Freelance Hourly Rate Calculator
Calculate your minimum hourly rate based on income goals, expenses, taxes, and available billable hours. Stop undercharging — know your number.
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How to Calculate Your Freelance Hourly Rate
Setting your freelance rate is one of the most important financial decisions you will make as an independent professional. Charge too little and you will struggle to cover expenses and taxes. Charge too much without justification and you will lose clients. The right rate sits at the intersection of your financial needs, market conditions, and the value you deliver.
This calculator works backward from your desired take-home pay. It adds your business expenses, health insurance costs, and an estimate of your tax liability, then divides by your actual billable hours to arrive at a minimum viable rate. The recommended rate layers on a profit margin to account for slow months, unexpected costs, and business growth.
Why Billable Hours Matter More Than Work Hours
A common mistake new freelancers make is dividing their income goal by 2,080 hours (40 hours times 52 weeks). In reality, you will never bill every hour you work. Client acquisition, proposals, invoicing, bookkeeping, professional development, and admin tasks consume 25-40% of your working time. Most established freelancers report billing 25 to 30 hours per week. Using 40 hours in your calculation virtually guarantees you will underearn.
The Hidden Cost of Self-Employment Taxes
When you are a W-2 employee, your employer pays half of your Social Security and Medicare taxes. As a freelancer, you pay both halves — a combined 15.3% self-employment tax on top of your federal income tax. For someone earning $80,000, that is roughly $11,300 in SE tax alone. Failing to factor this into your rate means you are effectively giving yourself a pay cut compared to equivalent salaried employment. Use our self-employment tax calculator for a detailed breakdown.
Building in a Profit Margin
Your freelance business is not just a job — it is a business. Every viable business needs a profit margin for reinvestment, emergency reserves, and growth. A 10-20% margin on top of your break-even rate gives you breathing room for slow months, client churn, equipment failures, or opportunities like conferences and courses. Without it, one bad month can derail your finances. The recommended rate this calculator provides includes your chosen margin, ensuring you build a sustainable practice rather than just scraping by.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many billable hours should I expect per week?
Most freelancers can realistically bill 25 to 30 hours per week out of a 40-hour work week. The remaining time goes to admin tasks, marketing, invoicing, client communication, professional development, and business operations. New freelancers often overestimate billable time — tracking your hours for a few weeks gives you an accurate baseline.
Should I charge the minimum rate or the recommended rate?
Always aim for the recommended rate or higher. The minimum rate is your break-even — it covers expenses, taxes, and your take-home goal with zero cushion. The recommended rate adds a profit margin that accounts for slow months, unexpected expenses, rate negotiation, and business growth. Think of the minimum as your walk-away number and the recommended rate as your starting ask.
How do I account for taxes in my freelance rate?
As a self-employed individual in the US, you pay both income tax and self-employment tax (15.3% for Social Security and Medicare). This calculator estimates an effective tax burden based on your income level. A common rule of thumb is to set aside 25-30% of gross income for taxes, but your actual rate depends on deductions, filing status, and state taxes.
What expenses should I include in the calculation?
Include all costs required to run your freelance business: software subscriptions, equipment, office space or coworking fees, professional insurance, accounting services, marketing costs, phone and internet, continuing education, and professional memberships. Do not include personal expenses — only costs directly tied to earning freelance income.
How often should I recalculate my freelance rate?
Review your rate at least once a year, ideally at the start of each calendar year when tax rates and insurance premiums change. You should also recalculate when your expenses shift significantly, when you gain specialized skills or certifications, or when market rates in your industry move. Many successful freelancers raise their rates 5-10% annually to keep pace with inflation and growing expertise.
Related Calculators
Self-Employment Tax Calculator
Calculate your SE tax including Social Security, Medicare, and the employer-half deduction.
Profit Margin Calculator
Calculate gross, operating, and net profit margins plus markup equivalents.
1099 vs W-2 Cost Calculator
Compare the total cost of hiring a contractor versus an employee.
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