Hourly Consulting Rate Calculator
Determine what you need to charge to meet your financial goals
Calculation Summary
How to Set Your Hourly Consulting Rate
Transitioning from a salaried role to independent consulting requires a shift in how you view your time. Unlike an employee, a consultant must cover their own overhead, taxes, and non-billable time (like marketing and bookkeeping).
The Formula for Success
To find your ideal rate, you must first determine your "Total Revenue Requirement." This is the sum of your desired personal income and your annual business operating costs. Once you have that number, divide it by the total number of hours you realistically expect to bill in a year.
- Total Revenue Required: Desired Salary + Business Expenses.
- Workable Weeks: 52 weeks – Vacation/Sick weeks.
- Annual Billable Hours: Workable Weeks × Billable Hours per Week.
- Hourly Rate: Total Revenue Required / Annual Billable Hours.
Realistic Example
If you want to earn $90,000 a year and have $10,000 in annual expenses (laptops, health insurance, coworking space), your target revenue is $100,000.
If you take 4 weeks off per year, you have 48 weeks to work. If you spend 20 hours a week on actual client projects (billable) and the rest on admin/sales (non-billable), your annual billable hours are 960 hours.
$100,000 ÷ 960 hours = $104.17 per hour.
Factors to Consider
Don't forget that as a self-employed individual, you are responsible for the employer's portion of taxes (like FICA in the US). Many experts recommend adding a 25-30% buffer to your calculated rate to account for income tax and retirement savings.