The top 10 neighbors for The Woodhouse Day Spa span six distinct categories — apparel, grocery, dining, fitness, financial, and personal care services — with no single category dominating, which is the defining structural feature of a broad-shape audience.
Roosters, a hair salon and barber shop, leads at 0.88, making it the strongest match and the one neighbor that shares the Services category. From there, the set fans out quickly: The Fresh Market (0.86, general grocery) and Tommy Bahama (0.84, general apparel) follow, then Ruth's Chris Steak House (0.83, casual dining) and Janie and Jack (0.83, children's apparel). CycleBar (0.83, fitness) and Le Creuset (0.83, home goods) round out the upper tier. UBS Group (0.82, banking) is the one financial entity in the top 10 — a cross-kind signal that stands out against the otherwise lifestyle-oriented cluster. Orvis (0.81, sporting goods and outdoor gear) and Saint Laurent (0.81, women's apparel) close the set.
Tallying subcategories across the 10: apparel accounts for three entries (general, children's, women's), with the remainder spread across hair salons, grocery, casual dining, fitness, home goods, banking, and sporting goods — no subcategory repeats more than once. The only neighbor sharing The Woodhouse Day Spa's own subcategory (Beauty Salons and Spas) is absent from the top 10 entirely. What the data shows instead is an audience whose shape is defined by upscale lifestyle consumption across multiple verticals rather than by proximity to other spa brands.
This broad, cross-category pattern suggests the audience is less a beauty-services niche and more a general affluent-lifestyle segment that happens to patronize day spas.