What Getting a Weave Involves
A weave means wefted hair sewn, glued, or fused onto braided or leave-out sections of your natural hair — different from tape-ins or fusion strands, and usually longer chair-time than a basic extension touch-up. Because technique varies (sew-in vs. quick weave, closure vs. no closure), it's worth asking a salon directly whether they do the specific method you want rather than assuming "weave" means one standard process.
Chandler's directory lists six salons that offer this service, though the tag only confirms the work happens there — it doesn't tell you technique, hair quality, or how many installs a stylist has done. Bring reference photos and ask about the weft or hair brand they use before you book.
How to Choose a Weave Specialist Here
Start with booking access. In Chandler, 67% of the salons offering weaves take appointments online, useful if you want to compare openings without a round of phone tag. For the rest, a call or a look at their Instagram is the faster route — several salons on this list post their extension work there, a reasonable way to gauge finish quality before you commit to a chair.
Because service tags here are broad, don't assume a salon offering weaves only does weaves — many bundle it with other extension methods, so ask what's included (removal, maintenance, follow-up) before the price conversation even starts.
The Rating and Booking Picture
All six salons in Chandler's weave listings carry a rating, and the average sits at 4.97 stars — a tight, high cluster rather than a wide spread. That consistency is worth noting, but these are aggregate counts, not a ranking of who's "best"; check the individual review counts below before deciding who to call first.
Booking access sits at 67%, meaning about two out of three salons let you request a time online rather than requiring a phone call. If online booking matters to your schedule, check that detail on each listing before you start reaching out.
