Freelance Hourly Rate Calculator
Determine exactly what you need to charge to meet your financial goals and cover business costs.
To reach your goals, your minimum hourly rate should be:
Breakdown:
Total Annual Business Cost:
Total Billable Hours per Year:
How to Calculate Your Freelance Hourly Rate: A Comprehensive Guide
Transitioning from a traditional 9-to-5 to freelancing often leads to one critical mistake: charging the same hourly rate you earned as an employee. As a freelancer, you are both the employer and the employee. This means you are responsible for taxes, health insurance, equipment, and unbillable administrative time.
The Formula for Freelance Success
Setting your rate isn't about guessing; it's about reverse-engineering your life. Our calculator uses a sophisticated formula to ensure you aren't just "getting by," but actually thriving.
1. Calculating Your Annual Gross Target
Your gross target must include your desired take-home pay, your business overhead, and your tax obligations. If you want to take home $70,000 and have a 25% tax rate, you actually need to earn significantly more before taxes are deducted.
2. Accounting for Overhead
Don't forget the hidden costs of running a business:
- Software subscriptions (Adobe, Slack, Zoom, CRM)
- Hardware upgrades (Laptops, monitors)
- Home office utilities and high-speed internet
- Professional services (Accounting, Legal)
- Health and Disability Insurance
3. Billable vs. Non-Billable Hours
A standard work week is 40 hours, but a freelancer rarely bills 40 hours. You must account for "Administrative Overhead"—time spent on marketing, invoicing, discovery calls, and learning new skills. Most successful freelancers target 20 to 30 billable hours per week.
Target Income: $80,000
Business Expenses: $6,000 ($500/mo)
Taxes (30%): ~$36,800
Total Required Revenue: $122,800
Working 48 weeks at 25 billable hours/week = 1,200 hours.
Resulting Hourly Rate: ~$102.33/hr
Why You Should Review Your Rate Annually
Inflation, increased experience, and rising software costs mean your rate should not stay static. Expert SEO consultants and senior developers typically raise their rates by 5-10% annually to reflect their increased efficiency and value to clients.
Pro Tip: Value-Based Pricing
While an hourly rate is a great baseline, consider value-based pricing for high-impact projects. If your work generates $100k in revenue for a client, charging $5k for 10 hours of work ($500/hr) is often more appropriate than your standard hourly rate.