Loc Salons & Specialists in 109 US Cities | HairAide
Find a Salon Locs

Locs: How to Find a Loc Specialist Worth Your Hair

Locs aren't a style you try on — they're a commitment measured in years, and the person who starts and maintains them matters more than for almost any other hair service. HairAide lists 1,610 salons across 109 US cities that handle locs. Here's what the work involves, what to ask at a consultation, and how to tell a careful loctician from someone who just owns a crochet needle.

The salons below all offer loc services. Just over half — 53% — take online bookings, which is the fastest way to lock in a consultation slot.

4.5 (144)

Braids & Beauty Studio

San Jose, CA

4.5 (12)

Judy hair braiding

Lexington, KY

4.5 (26)
4.5 (97)
4.5 (444)
4.5 (204)
4.5 (149)

Black Butterflies

Chesapeake, VA

4.5 (135)
4.5 (670)

Perfect Braids

Aurora, CO

4.5 (22)

Operation Hair

San Jose, CA

4.5 (82)
4.5 (284)

AFRONEAT

Los Angeles, CA

4.5 (61)
4.5 (52)
4.5 (60)

Dvyne Braids

Garland, TX

4.5 (268)
4.5 (207)

seattleafricanbraids

Tukwila, WA

4.5 (58)
4.5 (386)

Boss Braids

Sacramento, CA

4.5 (15)
4.5 (106)

Expressions Hair Lounge

Long Beach, CA

4.5 (111)
4.5 (363)
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What locs actually involve

Locs are sections of hair deliberately matted and trained into permanent ropes. Getting there is a process with recognized stages — starter, budding, teen, mature — and the full journey usually takes 18 to 24 months depending on your texture and growth rate.

The starting method shapes everything after it. Comb coils and two-strand twists are the classic routes for tightly textured hair. Instant locs, done with a crochet hook, give you a mature look on day one. Interlocking builds a tighter, longer-lasting root, and microlocs use much smaller sections for lighter weight and more styling range. Once established, locs need professional attention every four to eight weeks — a retwist or retightening at the root — plus consistent home care in between.

What to ask at the consultation

Book a consultation before you book an install. A good loctician will look at your texture, density, and scalp before recommending a method — be wary of anyone who commits to a plan without touching your hair.

Ask three things. First, which starting method they'd use on your hair and why. Second, how they handle maintenance — retwisting and interlocking build different roots, and switching between them later can cause damage. Third, their product philosophy: locs need light, residue-free products, and heavy waxes or thick gels cause buildup you'll be cutting out years later.

How to vet a loc specialist

A service tag tells you a salon does loc work; it doesn't tell you how well. Ask to see mature locs they've maintained for years, not just fresh installs — anyone can make day-one coils look neat. Ask how they protect the hairline: too-tight retwists cause traction alopecia, and a careful specialist will bring up tension before you do.

Reviews matter more here than in most categories. Ninety-nine percent of the loc salons we list carry a public rating, and they average 4.57 stars — but read the text, not just the number, and look for reviewers who mention loc work specifically. Repair skill is another good sign: someone who can reattach or rebuild a thinning loc has seen the long game.

Where HairAide lists loc salons

Our directory covers salons that handle locs in 109 cities. Las Vegas has the deepest bench with 24, followed by Aurora, Colorado with 22. Raleigh, Jacksonville, Houston, and Greensboro each list 20, and a wide band of cities — San Antonio, Omaha, Milwaukee, Memphis, Los Angeles, and Indianapolis — come in at 19 apiece.

The spread is genuinely national. This isn't a coastal-metro service: mid-sized cities like Omaha and Greensboro hold their own against the largest markets in the country.

Frequently asked questions

How often do locs need professional maintenance?
Most people go every four to eight weeks for a retwist or retightening at the roots. A tighter schedule keeps things neat but raises the risk of thinning from tension; a good loctician will help you find the interval your hairline can sustain.
Do I need a loc specialist, or can any stylist maintain locs?
The 1,610 salons in our directory all offer loc services, but a service tag proves the work happens there — not that it's the salon's strength. Vet the individual: ask for photos of mature locs they've maintained over time and how they handle tension and repairs before committing.
Which starting method should I ask for?
It depends on your texture and goals. Comb coils and two-strand twists suit tightly textured hair, instant (crochet) locs give a mature look immediately, and interlocking or microlocs work well for finer hair or smaller sections. Book a consultation and let the loctician assess your hair before you choose.