schedule Last updated: June 2026 | Based on current market conditions

Freelance Rate Calculator

Find your true minimum hourly rate and avoid the freelancer poverty trap.

Built for independent professionals and specialized consultants:
UI/UX Designers Frontend Developers SEO Consultants Copywriters Business Analysts Full-Stack Engineers Legal Advisors Data Scientists UI/UX Designers Frontend Developers SEO Consultants Copywriters Business Analysts Full-Stack Engineers Legal Advisors Data Scientists

Financial Goals & Parameters

lightbulb Global Freelancer Insight

Freelancers in Global typically need to charge between $65–$120/hour depending on specialization to maintain financial stability due to local living costs and taxes.

Your Required Hourly Rate

$ 0 / hr
Calculating your sustainable rate...

Where does this money go? (Per Hour)

  • Take-home: $0
  • Taxes: $0
  • Expenses: $0
  • Unpaid Time: $0

Minimum Day Rate

$0

Target Gross Revenue

$0

Stop Undercharging Your Clients

Grab our complete Freelance Pricing Cheat Sheet (PDF). No sign-up required. Includes negotiation scripts, exact formulas, and project profitability checklists.

Reality Check: Average Rates in Global

Before finalizing your rate, compare it against current market averages. Remember, these are averages—premium specialists charge significantly more.

Profession Junior Mid-Level Senior
Graphic Designer $35 / hr $60 / hr $95 / hr
Web Developer $50 / hr $90 / hr $160 / hr
UX Designer $70 / hr $120 / hr $200 / hr

The Financial Reality of Independent Work

Pricing your services accurately is the single most critical factor in determining whether your freelance business thrives or fails. One of the most common—and devastating—mistakes beginners make is looking at a traditional corporate salary, dividing it by 2,080 working hours, and setting that as their hourly rate. This mathematical error almost guarantees burnout.

When you transition to independent work, you are no longer just an employee; you are the HR department, the IT support, the marketing team, and the CEO. Your hourly rate must absorb the heavy impact of self-employment taxes, personal health insurance, zero paid time off, and software overhead.

The Utilization Trap: Why You Only Bill 50% of the Time

In a standard 9-to-5 job, you are paid for 40 hours a week, regardless of whether you are actively executing tasks or taking a coffee break. As a freelancer, your reality is fundamentally different. You only generate revenue during billable hours.

You must spend non-billable time hunting for clients, writing proposals, negotiating contracts, managing invoices, and upgrading your skills. Industry benchmarks show that a successful independent professional maintains a Utilization Rate of 50% to 65%. This means if you want to get paid for a full-time income, your hourly rate must be at least double what an employee earns per hour.

Account for the "Invisible" Days Off

Employees get paid sick leave, national holidays, and paid vacations. Freelancers do not. When calculating your annual target income, you must subtract at least 4 to 6 weeks from your available working year. If you catch the flu for a week, your business revenue shouldn't drop to zero—your hourly rate should already have those sick days baked into its premium.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good starting hourly rate?
Starting rates depend heavily on your location and skill set. However, a professional should rarely charge below $35-$50 per hour. Going below this threshold often signals low quality to premium clients and traps you in a cycle of overwork.
How much should I set aside for taxes?
Self-employment taxes are significantly higher than employee taxes because you pay both the employer and employee portions. We strongly recommend setting the tax slider in the calculator to at least 25-30% to be safe.
When is the right time to increase my rates?
You should evaluate your rates every 6 to 12 months. If no client is pushing back on your pricing and you have a 100% proposal acceptance rate, you are leaving money on the table. A healthy rejection rate based on price is around 20-30%.