Freelance Day Rate Calculator
Calculate exactly what you need to charge to meet your financial goals.
How to Calculate Your Day Rate as a Freelancer
Transitioning from a salaried role to freelancing or contracting requires a fundamental shift in how you view your income. You can't simply divide a salary by 260 working days. To sustain a healthy business, you must account for overheads, taxes, and the reality that you cannot bill every hour of the day.
The Formula for Success
The calculation follows a specific logic to ensure you don't undercharge:
- Step 1: Determine Gross Requirement. Take your desired take-home pay, add your business expenses (software, hardware, insurance), and then adjust for taxes. If you want $75k net and have a 25% tax rate, you actually need to earn much more.
- Step 2: Calculate Working Capacity. Start with 260 potential weekdays. Subtract weekends, public holidays, and your personal vacation/sick leave.
- Step 3: The Utilization Rate. No freelancer is 100% billable. You spend time on invoicing, pitching, and learning. Most successful freelancers aim for a 60-80% utilization rate.
Example Calculation
Imagine you want a $100,000 net salary. You have $10,000 in annual expenses. With a 30% tax rate, your total gross revenue target is approximately $157,142 ($110,000 / 0.70).
If you take 25 days off (vacation/holidays) and spend 20% of your time on admin, you have roughly 188 billable days. Dividing $157,142 by 188 gives you a required day rate of $835.
Why Day Rates Over Hourly Rates?
Many senior professionals prefer day rates because they decouple time from value. It prevents "efficiency punishment," where getting faster at your job results in getting paid less. Day rates also simplify project budgeting for clients and provide more predictable cash flow for the freelancer.