Hairdressers, manicurists make house calls to survive Covid

Barbers in Hanoi and HCMC are going to customers’ homes to make a living as their shops remain closed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. For a month now Nguyen Thai Hoang, 27, a hairdresser in Hanoi’s Long Bien District, has had his business disrupted, and he has begun to visit his customers instead.

He said: “Since the city ordered salons to close we have no choice but to provide services at our customers’ homes. It’s the only way we earn a living amid the pandemic.” His monthly income of around VND10 million ($435) has fallen by 90 percent after the fourth wave of Covid hit Vietnam two months ago.

On a Facebook group with 1,400 members in Hanoi, there are around 20 posts every day by barbers offering to visit customers’ houses for VND50,000-100,000 plus transportation.

“We’ll bring mirrors, masks, protective shields, and rubber gloves to ensure your safety,” one post by a salon in Thanh Xuan District with 20 barbers said.

“Our job is the same but we have to travel a lot more so it is more challenging,” a barber in Hanoi’s Ha Dong District who asked not be identified said.

“We still have to pay rents so this is the best we can do while we wait for everything to reopen.”

Many people have not had a proper haircut since the end of April when everything closed.

“No salon near my building is open, so I get a barber to come and trim my hair in the hallway of my apartment,” Le Manh Hung, who lives in Hoang Mai District, said.

“It was uncomfortable to have neighbors walk by and stare, but I got what I needed.”

On social media there are also many offers for nail, spa, and skin care services.

In HCMC’s Tan Binh District, last month Mai had to shut her hair and nail salon, which is the main source of income for her family.

“I had to ask for time to pay rent,” the 40-year-old woman said. She has been providing customers with hairdressing and nail services at home to earn some money.

However, authorities have expressed concern about this. Nguyen Hong Tam, deputy director of the HCMC Center for Disease Control, said people cannot maintain a minimum distance of two meters when doing hair and nails, and therefore this is a violation of Covid-19 regulations.

“Going to customers’ homes means shops are still operating, and this is also a violation,” he said.

But hairdressers are concerned about putting food on the table for their family. Hoang, who has to take care of his mother and grandmother, has three customers booked for tomorrow and he has no intention of canceling them.

Must read

Behind the Buzz
Retail News Asia — Your Daily Fix of What’s Happening in Asian Retail

We’re here to keep you in the loop—every single day. Whether you’re running a small local shop, scaling an online biz, or part of a global brand making moves in Asia, we’ve got something for you.

With 50+ fresh stories a week and 13.6 million readers, Retail News Asia isn’t just another news site—it’s the go-to source for all things retail across the region.
Retail Kitchen
We respect your inbox as much as we value your time. That’s why we only send carefully curated weekly updates, packed with the most relevant news, trends, and insights from the retail industry across Asia and beyond.

Copyright © 2014 -2025 |
Redwind BV