2 set days
Part-time- + Scheduled set days
- + Chair + shampoo bowl access
- + BYO towels/supplies
NOT A SUITE. Wi-Fi included (business use). Towels/linens and laundry not included.
If you are looking for salon booth rental in Fort Lauderdale, the main question is usually not whether a chair exists. The real question is whether the setup is practical enough to support your current client book without forcing you into overhead that does not match your stage of growth. This location at The Harbor Shops (Publix-anchored)is built for that exact use case. You get a recognizable address, predictable set-day scheduling, chair and shampoo bowl access, and a simple way to operate as an independent stylist inside a working salon.
The address is 1929 Cordova Rd, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316. That matters because clients show up more consistently when the destination is easy to recognize. It is close to Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Port Everglades, Las Olas Boulevard, and SE 17th Street Causeway, which makes the location useful both for core Fort Lauderdale books and for stylists serving nearby cities.
Many stylists use the terms booth rental and chair rental interchangeably. Here, the structure is a station-use license with scheduled set days. That keeps the model clear, lowers friction, and makes it easier to plan your week around real demand instead of paying for more capacity than you need.
Salon booth rental works best when the structure is simple enough to support independent day-to-day operation. At this Fort Lauderdale location, the model is built around scheduled set days. You choose from currently available days, confirm the plan that matches your demand, and work your clients from that fixed routine. That consistency helps both sides: it gives you cleaner scheduling and it gives clients a stable answer when they ask where you are available.
The offer centers on the pieces most stylists actually need: chair or station access, shampoo bowl access, Wi-Fi for business use, and a clean location inside an existing salon. Towels, linens, products, and laundry are not bundled into the model. That is intentional. A bring-your-own supply structure helps keep weekly overhead lower and lets each stylist run their own product preferences instead of paying for extras they may not use every day.
This format is especially useful for independent stylists who are building back a book, splitting work between two zones, or transitioning into a more disciplined week. Set-day scheduling changes the way the business feels. Instead of chasing scattered appointment blocks, you are building predictable service days that are easier to fill, easier to explain, and easier for clients to remember when they rebook.
Another advantage is that you stay inside a salon environment instead of operating in total isolation. For some stylists, that matters more than they expect. A working salon gives the day a normal rhythm and reduces the “single-room” feeling that can come with other models. You still control your client relationships and service mix, but you do it inside a setup that feels active and grounded.
The pricing structure is designed to line up with actual usage. Start with the smallest plan that matches real demand, then add more days only when rebooking justifies it. That approach protects margin and keeps your Fort Lauderdale overhead under control.
2 set days
Part-time3 set days
Most popularFull-time (5–6 days)
Best valueDay rate (when available)
LimitedOnly when availability allows.
Set-day scheduling keeps fees low and confirms scheduled access (subject to availability and rules).
Part-time set-day options work well for stylists who are still building consistency. A three-day plan often fits providers with a stronger repeat cycle. Full-time access makes sense once the week is already dense enough that broader availability improves revenue instead of simply adding open hours.
The Harbor Shops location solves a common local problem: clients are more likely to show up and rebook when the address is easy to understand. That sounds basic, but it has direct revenue impact. A recognizable plaza means fewer “where exactly are you?” conversations, fewer location-related reschedules, and a cleaner checkout-to-rebook flow.
The plaza is close to Fort Lauderdale Airport, Port Everglades, Las Olas Boulevard, and SE 17th Street Causeway. Those landmarks help orient both local Fort Lauderdale clients and clients traveling from nearby cities. When a client knows the airport corridor or the 17th Street Causeway area, they already have a mental map for the destination.
Stylists also choose this location because it supports real routing discipline. If your client book is spread across multiple neighborhoods, you need a place that can function as a fixed anchor rather than a moving target. Fort Lauderdale works well for that because it is central to many Broward travel patterns. Set-day scheduling at a known retail destination keeps the week tighter and reduces wasted travel blocks.
There is also a trust factor. Clients often feel more comfortable meeting you in a known plaza with visible retail anchors than in an obscure standalone spot. That trust is small on paper but meaningful in practice. It lowers friction for first appointments and makes ongoing maintenance visits feel routine.
Fort Lauderdale is often the center point for a wider Broward book. Many independent stylists do not serve a single neighborhood anymore. A real client base may include Hollywood, Dania Beach, Plantation, Aventura, Oakland Park, or Pompano Beach. That is why this page is not only about one city. It is about whether a Fort Lauderdale base can support broader local coverage without overcomplicating the week.
For Hollywood and Dania Beach books, the location can work as a northward anchor day that still feels accessible. For Plantation and Davie books, it can operate as an east-side destination for clients who prefer a more central Fort Lauderdale visit. For Oakland Park and Pompano Beach, it can serve as the south-facing part of a north Broward schedule. For Aventura and Hallandale Beach, it can function as a Broward work zone when you want to separate south routes from north routes.
The common thread is schedule clarity. A stylist who tells clients “I am in Fort Lauderdale on these days” makes rebooking easier than a stylist who keeps shifting locations based on weekly gaps. That is the real value of the city coverage angle: it turns a mixed local book into a routine that clients can learn and trust.
Map preview
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Open interactive mapPlans start with part-time set-day options and scale up to a full-time weekly plan, with day-rate access available when the calendar allows. Current pricing is shown on the pricing cards so the values stay consistent across the site.
Yes. The setup is designed for independent hairstylists and similar licensed professionals who want booth rental or chair rental inside a working salon.
Yes. Chair or station access includes shampoo bowl access for client services, which keeps the setup practical for everyday salon work.
Booth rental here means a station-use license in an existing salon with chair and shampoo bowl access. Salon suites generally mean a private room with more fixed overhead and a different operating model.
Text the plan you want and the days you want. We will confirm current openings at 1929 Cordova Rd, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316.