Freelance Rate Calculator

Stop guessing what to charge. Enter your expenses, goals, and availability to find the hourly rate you actually need to thrive as a freelancer.

Your Freelance Numbers

Fill in the fields below. We will calculate the hourly rate you need to cover all your costs and reach your income goal.

Income & Taxes

What you want to pay yourself after all costs
Includes federal, state, and SE tax (~25-35% typical)

Annual Business Expenses

Tools, subscriptions, ads, hardware
Annual premium cost
% of desired income to save

Availability

Admin, marketing, invoicing, proposals

How to Set Your Freelance Rate

Your freelance rate is not a guess or a feeling. It is a number derived from hard costs: what you need to live, what it costs to run your business, and how many hours you can realistically bill. Here is the framework this calculator uses:

  1. Start with your desired take-home pay. What annual salary would you need to cover rent, food, savings, and the life you want?
  2. Add business expenses. Software subscriptions, hardware, coworking space, marketing, professional development, and any other tools of the trade.
  3. Add health insurance and retirement. As a freelancer, no employer covers these for you. Budget $4,000-$12,000 per year for health insurance depending on your plan and location.
  4. Gross up for taxes. Self-employment tax alone is 15.3%, and you still owe federal and state income tax. Most freelancers need to set aside 25-35% of gross revenue for all taxes combined.
  5. Divide by billable hours. Not total work hours — billable hours. Admin, marketing, invoicing, and proposal writing are real work, but clients do not pay for them directly. Your billable rate must cover that time too.

Freelance Rate Tips

  • Never quote your bare minimum. Use your comfortable rate (1.2x) as your starting point. The bare minimum leaves zero margin for error, slow months, or scope creep.
  • Raise your rates annually. Costs increase every year. If you do not raise your rate, you are effectively taking a pay cut. Notify existing clients 30-60 days in advance.
  • Track your non-billable time honestly. Most freelancers underestimate admin hours. Track everything for two weeks to get a realistic number.
  • Value-based pricing beats hourly. Once you understand your hourly floor, consider pricing based on the value you deliver. A logo that takes 5 hours but generates $50,000 in brand value is worth more than 5 × your hourly rate.
  • Do not race to the bottom. Competing on price attracts clients who do not value quality. Position yourself on expertise and results instead.
  • Build a 3-month runway. Freelance income is irregular. Having three months of expenses saved lets you say no to bad projects and wait for good ones.
  • Factor in benefits you are losing. A $60,000 salary with employer benefits is equivalent to $85,000-$95,000 in freelance gross revenue once you account for taxes, insurance, retirement, and paid time off.

Common Freelance Rate Mistakes

These mistakes cost freelancers thousands of dollars every year:

  • Forgetting taxes. Your gross rate is not your take-home. A $50/hour freelancer earning $100,000 per year may only keep $55,000-$65,000 after taxes and expenses.
  • Ignoring non-billable time. If you work 40 hours but only bill 25, you need your billable rate to compensate for those 15 unpaid hours.
  • Matching employee salaries. A $75,000 salary is not the same as $75,000 in freelance revenue. Employees get benefits worth $15,000-$30,000 per year that freelancers must fund themselves.
  • Charging the same rate for every client. Enterprise clients with larger budgets and more complex needs should pay premium rates. Small businesses and startups may pay your base rate.
  • Not accounting for vacation and sick days. Employees get 2-4 weeks paid vacation. Freelancers earn zero during time off, so working weeks are fewer than 52.

Frequently Asked Questions