What You're Actually Booking
A blowout is a shampoo, blow-dry, and heat style in one sitting — no cut, no color. The stylist washes your hair, rough-dries it, then shapes it in sections with a round brush, finishing with smoothing product or a light iron pass depending on the look.
The look is the part you control, so be specific when you book. "Smooth and straight," "bouncy with bend," and "big volume at the root" are three different techniques, and a photo beats all three phrases. If you have curly or coily hair and want it worn smooth, say so up front — it changes how much time your appointment needs.
How to Vet a Blowout Bar
Service tags in a directory are coarse: they tell you a salon offers blowouts, not that blowouts are its strength. So do two quick checks before you book. First, read recent reviews specifically for staying power — a style that photographs well at the register but falls flat by dinner is a common complaint, and reviewers mention it. Second, watch how the salon handles intake. A place that asks about your texture, density, and the occasion before confirming a slot is a place that plans its time honestly.
The numbers here can help you shortlist: every blowout listing in our directory is rated, the group averages 4.79 stars, and about 73% offer online booking — useful when you're scheduling around an event.
Where We List Them
HairAide currently lists salons offering blowouts in 104 cities. Las Vegas leads with 21 listings, and a dense second tier sits at 20 each: Washington, DC; Stockton; Spokane; Scottsdale; Santa Ana; San Jose; Reno; Raleigh; Omaha; Oklahoma City; and Oakland. California appears four times in that top group alone, but the spread is genuinely national — Nevada to North Carolina to Nebraska.
Timing It Right
A standard blowout runs roughly 45 minutes to an hour; thick, long, or curly-to-smooth hair takes longer, so flag it when you book. For an event, book the same day, three to four hours ahead — the style gets time to settle without eating into its lifespan.
Arrive with the hair you have. The wash is part of the service, so there's no need to shampoo beforehand, and most stylists would rather start from your natural state anyway.
