Barbers in Japan need professional training, and there are two kinds of employment certificates:
Hairstylist (barber)
Dale (you know).
Every qualification is obtained after training in the training school, and then registered with the relevant association, and then a barber shop will look for you, or you will volunteer.
Japanese barbershops usually take only one day off on weekdays. I go to work as usual on weekends, so my salary is generally higher.
If it is not a boy, it is usually 350,000 to 400,000 months.
Some students are unpaid and paid, and most of them come to work, so their wages are low, more than 100 thousand a month.
There are many barbershops in Tokyo, such as Leimen Temple and Asakusa, most of which are general barbershops.
Barber shops in Ikebukuro University Town have higher incomes and more people.
Congress, Tsukiji local barber shop is more upscale.