





• Hair salons
• Beauty studios
• Massage and wellness clinics
• Nail salons
• Personal service operators
• Multi-site salon groups
• Wellness chains
• Beauty franchises
• Health service operators
• Personal care portfolios

• Equipment and lighting usage
• Seasonal HVAC changes
• Limited time to compare plans
• Contract complexity
• Rising operational costs
• Multi-site load management
• Contract alignment
• HVAC and equipment peaks
• Limited usage visibility
• Procurement challenges
Energy is mainly used for lighting, heating, cooling and equipment such as hair dryers, wash stations, treatment machines and hot water systems. These items often run for long hours, which increases overall usage.
Seasonal heating and cooling have a major impact. Salons and wellness studios use more air conditioning in summer and more heating in winter, which increases electricity usage and contributes to higher bills.
Small studios can reduce costs by comparing plans regularly, managing equipment usage, switching off appliances between clients, upgrading lighting, reviewing contract terms and adjusting HVAC settings for efficiency.
Large operators experience higher usage due to extended opening hours, multiple treatment rooms, hot water demand and HVAC systems covering larger spaces. Running several high-load appliances at once can also increase demand charges.
They can align contract end dates, benchmark usage by site, upgrade older equipment, adopt efficient lighting and manage HVAC settings. Using energy insights to identify peak periods helps reduce both consumption and operating costs.
