Freelance Rate Calculator
Calculate a practical freelance hourly, daily, project, and retainer rate from your income goal, taxes, expenses, available billable time, and savings buffer.
Business expenses entered: the calculator adds your monthly total across a full year before it works out the minimum revenue and rate needed.
Your minimum freelance pricing benchmark
This result is the revenue rate needed to cover the assumptions you entered. Review it alongside your market, scope, niche expertise, payment risk, and client outcomes before quoting.
Where the annual revenue goes
Use your rate as a floor
A higher-value, specialist, urgent, complex, or risky job may need a rate above this number. A low rate can make it difficult to cover non-billable work and unexpected business costs.
Use the rate to protect your financial baseline. Then consider your portfolio, reputation, demand, speed, specialist knowledge, client value, payment terms, and scope risk when choosing the final quote.
Turn your hourly rate into a quote
Price recurring monthly work
See how a different income goal and availability could affect the required hourly rate while keeping your other assumptions the same.
Saved figures are kept only in this browser. Select Load to restore a previous rate plan.
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Quick answer: what should a freelance rate include?
A freelance rate should cover more than the personal income you want to take home. It also needs to account for time you cannot invoice, business expenses, taxes, annual leave, slower periods, client acquisition, and a buffer for future needs. This is why a rate that feels high compared with an employee hourly wage can still be a sensible starting point for independent work.
The Freelance Rate Calculator starts with your personal income target. It adds your chosen tax allowance, recurring business costs, and a profit or savings buffer. It then divides the revenue needed by your estimated billable hours. The result is a rate baseline: the amount you need to earn for each billable hour under the assumptions you have selected.
That baseline is not necessarily the final number you quote a client. A final quote can be higher because a project has a tight deadline, vague scope, specialist responsibility, payment risk, difficult stakeholders, or high commercial value. The calculator helps you avoid one common mistake: charging a rate that looks acceptable per hour but does not cover all the time and cost required to run your business.
How to calculate a realistic freelance hourly rate
The core calculation is simple in principle. Start with the income you want to keep, add estimated taxes, add annual operating costs, and add a buffer. That gives you a target revenue amount. Next, estimate your annual working hours and reduce that number by the percentage of time you cannot bill. Examples include writing proposals, sending invoices, client calls, bookkeeping, marketing, learning, portfolio work, and unpaid revisions.
For example, a freelancer may work 40 hours per week for 48 weeks, which is 1,920 working hours. With 20% non-billable time, only around 1,536 hours are available to invoice. Dividing annual revenue by 1,536 creates a different rate from dividing by the full 1,920. The difference can be large, which is why non-billable time is one of the most important fields in the calculator.
You should also use realistic expenses. Software subscriptions, advertising, equipment, accounting, internet, insurance, memberships, coworking, training, and professional services may be predictable costs of operating as a freelancer. Leaving them out can make a rate look competitive while quietly reducing your personal income.
Hourly, project, and retainer pricing each solve a different problem
Hourly pricing is useful when the scope is unclear, support is ongoing, or the work may change frequently. It makes time visible, but some clients focus too heavily on the number of hours rather than the outcome. A project quote is useful when you can define the deliverables, boundaries, approval process, and revision limits. It lets you package the result rather than selling each hour separately.
A monthly retainer is useful for recurring work where a client commits to a defined capacity or service level. It can provide a more predictable revenue base for the freelancer and easier planning for the client. A small commitment discount can make sense when the work reduces your sales effort and scheduling uncertainty, but only after you know that the discounted amount still clears your financial baseline.
The project and retainer sections in this calculator use your hourly baseline as a starting point. They do not measure the commercial value of a project, so you may choose a higher figure when the work drives revenue, saves substantial client time, reduces business risk, or needs rare expertise.
Use a freelance rate as a floor, then test it against your market
A personal rate calculation answers, โWhat do I need to charge for this work to support my goals and costs?โ Market research answers, โWhat are suitable clients willing to pay for this type of result?โ Both questions matter. You need a floor that keeps the business sustainable, but you also need to understand the expectations of your industry, skill level, portfolio, location, client segment, and niche.
Compare your rate with recent work, not only online averages. Review the actual time you spent, the revision rounds, the admin involved, the payment speed, and the final benefit for the client. That review helps you improve future estimates. It may show that a certain project type deserves a higher base price, tighter scope boundaries, an upfront deposit, or a faster turnaround charge.
Financial planning works best when you revisit the assumptions. The Salary to Hourly Calculator can help compare employee income with an hourly figure, while the Compound Interest Calculator can help model a longer-term savings goal. For percentage changes, use the Percentage Calculator to plan a rate increase before your next client conversation.
Practical ways to protect your freelance income
Define scope before pricing
Write down deliverables, meetings, deadlines, feedback rounds, and what counts as out-of-scope work before you send a quote.
Separate taxes from spendable income
Treat the tax allowance in your rate as money set aside for obligations, not as extra personal income to spend.
Keep a buffer for uneven work
Freelance income can change across months. A savings buffer can make holidays, delayed payments, and quieter periods less disruptive.
Review actual time after delivery
Compare your initial project estimate with the time actually spent, then use the lessons to improve future pricing.
Freelance Rate Calculator FAQs
How do I calculate my freelance hourly rate?
Start with the annual take-home income you want, then add estimated taxes, annual business expenses, and a profit or savings buffer. Divide that total by your realistic billable hours for the year, not by every hour you plan to work. This calculator does that calculation for you and also shows a daily, weekly, monthly, project, and retainer figure.
What counts as non-billable time for freelancers?
Non-billable time is work you do that cannot be charged directly to a client. It can include proposals, sales calls, bookkeeping, marketing, meetings, invoicing, learning, planning, and unpaid revisions. Ignoring it makes the hourly rate look lower than it needs to be, because the same income goal must be earned in fewer chargeable hours.
How much should a freelancer set aside for taxes?
The right percentage depends on country, income, deductions, and legal structure. This calculator treats the tax figure as a planning input rather than tax advice. Use a rate that reflects your expected income tax and self-employment obligations, then confirm the amount with current local guidance or a qualified tax professional.
Why is my freelance rate higher than my salary-equivalent hourly pay?
An employee wage usually does not include unpaid sales time, business software, equipment, insurance, accounting, leave, unpaid holidays, retirement savings, and the risk of inconsistent work. A freelance rate needs to cover those costs as well as the income you want to keep. That is why using only an old salary divided by work hours can underprice freelance work.
Should I charge hourly, per project, or on a retainer?
Hourly pricing can suit uncertain scopes or ongoing support. A project quote works well when deliverables and boundaries are clear. A retainer can create predictable monthly income for recurring work. Use this calculator's project and retainer outputs as a baseline, then adjust for scope risk, client value, urgency, specialist experience, and the work you are responsible for.
How does a profit buffer help freelancers?
A profit buffer is money above immediate income, tax, and operating costs. It can support slower months, annual leave, retirement saving, equipment replacement, professional development, emergency reserves, or business growth. It is not a guarantee of profit, but including it in the rate stops every client payment from being fully consumed by current costs.
How often should I review my freelance rates?
Review them at least once a year and whenever your skills, demand, expenses, tax position, niche, responsibilities, or client outcomes change. You can also review after a major project to see whether your original hour estimate was realistic. A rate calculator provides a financial floor; market research and past project outcomes help you set the final price.
Is this freelance rate calculator financial or tax advice?
No. It is a planning tool that uses the inputs you choose. It does not account for every tax rule, benefit, legal requirement, exchange rate, client acquisition cost, or personal financial situation. Check contracts, taxes, insurance, and compliance requirements with qualified local professionals before making decisions.
This calculator is for educational purposes only. It is not financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making financial decisions.