# How to Calculate Your True Hourly Rate as a Freelancer and Why It Matters

You know what a freelancer’s favorite question is? “What’s your hourly rate?”

You probably answer without thinking: “$75 an hour.”

But that’s a lie. A beautiful, comforting lie.

Your true hourly rate is probably closer to $42.50. And that’s if you’re doing well.

Because here’s what nobody tells you: when you quote a client “$75/hour,” you’re not actually charging that rate. You’re pricing in your mistakes, your overruns, your unpaid overtime, and your administrative chaos.

## The Hidden Costs of Freelancing

Let me show you the math. Here’s what your “$75” rate actually covers:

**What you think you’re charging:** $75/hour

**What’s really happening:**
– Billable work: $75/hour
– Project management: $15/hour
– Client communication: $10/hour
– Sales and marketing: $8/hour
– Admin and paperwork: $12/hour
– Taxes (25% of income): $18.75/hour
– Benefits and insurance: $6/hour
– Overhead and software: $4/hour

**Total real cost:** $148.75/hour

That means when you quote “$75,” you’re underpricing yourself by nearly half. You’re working for free to cover all the stuff nobody talks about.

## The Three Numbers You Must Know

Before you can calculate your true rate, you need three metrics:

### 1. Your Annual Target Income

What do you want to make this year?

Let’s say you want $100,000 after taxes.

### 2. Your Billable Hours

How many hours can you actually charge for?

Most freelancers overestimate this. You think you can work 2,000 hours. You can’t. Here’s the reality:

– 52 weeks × 40 hours = 2,080 hours
– Vacation: 2 weeks × 40 = 80 hours
– Sick days: 1 week × 40 = 40 hours
– Administrative tasks: 10 hours/week × 52 = 520 hours
– Marketing and sales: 5 hours/week × 52 = 260 hours
– Professional development: 5 hours/week × 52 = 260 hours

**Total non-billable:** 1,160 hours

**Total billable available:** 920 hours

That’s your ceiling. Not 1,500 hours. Not 1,800 hours. 920 hours.

### 3. Your Tax Rate

If you’re in the 25% bracket, your effective tax rate might be closer to 30-35% when you include self-employment tax, state tax, and estimated tax payments.

## The True Rate Formula

Here’s the math:

**Target income after tax:** $100,000

**Tax needed (at 30%):** $42,857

**Gross income needed:** $142,857

**Billable hours available:** 920

**True hourly rate:** $155/hour

**Billable rate needed:** $155 ÷ 0.7 = $221/hour

So when you quote a client “$100/hour,” you’re actually underpricing yourself by $121. That’s how you end up working 60-hour weeks and wondering where all your money went.

## Why Your Rate Matters More Than You Think

Here’s the brutal truth: your rate determines everything.

**At $50/hour:**
– You can’t afford quality software
– You’re always stressed about money
– You take projects you don’t want
– You work weekends
– You burn out in 18 months

**At $150/hour:**
– You can hire help when needed
– You have a cash reserve
– You’re selective about projects
– You take Fridays off
– You build a sustainable business

**At $300/hour:**
– You have mentors and advisors
– You invest in growth
– You create systems that work without you
– You work 30-40 hours a week max
– You build something valuable

## How to Calculate Your Real Rate (Step by Step)

### Step 1: Track Your Time for One Week

For one week, track every hour with a tool like Toggl, Harvest, or even a paper notebook.

You’ll be surprised how much time you spend on non-billable work.

### Step 2: Calculate Your Annual Billable Hours

Take your weekly tracking and multiply by 50 (you won’t work every week of the year).

### Step 3: Calculate Your Tax Rate

Use a self-employment tax calculator. Most freelancers are surprised to find their effective tax rate is 30-35%.

### Step 4: Calculate Your True Rate

**True Rate = (Target Income ÷ Billable Hours) ÷ (1 – Tax Rate)**

### Step 5: Build in Your Overhead

Add your software costs, insurance, home office expenses, and professional development. This becomes your “minimum billable rate.”

## The “What If” Scenarios

Let’s run some numbers:

**Scenario A: You charge $75/hour and work 1,500 hours**
– Gross: $112,500
– Tax (30%): $33,750
– Net: $78,750

**Scenario B: You charge $150/hour and work 800 hours**
– Gross: $120,000
– Tax (30%): $36,000
– Net: $84,000

**Scenario C: You charge $200/hour and work 600 hours**
– Gross: $120,000
– Tax (30%): $36,000
– Net: $84,000

All three scenarios make $84,000 after tax. But Scenario B and C give you:
– More free time
– Better projects
– Lower stress
– Higher quality work

## How to Raise Your Rates Without Losing Clients

This is the scary part. Raising your rates feels like you’re pricing yourself out of the market.

Here’s how to do it without losing work:

### 1. The 20% Gradual Increase

When you raise rates, do it by 20% at a time. Give clients 30 days notice. Explain that this reflects your increased expertise and value.

### 2. The Value-Based Pricing

Stop selling by the hour. Start selling by results.

Instead of “$100/hour for a website,” say “$5,000 for a website that generates leads.”

You’re not selling time. You’re selling outcomes.

### 3. The Package Deal

Create packages with clear deliverables and prices. This makes your rate less obvious and more defensible.

“Website Design Package: $3,500”
vs
“$100/hour for website development”

### 4. The “Premium” Client Strategy

Identify your dream clients. The ones who pay well, respect your time, and are a joy to work with.

Then, price your services for *them*, not for everyone else.

## The Bottom Line

Your hourly rate isn’t just a number. It’s a statement about your worth.

When you underprice yourself, you’re telling the world you’re not worth more.

When you price yourself appropriately, you’re telling the world you’re an expert who delivers exceptional value.

So calculate your true rate. Use it. And never apologize for it.

Because your time is valuable. And you’re a professional. That’s not opinion. That’s math.

## Quick Calculation Worksheet

– Target annual income: $_________
– Tax rate (%): ________
– Available billable hours: ________
– True hourly rate: $_________
– Minimum billable rate: $_________

Use this worksheet to calculate your numbers. Then use them to price your services confidently.