What extensions actually are
Extensions add length or density by attaching wefts or individual strands of hair to your own. The main methods you'll see on salon menus: tape-ins (thin adhesive panels sandwiched around sections of your hair), sew-ins and hand-tied wefts (rows anchored to braids or small beads), keratin or fusion bonds (strand-by-strand attachment), and clip-ins (temporary, no salon visit required after the initial color match).
Two things separate the methods more than marketing does: how the hair attaches to your head, and how often that attachment needs professional maintenance as your hair grows. Human hair — often labeled Remy — styles and colors like your own; synthetic hair can't take heat the same way. Whatever the method, extensions are an ongoing relationship with a stylist, not a one-time appointment.
How to vet an extension specialist
Method-specific training is the thing to verify. Extensions aren't a general cosmetology skill — each system has its own certification, and a stylist trained in tape-ins hasn't necessarily installed a hand-tied row. Ask which methods they actually work in, and which one they'd recommend for your hair density and routine. A trustworthy specialist will sometimes steer you away from the method you came in wanting.
Then ask to see their own work — real client photos, not brand imagery — ideally on hair with a texture and color close to yours, and ideally a few weeks after install, when a sloppy blend starts to show. A proper consultation should also include an honest look at your hair's condition; extensions on compromised or shedding hair accelerate breakage, and a good stylist will say so before anything is attached.
What to ask for at the consultation
Ask for a color match under natural light — a convincing blend usually mixes two or more shades rather than one. Ask where the hair comes from and whether it's Remy human hair. Ask what the maintenance schedule looks like: how often you'll be back in the chair for move-ups or re-taping, and what happens as your natural hair grows out.
Finally, ask about removal before you commit to an install. Every method comes out eventually, and the exit should be as planned as the entrance. If a stylist is vague about how they take extensions out safely, keep looking.
Where HairAide lists extension salons
HairAide's directory currently includes 1,013 salons that handle extensions, spread across 104 US cities. Coverage runs deepest in San Antonio, TX (17 listings), New York, NY and Colorado Springs, CO (16 each), and Chicago, IL (15), with Scottsdale, Houston, Tampa, San Diego, Memphis, Boston, Philadelphia, and Laredo close behind.
Every salon on these pages carries a rating — the average across the directory is 4.83 stars — and 72% take online booking, so you can usually go straight from reading to requesting a consultation.
