The tools fall into four kinds, and most cover only one slice of the job. Here is an honest map of the category, and where each one fits. Updated June 2026.
Built for an individual to catalogue their own clothes, often with clever intake and outfit planning. What they are not is a back-office: no client roster, no booking, no invoicing, and color analysis is absent or linked out to a pro. A good closet layer, not a platform for your business.
These bring you inbound clients in exchange for control and a take-rate. The platform owns the relationship and a cut of revenue, and there is no client-owned closet or roster you keep. Useful for leads, the wrong fit if the goal is your own practice and your own brand.
Single-purpose color. The serious ones run a 12-season system with branded client guides, roughly $34 to $104 a month for the working tiers. They do color well and nothing else, so you still need a separate tool for closets, booking, and delivery.
The closest tools to a full platform, purpose-built for personal stylists: a branded client home, closets, lookbooks, invoicing, and shopping commissions. GlossGenius and Vagaro sit nearby but are built for salon chairs, not outfits. Where most of this bucket stops is the client-facing experience, color analysis, travel styling, and a keepsake are largely absent, and a real multi-stylist team model is the exception.
| Stylement | Nove | GoodPix | Hue & Stripe | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Public pricing | From $49/mo | By request | $99 to $299/mo | By request (~$85/mo) |
| 12-season color analysis | Yes, plus in-store scanner | No | No | Color filter only |
| Travel styling | Yes | No | No | No |
| Client keepsake passport | Yes | No | No | No |
| Multi-stylist studio team | Yes, per seat | Not listed | Team tier ($799/mo) | Not listed |
| Stylist community | Bring your own | Yes, Slack + office hours | Peer-referred | Business training |
Competitor details from public materials as of June 2026. By request means pricing is gated behind an onboarding call.
Stylement is a studio platform for independent personal stylists, built to scale from a solo practice to a multi-stylist studio. It covers the operations layer the purpose-built platforms do, and adds the client-facing layer most of them leave out.
Where Stylement does not compete: there is no built-in stylist community like Nove’s. It assumes you bring your own network and want the software to disappear behind your brand.
See the studio your clients would see →Most use a mix: a consumer wardrobe app (Indyx, Whering, Acloset) for closets, a booking tool, and sometimes a color-analysis app like Hathaura. Purpose-built stylist platforms that combine these include Nove, GoodPix, Hue & Stripe, and Stylement.
A wardrobe app like Indyx or Whering is built for an individual to catalogue their own clothes. A stylist platform like Nove, GoodPix, or Stylement is built to run a practice: client rosters, branded client homes, booking, invoicing, and delivery.
Most do not; color is usually a separate tool like Hathaura. Stylement includes 12-season color analysis and an in-store color scanner built in.
Most tools are built for a solo stylist. Among platforms with a true multi-stylist model, GoodPix offers a team tier and Stylement includes a studio-team model where teammates share clients, hold defined roles, and are billed per seat.
It ranges widely: consumer closet apps are free to about $13 a month, dedicated color platforms run roughly $34 to $104 a month, and purpose-built stylist platforms range from gated pricing (Nove, Hue & Stripe) to $99 to $299 a month (GoodPix). Stylement publishes its pricing starting at $49 a month, with Pro at $129 and the Atelier studio tier at $399.