Beauty Salon Logo Ideas

Your logo is often the first thing a potential client sees, whether that’s on Instagram, a booking site, or a sign in a strip mall window. For a beauty salon, that first impression carries extra weight. People are trusting you with their appearance, and a logo that feels polished and intentional helps them feel confident before they even book.

A good beauty salon logo doesn’t need to do everything at once. It needs to communicate your vibe, whether that’s clinical and precise, warm and welcoming, or playful and a little quirky. Think about who your clients are and what feeling they want when they walk in.

The most useful logos in this space tend to use one clear image, a readable font, and a color palette you can actually live with for years. Trends fade. A geometric scissor mark or a simple floral silhouette ages much better than whatever color is fashionable this season.

Logos we love

The Line Peanut Beauty Logo is a minimal line-art mark that reads as beauty without spelling it out. It’s the kind of logo that works at any size, from a favicon to a storefront sign.

The Heart in Hands Logo leans into the service side of beauty. If your salon is known for being a welcoming, community-focused space, this one communicates that without being overly literal.

The Dapper Dog Bowtie Logo is a real option if you run a pet grooming salon or a boutique that blends pet services with beauty. The bowtie detail keeps it feeling refined rather than cartoonish.

The Detailed Rose Blossom Logo is a classic for a reason. A rose reads as beauty, femininity, and care all at once. This version has enough detail to feel premium but still reproduces cleanly in a single color.

The Line Comb Logo is as direct as it gets. A clean comb silhouette drawn in outline style, no fuss. If your salon specializes in hair above everything else, this tells clients exactly what you do.

The Hair Dryer Silhouette Logo works the same way. It’s recognizable, unambiguous, and gives you a lot of room to make it yours with color and font choices.

The Cat Barber Logo is for the salon owner who wants a personality-forward brand. A barbershop-style cat with grooming tools, this one is memorable and suits a salon that’s more neighborhood hangout than spa retreat.

The Bird with Paintbrush Logo is a good pick for nail studios, lash artists, or anyone doing artistic beauty work. The paintbrush element signals creativity and precision in a way that scissors or combs don’t.

The Abstract Swirl Hair Logo uses flowing lines to suggest movement and hair without depicting either literally. It’s the most versatile of the bunch. Works across beauty categories and reads well in both light and dark colorways.

Editing your logo in Figma

All of these logos come as SVG files, which means you can open them in Figma, Illustrator, or Inkscape and adjust everything without losing quality. Here are a few things worth doing before you finalize anything:

  • Swap the color first. Choose one brand color and apply it to the mark. See how it reads against white, then against a dark background. That test alone tells you a lot.
  • Pair it with one font. Resist using the font bundled in the file if it doesn’t match your brand. Ungroup the logo in Figma, delete the text layer, and add your own. Keep it to one typeface.
  • Test it small. Drop your logo into a 32x32 pixel frame in Figma. If the icon is unreadable, the mark is too complex for practical use. Simplify or use a cropped version of the icon for small applications.
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Ready to browse more options? Check out the full beauty logo collection for more SVG marks across styles, from minimal to detailed.

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