Pickles — Surry Hills
The cult Sydney balayage salon. Sustainable Pickles' technique grows out for 10-12 weeks before maintenance — almost double the standard. Six-week book ahead.
Five Sydney salons ranked specifically for balayage and lived-in colour. The colourists Sydney editors actually book themselves.
| Rank | Clinic | Location | Price from | Glow Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| № 1 | Pickles — Surry Hills | Bourke Street, Surry Hills 2010 | Balayage from $480 | ★★★★★ 9.4/10 |
| № 2 | Joh Bailey — Double Bay | Bay Street, Double Bay 2028 | Balayage from $620 | ★★★★★ 9.2/10 |
| № 3 | Rakis on Crown — Surry Hills | Crown Street, Surry Hills 2010 | Balayage from $440 | ★★★★★ 9.0/10 |
| № 4 | Edwards and Co — Paddington | Oxford Street, Paddington 2021 | Balayage from $480 | ★★★★★ 9.0/10 |
| № 5 | Eleven Hair — Sydney CBD | Pitt Street, Sydney 2000 | Balayage from $380 | ★★★★★ 8.6/10 |
Balayage looks easy. It isn't. The difference between hand-painted, sun-kissed, even-fade balayage and chunky highlights you'll regret in six weeks is the colourist, not the brand. Glow's editorial team booked treatments at every salon in this ranking.
The cult Sydney balayage salon. Sustainable Pickles' technique grows out for 10-12 weeks before maintenance — almost double the standard. Six-week book ahead.
Premium eastern-suburbs salon. Long-hair colour transformations are their flagship. Pricing reflects the postcode.
Independent colourist-led salon. Strong on cool-toned balayage that doesn't go brassy. Mid-premium pricing.
Sister salon to Melbourne's Edwards and Co. Same technique standard, same lived-in finish. Sydney's eastern-suburbs answer to the cult Melbourne brand.
Brand-owned mid-market salon. Reliable balayage at fair pricing. Skip if the brief is a major transformation; book if it's maintenance.
Quality balayage from a top Sydney salon (Pickles, Joh Bailey, Edwards and Co) grows out for 8-12 weeks before maintenance. Mid-market balayage grows out for 4-6 weeks before showing. The cost-per-week of premium balayage is often comparable to mid-market because of the longer wear.
Rakis on Crown — their technique uses thinner painted sections that don't weigh down fine hair. Skip the standard chunky-section balayage at chains; it visibly thins the appearance of fine hair.
Tipping isn't standard in Australian salons but is welcomed. 5-10% on a $500 balayage is gracious and remembered. More common: pre-pay loyalty packages that effectively give the colourist a security of forward bookings.
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