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Retail & Consumer

Hair salons tell Chancellor to cut VAT to save industry from 'existential crisis'

Famous Liverpool group joins British Hair Consortium campaign to support sector and its apprentices

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is being urged to look at VAT cuts for hair and beauty firms (Image: Getty Images)

The North’s hair and beauty industry could face a long-term crisis unless the Government cuts VAT – that’s the message from the owners of salons across Merseyside.

The British Hair Consortium (BHC) says the tax system is “crushing” high street salons and that the whole industry so vital to the region’s economy is facing an "existential crisis".

Collinge & Co has been in Liverpool city centre for decades and every year trains dozens of apprentices who will be the future of the industry. But says his company has already had to close one salon as rising costs bite – and warns that without more Government support the flow of apprentices to the industry could stop altogether.

Like other high street companies, hair and beauty firms are also coping with the upcoming rise in National Insurance costs. Collinge & Co said that rise in costs was a factor in the closure of its Ormskirk salon. Meanwhile the owner of three Sefton salons says VAT is her biggest challenge and says she fears for the future of the industry.

The BHC is today issuing a report by consultancy CBI Economics saying the Government must “urgently halve the VAT salons pay on labour costs to 10%” to help salons stay competitive. It says that because hair and beauty work is labour-intensive, taxes on labour hit salons harder than other high street businesses.

More hairdressers are choosing to work on their own rather than being employed at salons – such as by renting chairs at a shared salon – to save money. But the BHC says sole traders are generally not taking on apprentices, unlike traditional salons. It says that if the trend goes on then "by 2027 there may be no new apprenticeships offered".

Charlie Collinge, managing director of Liverpool’s Collinge & Co, said last year the business had 300 applications for 64 apprenticeship places. It managed to fill 60 of those places.

This year’s apprenticeship scheme has been open for two months and has already had more than 120 applications. But so far it has only had 17 businesses express an interest in taking an apprentice.