Personal care and service occupations · SOC 39-5012

Hairdressers, hairstylists, and cosmetologists

Hairdressers, hairstylists, and cosmetologists earned a median of $35,250 per year in the U.S. in 2024, employment is projected to grow +5.6% from 2024–2034, with about 75,800 openings projected each year. Typical entry-level education: Postsecondary nondegree award.

Data snapshot: June 14, 2026

Median annual pay

$35,250

Below the $49,500 median for all U.S. occupations

Projected growth (2024–2034)

+5.6%

Faster than the +3.1% projected for all occupations

Annual openings (avg)

75,800

Projected 2024–2034

Employed (2024)

575,200

Typical entry education

Postsecondary nondegree award

Explore your next step

Use CampusPin to search and compare U.S. colleges by cost, admissions, and location, and to browse college majors. CampusPin doesn't link this occupation to specific programs at specific institutions, always confirm what a college offers with the institution.

More occupations in this field

Occupations in the same federal BLS group (Personal care and service occupations), grouped by the standard occupational classification, not a curated related-occupation mapping.

Source & methodology

Figures are from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment Projections program (Employment Projections). Wages are 2024; employment projections cover 2024–2034. Public domain (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics). Credit BLS.

  • U.S. national figures only, wages and outlook vary by state, metro, employer, and experience.
  • Median wage is the 2024 BLS estimate; projections are BLS model estimates for 2024–2034, not guarantees.
  • Occupational data is national and is NOT an institution-specific or graduate outcome.
  • Very high wages are capped by BLS and stored as null rather than a fabricated number.

Suggested citation

CampusPin. (2026). Hairdressers, hairstylists, and cosmetologists, occupation profile. Retrieved from https://campuspin.com/careers/hairdressers-hairstylists-and-cosmetologists

See a problem with this data? Report a correction.