💼 For Freelancers · Consultants · Creators

Freelance Hourly Rate Calculator

Calculate exactly how much you should charge per hour based on your income goal, business expenses, taxes, and realistic billable hours.

Your Situation

Enter realistic numbers — rate updates instantly

$50k $75k $100k $150k $200k
Average: $4k–$10k for most freelancers
20% 30% 40% 45%
US self-employed typically 25–35%
15 hrs (new) 22 hrs (avg) 30 hrs (busy)
Most freelancers bill 20–25 hrs/week, not 40
48 weeks = 4 weeks vacation, holidays, sick days
10–15% recommended for dry spells, slow months
Your Target Hourly Rate
$85/hr
Based on 1,056 billable hours/year
🎯 Target Income$75,000
📒 Business Expenses$6,000
💸 Taxes (~30%)$34,714
🛡️ Profit Buffer (10%)$11,571
Required Gross Revenue$115,714
📊 Monthly Revenue Target$9,643
💰 Weekly Revenue Target$2,410
⏱️ Billable Hours/Year1,056
🎯 Daily Revenue Goal$482
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How the Freelance Pricing Formula Works

Three inputs + simple math = rate confidence.

01

Your Income Goal

Start with how much you want to earn after business expenses. Be honest with yourself — under-pricing is the #1 reason freelancers burn out.

02

Realistic Hours

Bill 20–25 hrs/week max — the other 15–20 hours go to client work, pitching, invoicing, admin, and learning. Most new freelancers overestimate by 50%.

03

Taxes + Buffer

Self-employed taxes eat 25–35% of gross revenue in the US. Add a 10–15% buffer for dry months so you never panic when clients pause projects.

Average Freelance Rates by Field

2026 industry benchmarks — use these to sanity-check your calculated rate.

Field / RoleBeginner (0–2 yr)Intermediate (2–5 yr)Expert (5+ yr)
Writing / Copywriting$50/hr$80/hr$120–200/hr
Graphic Design$40/hr$75/hr$120–180/hr
UX / UI Design$70/hr$100/hr$150–250/hr
Web Development$60/hr$100/hr$150–250/hr
Software / App Dev$80/hr$140/hr$200–350/hr
SEO / Digital Marketing$50/hr$90/hr$120–200/hr
Video Editing$35/hr$75/hr$120–180/hr
Business Consulting$100/hr$200/hr$300–500+/hr
Legal Consulting$150/hr$250/hr$400–700/hr
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FAQ

The questions every freelancer asks about pricing.

What is a good hourly rate for a freelancer?+

Good hourly rates by field: Writing/copywriting — $50–$120/hr; Graphic/Web design — $60–$150/hr; Web/software development — $80–$250/hr; Digital marketing — $70–$175/hr; Consulting — $150–$500+/hr. Your rate should exceed your target income ÷ (billable hours × 0.7 to account for admin + taxes).

How do I calculate my hourly rate as a freelancer?+

Freelance hourly rate formula: (Desired annual income + Annual business expenses + Taxes + Profit buffer) ÷ (Billable hours/week × Work weeks/year). Billable hours are typically 20–25/week × 48 weeks = 1,000–1,200/year — NOT 40 hours/week × 52. Taxes for US self-employed are roughly 25–35% of gross income. Use our free freelance pricing calculator above for a live estimate.

How many hours should a freelancer bill weekly?+

Most freelancers bill 20–25 hours/week. The other 15–20 hours go to admin, client communication, pitching, invoicing, learning, and unpaid breaks. If you're brand new and doing heavy pitching, 15 billable hours/week is a realistic starting point.

Should I charge by the hour or by the project?+

Value-based pricing (flat project fee or retainer) > hourly for most freelancers once you have experience. Hourly penalizes speed and efficiency. Hourly is fine when: (1) scope is uncertain; (2) client requests are open-ended; (3) you're under $60/hr and new. Move to flat/project pricing once you can reliably estimate scope.

How much should I raise my freelance rates?+

Raise your rates 10–20% every 6–12 months. Best times: (1) When renewing a client; (2) After completing a successful, high-value project; (3) When in demand (70%+ of your week booked). Most freelancers under-price by 20–40% at first. A small rate increase compounds fast over time.

How do I tell clients my rate without losing them?+

Three tactics: (1) Present your rate confidently early in the conversation — no apologies; (2) Frame it as a project investment, not a cost ("$X for Y result — here's the ROI"); (3) Offer 2 or 3 packages (basic, premium, enterprise) — most clients self-select toward the middle. Clients rarely walk solely on price; they walk on perceived value.

Recalculated!