Freelance Daily Rate Calculator

Set rates covering costs, downtime, growth, and savings. Compare annual targets, billable days, and equivalents. Build confident quotes for sustainable independent work every time.

Enter Your Freelance Pricing Inputs

This calculator uses a single-page layout. The input grid becomes three columns on large screens, two on medium screens, and one on mobile devices.

Personal annual pay target before reserves and margins.
Reserve percentage applied to owner pay.
Office, accounting, subscriptions, and admin costs.
Long-term savings contribution built into pricing.
Health cover, liability cover, and benefits costs.
Design, coding, research, and communication tools.
Networking, travel, coworking, and contingency costs.
Extra margin for growth, reinvestment, and resilience.
Protects against delays, discounting, and unpaid invoices.
Use your real average schedule, not an ideal week.
Usually 52 unless your operating year differs.
Planned annual leave that cannot be billed.
Days you expect not to work because of holidays.
Include recovery days and personal interruptions.
Planned non-client work such as proposals and learning.
The share of available time you realistically bill.
Used to translate the day rate into an hourly rate.
Reset

Formula Used

The calculator estimates a day rate by converting your income target, taxes, annual business costs, and pricing buffers into a required annual revenue figure.

Total Potential Days = Working Weeks × Working Days per Week Available Days = Total Potential Days − (Vacation + Holidays + Sick Days + Admin Days) Billable Days = Available Days × Utilization Rate Annual Business Costs = (Overhead + Retirement + Insurance + Tools + Other Monthly Costs) × 12 Base Revenue Need = Desired Owner Pay + Tax Reserve + Annual Business Costs Required Annual Revenue = Base Revenue Need + Bad Debt Reserve + Profit Buffer Recommended Daily Rate = Required Annual Revenue ÷ Billable Days Recommended Hourly Rate = Recommended Daily Rate ÷ Billable Hours per Day

Planned leave and admin time are removed first. Utilization is then applied to the remaining days to reflect unsold capacity, prospecting gaps, and partial booking periods.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Choose your working currency and enter your desired annual owner pay.
  2. Add monthly operating costs, savings goals, insurance, tool expenses, and other recurring business costs.
  3. Enter a tax reserve percentage that reflects your own market and filing structure.
  4. Set profit and bad debt percentages to protect against uncertainty and fund future growth.
  5. Enter your real schedule, leave days, admin time, and expected utilization.
  6. Press the calculate button to show the result directly above the form.
  7. Use the CSV and PDF buttons to save your pricing summary for proposals, internal planning, or negotiations.

Example Data Table

Freelance profile Desired pay Annual costs Billable days Suggested daily rate
Content strategist $70,000 $18,600 142 $771
UX designer $95,000 $28,800 150 $1,041
Data consultant $120,000 $34,200 156 $1,300

FAQs

1. What is a freelance daily rate?

A freelance daily rate is the amount you charge for one billable day of client work. It should cover pay, taxes, business costs, non-billable time, and a margin for risk and growth.

2. Why does utilization matter so much?

Utilization translates available working time into realistic billable time. Even busy freelancers spend time on proposals, revisions, admin, follow-ups, and gaps between projects, so 100% billing is rarely sustainable.

3. Should taxes be part of my quoted rate?

Yes. Taxes are a real cash obligation. Reserving for them inside your pricing helps prevent undercharging and protects cash flow when filing dates or installment payments arrive.

4. What is the difference between floor and recommended rate?

The floor rate covers owner pay, taxes, and operating costs. The recommended rate adds bad debt protection and profit margin, making the quote more resilient and strategically healthier.

5. Can I use this for hourly pricing too?

Yes. The calculator converts the recommended day rate into an hourly rate using your billable hours per day. This helps keep hourly and daily quotes aligned.

6. How many admin days should freelancers allow?

Many freelancers allow at least two admin or business development days each month. The right number depends on proposal volume, reporting needs, learning time, and client management effort.

7. Should I include retirement savings in pricing?

Usually yes. Independent professionals often self-fund retirement and long-term security. Building that contribution into your pricing makes your business model more sustainable over time.

8. Is a higher profit buffer always better?

Not always. A higher buffer can strengthen resilience and reinvestment, but it must still fit your market, value proposition, demand, and competitive positioning. Test it against real client responses.

Related Calculators

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.