bottom line: salon website accessibility isn’t just “nice.” It’s practical. It reduces friction, expands your audience, and makes your site easier to understand for both clients and search engines. Combine it with Customer Reviews for Social Proof, optimize your Google Business Profile, and watch Local SEO drive more local clients through Local Search Results.

If your goal is more bookings (and fewer DMs that say “your link isn’t working”), this work pays off. Elements like Content Marketing, Meta Descriptions, and Long-tail Keywords round out a comprehensive Search Engine Optimization strategy, while accessibility ensures it all converts.

A salon website should feel like a good consultation: clear, supportive, and confidence-boosting. Tighten up your font sizes, contrast, headings, and buttons, and you’ll help more clients book without needing a second brain.

If you want this handled quickly, without losing your weekend to troubleshooting mobile layouts, that’s exactly what my Website In A Day service is for. Your site can look high-end and work for real people at the same time. Accessible can still be gorgeous.

Apply to work with me

My Website in a Day service is perfect for beauty pros who need a polished, professional online presence—like, yesterday. We’ll take one of my custom-designed Showit templates and tailor it to your brand, style, and services in just one day. You’ll walk away with a site that books clients, builds trust, and looks like a million bucks (without taking forever to launch).

One day. One dreamy website.

Get a rock star website in 1 day!