Freelance Pricing Calculator
Set sustainable freelance prices using income goals and effort. Test margins, fees, and buffers instantly. Quote smarter projects with transparent numbers and stronger confidence.
Calculator Inputs
The page uses one main column overall. Inside the calculator, fields stack into three columns on large screens, two on medium screens, and one on mobile.
Formula Used
This calculator combines annual income planning with project-based quoting. It first builds a sustainable hourly rate, then turns that rate into a project quote.
1) Annual billable hours
Annual Billable Hours = Billable Hours/Week × Working Weeks/Year × Utilization %
2) Revenue need before quoting
Base Revenue Need = Target Income + Overhead Cost
Overhead Cost = Target Income × Overhead %
Tax Reserve = Base Revenue Need × Tax Reserve %
Profit Buffer = Base Revenue Need × Profit Margin %
3) Recommended hourly rate
Required Annual Revenue = Base Revenue Need + Tax Reserve + Profit Buffer
Recommended Hourly = Required Annual Revenue ÷ Annual Billable Hours ÷ (1 - Platform Fee %)
4) Project fee build-up
Adjusted Labor Hours = (Project Hours + Revision Hours + Meeting Hours) × Complexity Multiplier
Base Labor Fee = Adjusted Labor Hours × Recommended Hourly
5) Final quote
Final Quote = Base Labor Fee + Contingency + Rush + Value Premium + Fixed Expenses + Platform Fee - Discount
How to Use This Calculator
- Select your currency and enter the annual income you want your freelance business to support.
- Add overhead, tax reserve, and profit margin to create a realistic pricing base.
- Estimate how many hours you can truly bill each week and how many weeks you work yearly.
- Enter project delivery hours, revision hours, and meeting time.
- Adjust complexity, rush, value premium, platform fee, discount, contingency, and fixed costs.
- Click Calculate Pricing to see your hourly rate, quote, retainer suggestion, and pricing range.
- Use the CSV and PDF buttons to export the results for proposals or internal planning.
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Target Income | Billable Hours/Week | Project Hours | Complexity | Recommended Hourly | Final Quote |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter Website | $45,000 | 20 | 18 | 1.00 | $41.75 | $1,041.30 |
| Brand Identity Project | $60,000 | 25 | 28 | 1.20 | $58.60 | $2,566.05 |
| Marketing Retainer | $80,000 | 28 | 12 | 1.10 | $71.45 | $1,210.58 |
These sample values are illustrative and help show how different scope and income goals affect your recommended pricing.
Frequently Asked Questions
1) Why does the calculator use annual income first?
Freelancers often underprice by starting from project hours only. Income-first pricing anchors your quote to real sustainability, overhead, taxes, and a healthier business model.
2) What is utilization percentage?
Utilization is the share of your working time that becomes billable. Admin, sales, learning, and unpaid revisions reduce it, so realistic utilization protects your true hourly rate.
3) Should I always charge a rush fee?
Rush fees are useful when deadlines compress your schedule, create overtime, or force reprioritization. They compensate for disruption and opportunity cost, not just speed.
4) What does the value premium mean?
A value premium reflects business impact. If your work drives revenue, saves time, or improves conversions, the price can exceed a simple hours-based quote.
5) Why include contingency?
Contingency absorbs small surprises like extra coordination, clarifications, or minor scope drift. It keeps quotes more stable and reduces the need for awkward renegotiation later.
6) Is discount percentage applied too late?
The calculator discounts near the end so you can see the full project value first. That makes negotiation clearer and prevents accidental underpricing.
7) Can I use this for retainers?
Yes. Enter expected monthly retainer hours and the tool estimates a recurring monthly price using your recommended hourly rate, not a guessed package number.
8) How often should I update my pricing inputs?
Review them when costs rise, your demand improves, your process changes, or your utilization shifts. Quarterly reviews usually keep pricing aligned with business reality.