Calculate exactly what you need to charge as a freelancer or consultant to hit your income goals — after taxes, expenses, and all the unpaid hours most freelancers forget to count. No more undercharging.
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Enter your income goal and work details above.
Freelance pricing done correctly.
Most freelancers calculate rates based on 40 hours/week, but they only bill 20–30. Admin, proposals, revisions, marketing, and invoicing eat 30–50% of work hours. If you don't factor this into your rate, you're effectively working half your hours for free. This calculator accounts for that correctly.
Unlike employees who have taxes withheld automatically, freelancers receive gross income and must set aside taxes manually. Forgetting this is the #1 financial mistake new freelancers make — facing a large tax bill with no savings to cover it. Set aside 25–30% of every invoice immediately.
The calculated rate is your absolute minimum — what you need to survive. Your market rate should be higher based on experience, specialization, and demonstrated value. Research what others in your niche charge. Most freelancers undercharge by 30–50%.
Freelance pricing answered honestly.
Formula: (Annual income goal + Annual expenses) ÷ Annual billable hours = pre-tax rate. Then gross up for taxes: rate ÷ (1 - tax rate). Finally, add a profit margin. This calculator handles all of this automatically. The result is the minimum you must charge — market rates should be higher based on your expertise.
It depends entirely on your income goal and hours. At 25 billable hours/week, 46 weeks/year: $50/hr = $57,500 gross. After 30% taxes and $300/mo expenses, net take-home is approximately $36,200. Whether that's "good" depends on your cost of living and goals. Use this calculator to check if your desired rate actually produces the net income you need.
Project-based pricing is almost always better for experienced freelancers. Benefits: rewards your efficiency, eliminates scope creep disputes, and aligns payment with value delivered rather than time. Use hourly for unpredictable-scope work only. Start hourly to understand your time investment, then transition to project pricing.
Easiest with new clients (just charge your new rate). For existing clients: give 30–60 days notice, frame as market rate alignment, offer a transition period. Build your case with documented value delivered. Specializing further is the fastest way to justify higher rates — narrow niche + rare skill combination commands premium pricing with almost no pushback.
Price and grow your freelance business.
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