Weaves in Baltimore: What the Local Picture Looks Like
If you're searching for a weave specialist in Baltimore, you've got 12 options in our directory that list weave services — sew-ins, quick weaves, and closure or frontal work all fall under that umbrella here. That's enough of a spread that you can actually compare rather than settle for whoever pops up first.
What stands out is booking access: 100% of these 12 salons have online booking set up, which means you can usually check availability and lock in a slot without playing phone tag. That's not universal in this industry — plenty of directories are full of salons where the only way in is a cold call.
How to Choose a Weave Specialist Here
Service tags on a directory only tell you that a salon handles weaves — they don't tell you how. Before you book, ask specifically about the install method you want (sew-in versus quick weave versus a closure or frontal), how they handle your natural hair underneath, and how long they block out for the appointment. A rushed install is usually a bad one.
It's also worth asking what maintenance looks like — how often you'll need to come back for a tighten-up or take-down, and whether that's built into the original price or billed separately. Some of the salons on this list post their install work on Instagram, so if a name has a handle listed, a quick scroll through their tagged photos is a fast way to see finished results before you commit.
Ratings and Reviews at a Glance
Every one of the 12 salons in this list carries a public rating — 100% rated, with the group averaging 4.83 stars. That's a tight, high cluster, which means the differences between salons here are more about fit — location, scheduling, the specific look you want — than about any of them being a clear standout on quality alone.
Review counts vary quite a bit across the list, from salons with just a handful of reviews to others with several hundred. More reviews generally means a longer track record to judge by, but a smaller, newer salon with strong ratings isn't automatically a worse bet — just a less-documented one.
