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Luxury spending signals economic strain

“I fear that the U.S. is on the verge of a major recession as salons are not buying much of anything.”

Photo Courtesy of Aevi Boutique

America, take note: the economy may not be as strong as leaders in Washington, D.C., suggest. Beneath official messaging, signals from everyday industries tell a more complicated story, one that points to tightening consumer behaviour and rising uncertainty.

A longtime leader in the salon and spa sector recently offered a candid view from inside the market. With decades of experience (having owned hundreds of salons, operated academies, and supplied top-tier businesses across Canada and the U.S.) his perspective carries weight. When operators at this level start to struggle, it often reflects broader economic currents.

He shared this directly, “Things are tough all around… I have had to take a job to pay my bills. I fear that the U.S. is on the verge of a major recession as salons are not buying much of anything.”

This is a signal. Historically, the beauty sector has been resilient, even during downturns. Consumers may cut travel, delay large purchases, or scale back luxury spending, but personal care has tended to remain steady. That pattern appears to be shifting.

High-end salons that once reliably sold $90–$175 bottles of haircare products, and charged upwards of $350 per visit, are now discounting inventory that still isn’t moving. Regular clients are visiting less frequently, or not at all. Even established operators are feeling pressure severe enough to seek additional income just to stay afloat.

This change matters. The beauty industry has long functioned as an informal economic barometer. When discretionary spending in this category drops, it often signals a deeper pullback in consumer confidence. What is notable now is that the contraction appears to be affecting not only lower-income households but middle- and higher-income consumers as well.

Other indicators reinforce this trend. Rising costs for essentials; fuel, food, housing, and energy, are forcing households to reprioritize. Businesses, in turn, are tightening their own practices. Suppliers who once extended generous payment terms now require 50–60% upfront, with full payment on delivery. That shift reflects growing caution across the supply chain.

However, some claims in the original argument require careful framing. Attributing price increases broadly to corporate greed lacks substantiated evidence and risks oversimplifying a complex mix of global supply issues, inflationary pressures, and geopolitical factors. Similarly, references to an Iran war should be clarified, or verified to avoid misinforming readers.

The broader takeaway remains clear: when consumers begin to consistently cut back on services once considered routine, it suggests a deeper unease about financial stability and future earning power.

The salon industry’s slowdown may not, on its own, confirm an impending recession, but it does raise an important question: if even the most resilient sectors are feeling strain, what does that say about the health of the wider economy?

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