Freelance Hourly Rate Calculator
Calculate exactly what you need to charge per hour to hit your income goals after business expenses.
Your Target Hourly Rate
How to Calculate Your Freelance Rate
Setting the right freelance rate is the difference between running a sustainable business and burning out. Many freelancers make the mistake of simply matching what they earned in a corporate job, forgetting that as a freelancer, you are responsible for your own taxes, insurance, software, and non-billable time.
The Formula for Success
To find your hourly rate, we use the Bottom-Up Method. This involves calculating your total financial needs first, then dividing them by your actual billable capacity:
(Desired Net Income + Business Expenses) / (Weeks Worked × Billable Hours) = Hourly Rate
If you want to take home $60,000 a year and your software, hardware, and marketing cost $5,000, you need a gross revenue of $65,000. If you take 4 weeks off (48 weeks working) and spend 20 hours a week on actual client work (the rest is admin/sales), your rate would be:
$65,000 / (48 × 20) = $67.71 per hour.
Key Factors to Consider
- Billable vs. Non-Billable: You cannot bill 40 hours a week. Between invoicing, prospecting, and learning, most freelancers only bill 20-30 hours per week.
- The Tax Buffer: Depending on your region, you should likely add 20-30% on top of your net goal to cover self-employment taxes.
- The "Hidden" Costs: Don't forget health insurance, retirement contributions, and your laptop replacement fund.
When to Increase Your Rate
If you are consistently booked at 80% of your capacity, it is time to raise your rates. Most senior freelancers increase their rates by 10-15% annually to account for increased expertise and inflation.