Search for salon booking software and you will find a hundred polished apps, almost all of them built for markets where every client has a credit card, SMS is cheap, and nobody has ever heard of Whish.
Lebanon is not that market. This guide compares the options a Lebanese salon actually has, including the honest case for each, so you can pick with open eyes instead of a feature checklist written in another country.
Option 1: Keep booking through Instagram DMs
The honest case for DMs: they are free, personal, and your clients already use them. For a chair-and-a-half operation with a dozen regulars, DMs genuinely work.
The problem is what happens the month you grow. Messages arrive mid-service and wait hours for a reply, availability gets negotiated one slot at a time, and the appointment ends up living in a chat thread instead of a calendar. Double bookings and forgotten clients are not bad luck at that point; they are the system working as designed.
Option 2: The big international salon apps
The global platforms are genuinely good software, and it is fair to say so. Beautiful calendars, marketplaces, point-of-sale integrations.
The friction is that their assumptions do not survive contact with Lebanon. Card-first payments and card-secured bookings assume every client banks online. Reminders lean on SMS and email, the two channels Lebanese clients read least. Pricing is set in markets with different margins. And when something breaks, support has usually never heard of your payment rails or your power cuts.
Option 3: A booking page built around Lebanon
The third option is software that starts from how Lebanon actually books and pays: a booking page under your salon's name, reminders that go out on WhatsApp where they are actually read, and optional deposits collected over Whish with no bank account or card machine anywhere in the flow.
This is the category Mawaeed lives in, so weigh our bias accordingly. But the comparison below is the honest one we would want as salon owners:
The feature that pays the rent: fewer no-shows
Whatever system you pick, judge it on one number first: the no-show rate. A salon losing a third of its booked slots does not have a marketing problem, it has a confirmation problem.
Two mechanisms do almost all the work. Reminders on a channel people read, sent at 24 hours and again at 2 hours. And a small deposit, always optional and always deducted from the bill, on the appointments you cannot afford to lose.
A quick checklist before you commit
- Can a client book from your Instagram bio in under a minute, without messaging you?
- Do reminders go out on WhatsApp automatically, without a staff member typing them?
- Can you take a deposit without a card machine, over Whish or OMT?
- Can you start free and leave anytime, with your client list exportable?
- Does the calendar handle your real shape: multiple chairs, staff schedules, services with different durations?
One honest caveat to check for any system, including ours: with Mawaeed, the booking pages themselves are currently in English. For most Lebanese salons that is how clients book anyway, but if your clientele expects to book in Arabic or French, test that flow with a few regulars before switching.
The bottom line
If you have a handful of clients and love your DMs, keep them. If you are card-first and internationally minded, the global apps are real options. But if your clients live on WhatsApp and pay with Whish and cash, pick software that treats that as the design brief rather than an edge case.
That is the gap Mawaeed was built to fill: a salon booking page live in an evening, free for 50 bookings a month, with the reminders and deposits doing the unglamorous work that keeps chairs full.
طبّق هذا عملياً مع مواعيد
مجاني حتى 50 حجزاً في الشهر. صفحة حجوزات أنيقة، وتذكيرات تلقائية، وجدول يمتلئ من تلقاء نفسه.