WiFi marketing for laundromats: turn wait time into revenue
Key takeaways: Laundromat customers spend 45–90 minutes per visit, visit 1–2 times per week, and universally want WiFi. A captive portal captures 70–85% of customer emails with virtually no friction. The most profitable automation for laundromats: promoting wash-dry-fold (WDF) service to self-service customers, which converts a $4 washer load into a $15–$25 service ticket. Loyalty programs triggered by WiFi visit frequency reduce the churn that plagues laundromats in competitive markets.
Performance figures in this article are illustrative benchmarks. Actual results depend on laundromat traffic and campaign execution. MyWiFi Networks does not guarantee specific results.
Laundromats are invisible to most marketers. No advertising budget. No social media presence. No email list. The owner collects quarters (or card swipes) and empties lint traps.
But laundromats have something most businesses would kill for: customers who show up every single week, stay for an hour, and have nothing to do but stare at their phones.
That's a captive audience in the most literal sense. And if the laundromat has WiFi — which costs the owner $50–$100/month for the internet connection — every single one of those customers can become a known, contactable, marketable person.
The question isn't whether WiFi marketing works for laundromats. The question is why more laundromats haven't done it yet.
Why laundromats are a hidden gem for WiFi marketing
Visit frequency
Laundromat customers visit 1–2 times per week. That's 50–100 visits per year from a single customer. Compare that to restaurants (1–2 visits per month for regulars) or retail (a few times per year). Laundromat customers are among the most frequent repeat visitors of any commercial venue.
Dwell time
A standard wash cycle runs 25–35 minutes. A dryer cycle runs 30–45 minutes. Most customers stay for both. Total dwell time: 45–90 minutes per visit. During that time, they're sitting on a bench, scrolling their phone, waiting.
They want WiFi. Badly.
No existing data capture
The typical laundromat has zero customer data. No names. No emails. No phone numbers. The owner knows how much revenue the machines generate, but not who's generating it. A customer who's been coming every week for three years is indistinguishable from a first-time visitor.
WiFi changes that overnight. First-time portal login captures the email. Subsequent logins track visit frequency. Within 30 days, the owner knows exactly who their regulars are, how often they come, and how to reach them.
Setting up WiFi marketing for a laundromat
Hardware
Laundromats are typically 1,500–4,000 square feet with an open floor plan (no interior walls blocking signal). One access point covers the entire space.
Most laundromats have basic internet service — often the cheapest business plan from the local ISP. That's fine. Laundromat WiFi usage is phone browsing, not video streaming. 25–50 Mbps is adequate.
If the laundromat has no WiFi at all (surprisingly common), adding it costs:
- •Internet service: $50–$100/month
- •Access point: $100–$200 (one-time)
- •Platform subscription: $49/month
Total monthly: $99–$149/month. That's 4–6 dryer loads per day to break even. The marketing value makes it free within the first month.
Portal design
Laundromat portals should be dead simple. This customer base skews practical. They don't want a brand experience. They want internet access.
SSID: [Laundromat Name] Free WiFi Portal headline: "Free WiFi — Connect and Relax" Body: "Enter your email to connect. Get wash alerts, loyalty rewards, and special offers." Login: Email only (single field) Post-login redirect: Laundromat's Google Maps page (encourages reviews) or a WDF service landing page
One field. One button. Connected in 5 seconds. That's it.
The wash-dry-fold upsell: the money automation
This is the single highest-revenue automation for a laundromat WiFi deployment.
What's wash-dry-fold?
Many laundromats offer wash-dry-fold (WDF) service: the customer drops off their laundry, and the laundromat washes, dries, and folds it for a per-pound fee (typically $1.25–$2.50 per pound). A standard load averages 10–15 lbs, making WDF revenue per load $12.50–$37.50.
Compare that to self-service revenue per load: $3–$6 (washer + dryer).
WDF is 3–6x more profitable per load than self-service. But most laundromat customers don't know the service exists, or they think it's more expensive than it is.
The WiFi-triggered WDF promotion
Trigger: Customer connects to WiFi for the 3rd time (confirmed regular) Email: "Tired of waiting? Try our Wash-Dry-Fold service. Drop off your laundry and we'll have it clean, folded, and ready for pickup — usually same day. $1.50/lb. No minimum. [details + drop-off hours]"
Day 30 (if no WDF conversion): "Your time is worth more than a wash cycle. Try WDF this week and get your first 10 lbs free. Just drop off and go."
This automation runs for every regular self-service customer. If even 5% convert to WDF, the revenue per customer triples.
The math
Laundromat with 200 unique weekly customers:
- •170 are self-service ($5 average revenue per visit)
- •30 are WDF ($20 average revenue per visit)
WiFi automation promotes WDF to 170 self-service customers. 5% convert = 8.5 customers switch to WDF.
Revenue shift:
- •8.5 customers × ($20 WDF - $5 self-service) × 52 weeks = $6,630/year in incremental revenue
From a single automated email sequence. On a $49/month platform.
Loyalty programs through WiFi
Laundromats in competitive markets — college towns, urban neighborhoods with 3–4 laundromats within a mile — face customer churn. Customers switch based on machine availability, cleanliness, and perceived value. A loyalty program creates switching costs.
WiFi-based loyalty tracking
The platform tracks visit frequency through WiFi connections. No punch cards. No app downloads. No barcode scans.
Structure:
- •Every WiFi connection = 1 visit credit (logged automatically)
- •10 visits = reward (free dryer cycle, $5 credit, or WDF discount)
- •25 visits = tier upgrade (VIP rate on WDF, priority machine access during peak hours)
Trigger: Customer reaches 10 visits Email: "You've hit 10 visits at [Laundromat Name]! Here's a free dryer cycle on your next visit. Show this email at the counter. Thanks for being a regular."
This is a no-cost loyalty program. The WiFi data tracks visits. The automation delivers rewards. No app. No hardware. No staff training.
Why WiFi loyalty beats app-based loyalty
Several laundromat loyalty apps exist (Wash Club, SudShare, CleanCloud). They require customers to download an app, create an account, and remember to use it. Download-to-active rates for laundromat apps average 15–20% of customer base.
WiFi loyalty captures 70–85% of customers because they're connecting to WiFi anyway. There's nothing to download, nothing to remember. The loyalty tracking is invisible to the customer until they receive their reward email.
Other automations for laundromats
Machine status and alerts
Some laundromats integrate WiFi-connected machines (through IoT sensors or connected machine platforms like Speed Queen Insights). While this isn't a captive portal feature per se, the combination of WiFi marketing data and machine data creates powerful automations:
Trigger: Customer connects to WiFi → 35 minutes later (average wash cycle) SMS/Email: "Your wash cycle should be finishing up. Head over to grab your clothes before the rush."
This is a value-add that builds customer loyalty. It shows the laundromat is invested in the customer's time.
Weather-based campaigns
Laundromat traffic correlates with weather. Rainy weekends drive traffic (people who'd normally dry clothes on a line come to the laundromat). Sunny weekdays are slow.
Automation: When weather API shows 3+ days of rain in the forecast → email to WiFi contacts: "Rainy week ahead. Beat the rush — come in Tuesday morning for the shortest wait times. [address + hours]"
Review generation
Laundromats live and die by Google Maps reviews. A laundromat with 4.5 stars and 200 reviews dominates a neighborhood. Most laundromats have 10–20 reviews.
Trigger: Customer's 5th visit (confirmed regular who keeps coming back) Email: "You've been coming to [Laundromat Name] for a while now. If you've had a good experience, we'd really appreciate a Google review. [direct review link]. It helps us a lot."
Targeting reviews at repeat customers (not first-time visitors) ensures you're soliciting from satisfied people. Repeat visitors are, by definition, people who chose to come back.
The reseller opportunity
Why laundromats are underserved
Digital marketing agencies don't pitch laundromats. The ticket size seems too small. The industry seems too unglamorous. The owners aren't on LinkedIn.
That's exactly why it's a wide-open market for WiFi marketing resellers.
There are approximately 30,000 coin laundromats in the United States (Coin Laundry Association 2025). Virtually none of them have WiFi data capture. A reseller who understands the vertical can own a geographic market with minimal competition.
Prospecting
Walk in. Do your laundry. Connect to WiFi (or note the absence of WiFi). Talk to the attendant. Ask who owns the place. Most laundromat owners are investors, not operators — they may own 3–10 locations and hire attendants to run them.
That investor/multi-location ownership pattern is perfect for WiFi marketing resellers. Win the owner, deploy to all their locations.
Pricing for laundromats
Single location: Starter plan ($49/month). Reseller charges $79–$99/month for the managed service.
Multi-location owner (5+ laundromats): Pro plan ($199/month for 5 locations). Reseller charges $49–$79/month per location — $245–$395/month total.
The margins are thin on a per-location basis, but the volume opportunity is real. 50 laundromat locations at $79/month = $3,950/month MRR.
The pitch
"Your customers sit here for an hour every week. They want WiFi. You want their email addresses. Right now, nobody's getting what they want. I set up WiFi systems that give your customers free internet and give you a customer database you've never had. From there, we can promote your wash-dry-fold service, run a loyalty program, and collect Google reviews — all automated."
FAQ
Do laundromat customers actually provide their email for WiFi? Yes. 70–85% opt-in rates in laundromats because dwell time is long and WiFi demand is high. Customers are willing to exchange an email for 45–90 minutes of internet access.
What if the laundromat doesn't have WiFi at all? That's an even better opportunity. Help the owner set up internet service ($50–$100/month) and a compatible AP ($100–$200 one-time), then layer the captive portal on top. You're providing a complete solution, not just software.
Can this work for unattended laundromats? Absolutely. WiFi marketing is fully automated — no staff involvement required. The portal captures data 24/7. Automations run without human intervention. For unattended locations, WiFi marketing might be the only customer engagement tool available.
How do I handle multiple languages? Laundromats in diverse neighborhoods serve customers who speak different languages. MyWiFi supports 30+ captive portal languages. The portal can detect the device language setting and display accordingly.
Is the customer data secure? All data is stored on AWS infrastructure with SSL encryption. The platform is GDPR and CCPA compliant. Customers opt in voluntarily and can unsubscribe from any communication.
Laundromat resellers can start a free trial and deploy WiFi data capture at a single location in under an hour. The WDF promotion alone pays for the platform within the first month.