Billable Rate Calculator

Set your freelance rates with confidence and clarity. Add taxes, overhead, tools, insurance, and benefits. Convert billable hours into a sustainable hourly price now.

Enter your targets and assumptions

Example: $, €, £, ₹
Your desired personal pay.
Software, hardware, rent, marketing.
Insurance, training, retirement, etc.
Estimate your effective tax rate.
Buffer for growth and uncertainty.
Excludes holidays and vacations.
Total hours you can work weekly.
Percent of hours actually billable.
Used to compute your day rate.
Estimate total hours for a project.
Rounding always rounds up.
Prevents pricing below a minimum.
Reset

Formula used

This calculator estimates a sustainable hourly rate using your annual targets and realistic billable time.

  1. Annual cost base = income goal + overhead + benefits
  2. Taxes = annual cost base × tax rate
  3. Annual before profit = annual cost base + taxes
  4. Billable hours/year = (weeks/year × work hours/week) × utilization
  5. Hourly rate = (annual before profit ÷ billable hours/year) × (1 + profit margin)

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter your annual income goal and yearly overhead.
  2. Add benefits you want to fund through work.
  3. Set an effective tax rate and profit margin.
  4. Choose weeks, hours, and a realistic utilization percent.
  5. Click Calculate to see hourly, daily, and project pricing.
  6. Download CSV or PDF after you compute results.

Example data table

Scenario Income goal Overhead Tax Utilization Result (hourly)
Solo consultant ₹1,500,000 ₹250,000 15% 65% Calculated after submit
High overhead ₹1,200,000 ₹500,000 18% 60% Varies with profit setting
Part-time freelance ₹800,000 ₹150,000 12% 45% Higher due to fewer billables

Tip: Utilization is the most common rate-killer. Keep it realistic.

FAQs

1) What does utilization mean?

Utilization is the percent of your work time you can actually invoice. Meetings, proposals, admin, learning, and breaks reduce billable time, so utilization is usually below 80%.

2) Why include a profit margin?

Profit is a buffer for slow months, equipment replacement, risk, and business growth. Without profit, small surprises can force underpricing or unpaid overtime.

3) Should taxes be added to the rate?

If you pay taxes from your business revenue, including an effective tax rate helps avoid a year-end shortfall. Use a conservative estimate if your taxes vary.

4) How do I estimate overhead?

List recurring tools, subscriptions, internet, phone, rent, travel, accounting, hardware, and marketing. Use last year’s totals if available, then add a buffer for upgrades.

5) What hourly floor should I set?

A floor is useful when your inputs are uncertain. Set it to the minimum you will accept after costs, or to match your market positioning and opportunity cost.

6) How should I quote projects?

Start with estimated hours times the recommended rate, then add a contingency if scope may change. For fixed bids, define deliverables clearly and limit revisions.

7) Why does part-time work increase the hourly rate?

With fewer billable hours, the same annual targets must be covered by less time. Lower utilization or fewer weeks worked usually pushes the hourly rate upward.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.