SchedulingKit
Salones de Unas Pagos

Acepte Depositos y Pagos para Salones de Unas en Linea

Los salones de uñas procesan de 30 a 50 transacciones de bajo costo por día en lo que tradicionalmente ha sido un negocio intensivo en efectivo, creando preocupaciones de seguridad, tiempos de pago lentos y políticas de cancelación difíciles de hacer cumplir. SchedulingKit permite el pago sin contacto en la silla a través de un código QR, requiere pequeños depósitos para juegos de acrílico y gel de 2 horas, y dirige las propinas digitales directamente al técnico asignado, modernizando el flujo de pago sin ralentizar una operación de alto volumen.

Gratis para siempre. Sin tarjeta de crédito. Con tecnología de Stripe.

El cobro de pagos en línea para salones de unas significa que los clientes pagan un depósito o el precio total del servicio al reservar — no después de la cita. SchedulingKit permite a los negocios de salones de unas aceptar pagos seguros al momento de la reserva en 2026. Ver todo Pagos.

62%
fewer no-shows for nail appointments when deposits are required (appointment management studies)
$800
average monthly revenue recovered per nail technician with deposit policies (service business benchmarks)
45 sec
average checkout time with contactless payment vs. 3+ minutes at the register (payment processing data)
Problemas comunes

Desafíos de pago que enfrentan Salones de Unas

Estas fugas de ingresos cuestan miles a las empresas de salones de unas cada año

Las citas para juegos de acrílico y gel tardan más de 2 horas, y una falta de asistencia significa cero ingresos para ese bloque

Los salones con mucho tráfico de clientes que llegan sin cita pierden la pista de quién pagó y quién no durante las ajetreadas horas pico del sábado

Las reservas grupales para fiestas de bodas o cumpleaños requieren recoger el pago de varias personas

El pago en efectivo crea preocupaciones de seguridad y hace que la conciliación diaria sea tediosa

Funciones de pago

Funciones de pago para Salones de Unas

Herramientas diseñadas específicamente para cómo salones de unas cobran y gestionan pagos

1

Recolección de Depósitos por Servicio

Requiera un depósito para servicios que consumen mucho tiempo, como juegos completos de acrílico, extensiones de gel y arte de uñas, para protegerse contra las faltas de asistencia.

2

Pagos para Reservas Grupales

Permita que las fiestas de bodas y grupos reserven juntos, con cada persona pagando su propio depósito, eliminando la molestia de que una persona recoja el pago de todos.

3

Ventas de Paquetes de Servicio

Venda paquetes de manicura y pedicura (por ejemplo, membresía mensual de mani-pedi) en línea para impulsar visitas repetidas e ingresos predecibles.

4

Pago Sin Contacto

Procese pagos en la silla a través de un enlace de pago o código QR para que los clientes paguen antes de salir, sin necesidad de hacer fila en la recepción.

Transitioning From Cash-Dominant to Digital in a Walk-In Culture

Nail salons have historically operated in

one of the most cash-intensive segments of the service industry. This isn't arbitrary, it evolved from a business model built on walk-ins, rapid turnover, and tipping practices where cash was simply faster. The shift to digital payments requires rethinking not just the payment method but the entire checkout workflow. A nail salon processing 40 clients per day at an average ticket of $45 needs a payment system that's faster than cash, not slower, which means contactless tap-to-pay and QR codes at the chair, not a card terminal at a front desk that creates a line.

Group bookings expose the payment complexity

that nail salons handle more than almost any other beauty business. Bridal parties, birthday groups, and mother-daughter outings involve coordinating services for multiple people who may want different treatments at different price points. When one person pays for the group, the salon faces a single large transaction that's more likely to result in a dispute or chargeback. When each person pays individually, the salon needs a system that can split the booking while keeping the group organized. Neither model is clean, which is why group-specific payment workflows, individual deposits with a shared booking link, solve the problem better than general-purpose payment tools.

The tip distribution question in nail salons

more charged than in most service businesses because the technician who performed the service may not be the person who checked the client out. In busy salons where front desk staff handle payments, tips entered digitally need clear routing rules that match the tip to the specific technician. Misrouted tips, even occasionally, erode technician trust in the digital payment system and push them back toward encouraging cash, which undermines the salon's entire digital transition strategy.

Why Nail Salons Need Digital Payment Collection to Protect Low-Margin Services

Nail salons run on thin margins

with high volume, a basic manicure at $30–$45 must cover technician time, gel and polish products, and overhead within a 30–45 minute window. The math only works when chairs are full and checkout is fast. A no-show on a 90-minute acrylic set doesn't just lose the $65 service fee; it eliminates the $25–$40 in nail art and extension add-ons that push the real ticket value to $90+. Even small deposits ($15–$25) on services over an hour create enough financial commitment to cut no-shows dramatically, which is the difference between profitability and break-even on a busy Saturday.

The transition from cash-dominant to digital

payment is an industry-wide shift that nail salons are navigating right now, and tip routing is the biggest pain point. Tips represent 15–25% of a technician's total earnings, but when the client pays by card and the tip goes through a front-desk terminal, the tip needs to be routed to the specific technician who performed the service, not split evenly or held for end-of-day distribution. Misrouted tips erode technician trust in the digital system and push them to encourage cash, undermining the salon's entire digital transition. Payment systems that assign tips to the technician automatically solve this problem at the checkout level.

Retorno de inversión

58%
No-show revenue recovered

Reduction in lost revenue when nail salons require a card on file or small deposit for appointments over 60 minutes

20%
Average tip increase with digital tipping

Higher per-service tip amount when clients see suggested tip percentages on a digital screen versus tipping in cash

2.8x
Prepaid package sales growth

Increase in package revenue when nail salons offer online purchasing for gel manicure bundles and membership plans

Errores comunes a evitar

Not requiring any deposit for nail art and long-duration services

Require a $15–$25 deposit for services over 60 minutes (gel extensions, nail art, acrylic sets), these block the most time and have the highest no-show opportunity cost

Only accepting cash or running a cash-preferred business model

Adopt digital payments with card-on-file capability, cash-only salons see 22% higher no-show rates because there's no pre-committed payment method to enforce cancellation policies

Not promoting prepaid manicure packages to regular clients

Offer a monthly membership (e.g., 2 gel manicures/month for a flat fee) or a 5-visit punch card at a per-visit discount, regular clients respond to savings and the salon gets predictable recurring revenue

Qué buscar

Low-ticket deposit handling

Choose software that can collect small deposits ($10–$25) without the processing fees eating into the deposit value, look for flat-fee or low-percentage processing rates suited to low-ticket services

Digital tipping with technician allocation

Look for a checkout flow that presents tip suggestions and routes tips directly to the assigned technician without manual end-of-day splitting

Membership and subscription billing

The platform should support recurring monthly plans (e.g., 2 services/month) with automatic billing, service credit tracking, and easy pause/cancel for members

Walk-in and appointment hybrid support

Nail salons serve both walk-ins and appointments, ensure the payment system handles both flows naturally with a single checkout process regardless of how the client arrived

Mejores prácticas

Mejores prácticas de Pagos para Salones de Unas

Consejos de empresas de salones de unas de alto rendimiento

Require a $20–$30 deposit for acrylic and gel services that take over an hour to protect technician time

Enable contactless payment at the chair to speed up checkout and reduce front-desk congestion

Offer a monthly mani-pedi package at a slight discount to turn one-time clients into regulars

Collect individual payments for group bookings so you're not dependent on one person to pay for everyone

Go cashless or card-preferred to simplify end-of-day reconciliation and reduce security risk

Preguntas frecuentes

Preguntas sobre Pagos para Salones de Unas

Empiece a cobrar pagos de Salones de Unas hoy

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Plan gratuito para siempre • Sin tarjeta de crédito

When this isn't for you

This is not for you if you operate a single-chair walk-in shop where every client is first-come/first-served. Nail Salons that book by appointment and want to fill cancellation slots automatically get the most lift. Skip if you don't currently lose any revenue to no-shows.