Setting your freelance rate is one of the most consequential decisions you will make as an independent worker — and most people get it wrong. The most common mistake is not charging too much; it is charging too little. New freelancers routinely underprice their services because they compare their hourly rate to what employees earn without accounting for the dramatically different cost structure of self-employment.
This guide gives you a concrete, math-based framework for calculating the minimum rate you need to charge — and the factors that justify charging more.
Why the Employee Comparison Fails
If you earned $50 per hour as an employee, you might assume $50 per hour is a fair freelance rate. It is not — it is likely far too low. As an employee, your employer covered your half of FICA taxes (7.65%), paid for health insurance, contributed to a retirement plan, provided paid time off, covered equipment and software costs, and handled administrative overhead. As a freelancer, all of those costs come out of your hourly rate.
A rough rule of thumb: your freelance rate should be approximately 1.5 to 2 times your equivalent employee hourly rate just to break even on take-home pay.
The Three Factors That Determine Your Minimum Rate
1. Your income target. Start with the annual take-home income you want — not gross revenue, but the actual amount you want deposited in your personal bank account after taxes and business expenses.
2. Your realistic billable hours. Not all your working hours generate revenue. Time spent on marketing, client communication, invoicing, professional development, and administrative tasks is unbillable. Most freelancers realistically bill 60–75% of the hours they work. If you work 40 hours per week, expect to bill 24–30 hours.
3. Your tax and expense overhead. Self-employment tax (15.3%), federal and state income tax, health insurance premiums, software subscriptions, equipment, professional memberships, and retirement contributions all reduce what actually reaches your pocket from each invoice.
Step-by-Step Rate Calculation
- Decide your desired annual take-home income. Example: $72,000 per year.
- Estimate your effective tax rate. For most freelancers earning $60,000–$100,000, a combined federal, state, and SE tax rate of 28–35% is typical. Using 30% in this example.
- Calculate the gross revenue you need: $72,000 ÷ (1 − 0.30) = $102,857 in gross revenue needed.
- Add annual business expenses. If you spend $6,000 per year on business costs: $102,857 + $6,000 = $108,857 total revenue target.
- Calculate annual billable hours. 30 billable hours per week × 48 working weeks = 1,440 billable hours per year.
- Divide revenue target by billable hours: $108,857 ÷ 1,440 = $75.60 per hour minimum.
What Justifies Charging More
Once you know your floor, consider the factors that allow you to charge above it:
- Specialization: Expertise in a specific niche commands premium rates. A general copywriter charges less than a SaaS copywriter with a proven track record in B2B software.
- Market rates: Research what peers with similar skills and experience charge. Platforms like Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, and freelance communities in your field provide useful benchmarks.
- Client size: Enterprise clients have larger budgets and expect to pay more. Pricing for a Fortune 500 company should differ from pricing for a local small business.
- Urgency and availability: Rush projects and tight deadlines justify surcharges of 25–50%.
- Results, not time: As you build a track record, consider moving toward value-based or project-based pricing rather than hourly rates. If your work generates $100,000 in value for a client, charging $5,000 for a project is a bargain for them regardless of the hours involved.
Common Pricing Mistakes to Avoid
- Quoting based on what you think clients will accept rather than what you need to earn. Underpricing attracts difficult clients and creates resentment.
- Forgetting unpaid time. Every hour of admin, marketing, and client communication reduces your effective hourly rate.
- Not raising rates regularly. Inflation, growing expertise, and increasing demand all justify annual rate increases of 5–15%.
- Discounting to win work. Discounting sets a precedent. Better to lose a client at your full rate than to train a client to expect discounts.
Your freelance rate is not just a number — it is a statement about the value of your work and the sustainability of your business. Take the time to calculate it properly, charge it confidently, and revisit it regularly as your skills and market position evolve.