What a Weave Actually Is
A weave is added hair — human or synthetic — attached to your own, most commonly as a sew-in: your natural hair is braided into flat cornrows, and wefts of hair are stitched onto those braids with a needle and thread. Because your hair is tucked away underneath, a well-done weave doubles as a protective style.
The two big decisions are the finish and the hair itself. A leave-out install keeps a section of your natural hair out to cover the tracks; a closure or frontal covers everything with a hairpiece, which means less daily blending but a piece that needs its own care. Human hair can be heat-styled, colored, and often reused for a second install; synthetic hair generally can't.
What to Ask For at the Consultation
Walk in with three things decided, or ready to decide with your stylist. First, the hair: human or synthetic, whether the salon supplies it or you bring your own bundles, and how many bundles your length and fullness will take. Second, the finish: leave-out, closure, or frontal — this determines the braid pattern, so it has to be settled before the first cornrow goes in. Third, the exit plan: when you'll come back for a tighten-up, how you'll wash and moisturize underneath, and when the whole install comes down.
If a salon can't or won't talk through those details before booking the install, keep looking.
How to Vet a Weave Specialist
Ask to see photos of their sew-in work — specifically the braid foundation and the hairline, not just glamour shots of the finished style, and ideally on a hair texture like yours. Flat, even cornrows are what make a weave lie flat and last.
Then talk tension. A fresh install should feel snug, never painful. Bumps along the hairline or a headache that won't quit means it's too tight, and too tight is how edges get lost. A stylist who checks on your scalp's comfort while braiding is a stylist protecting your hair.
The numbers help too. Every salon in this directory carries a rating — the average across all 1,013 is 4.83 stars — and 72% take online booking, so you can usually set up a consultation without a phone call.
Where HairAide Lists Weave Salons
Our directory covers 104 cities with salons that offer weaves. San Antonio leads with 17 listings, with New York and Colorado Springs just behind at 16 each, then Chicago at 15, and Scottsdale and Houston at 14. Tampa, San Diego, Memphis, and Boston each have 13, and Philadelphia and Laredo round out the top cities at 12 — Texas alone puts three cities on that list.
One note on how listings work: a weave tag means the salon handles this service. It doesn't tell you who on staff does the work or which install methods they offer, so confirm the specifics when you book.
