What are you overpaying?
Many booking apps charge a subscription per seat, then a commission on top for every new client they send you. Enter your team size, new clients, and the fees you actually pay below to see what that model would cost you a year – next to DaySync’s flat $25/month, no per-seat or commission fees at all.
Per-seat + commission fees vs. flat price
These figures reflect the per-seat + new-client-commission pricing common among booking apps as of July 2026; enter the fees you actually pay for your own numbers – the two sliders above default to a typical per-seat fee and commission rate, with a $6-per-new-client minimum built into the commission calculation. Card-processing fees (roughly 2.3–3.3% of each transaction, charged by the payment processor, not the booking platform) are excluded here – they apply to DaySync too. DaySync has no per-seat fee and no commission of its own, but Stripe’s standard processing rate still applies, same as it effectively does everywhere else.
Booth rent break-even
Booth and chair rent varies enormously by city and salon tier – the default above is a national blended estimate from public pricing guides, not a government statistic; enter your actual rent for an accurate result. “Break-even” here means covering your fixed rent, not your full cost of doing business – products, tools, insurance and your own time aren’t included. The commission-split comparison is drawn from a self-reported industry survey, not government wage data – treat it as a directional benchmark for the trade-off, not a precise conversion between booth rent and commission pay.