How to Charge What You're Worth
You've been freelancing for a year. You're good at what you do. But you're still charging $50/hour.
Meanwhile, someone with half your skills charges $150/hour. What's the difference? They know something you don't.
Here's the truth about pricing.
💰 The Pricing Paradox
The more you charge, the easier clients are to work with.
Seriously. Clients who pay $25/hour argue about every line item. Clients who pay $150/hour trust your expertise and let you work.
Here's why: price is a signal. Low price = amateur, desperate, or inexperienced. High price = expert, confident, in demand.
🧠 The Psychology of Value
Clients don't pay for your time. They pay for the result you deliver.
A logo that takes you 2 hours but increases their revenue by $50,000 is worth $5,000+. Not $200 (2 hours × $100/hour).
How to Frame Your Value
- Before: "I charge $100/hour for web design."
- After: "My website redesigns typically increase client conversion by 20-30%. For a business doing $500K/year, that's $100K+ in additional revenue. My fee is $8,000."
📈 When to Raise Your Rates
Raise your rates when:
- You're booked 2+ weeks in advance
- Clients say "yes" immediately (you're too cheap)
- You haven't raised rates in 12+ months
- You've added new skills or certifications
- You have 3+ testimonials or case studies
- Your cost of living increased
- You're doing the same work faster (you've gotten better)
🎯 How to Actually Raise Your Rates
Method 1: New Clients Only
Keep existing clients at their current rate. All new clients get the new rate. After 3-6 months, raise existing clients with a polite notice.
Method 2: The "Rate Increase" Email
Method 3: Project-Based Pricing
Stop charging hourly. Charge per project. This removes the "time = money" equation and focuses on value.
🔥 Common Pricing Mistakes
- Charging what you're "worth." Your emotional value ≠ market value. Charge what the market will pay.
- Undercharging to "get experience." Cheap clients are the worst. They scope creep, pay late, and demand the most.
- Not including revisions. "Unlimited revisions" is a trap. Include 2-3 rounds. Charge for extras.
- Quoting before understanding scope. "How much for a website?" is like asking "How much for a car?" Get requirements first.
- Discounting for "exposure." Exposure doesn't pay rent. Ever.
🧮 Calculate Your Real Rate
Use our free Hourly Rate Calculator to figure out what you should actually charge:
- Enter your desired annual income
- Add your business expenses
- Factor in taxes
- Enter realistic billable hours
- Get your minimum rate
🎯 The Bottom Line
Most freelancers undercharge by 30-50%. Don't be most freelancers.
Your rate is a signal. It tells clients: - How experienced you are - How confident you are - How much demand you have - Whether you're a commodity or an expert
Charge properly. Deliver value. Sleep better.
Built by a freelancer who used to charge $25/hour and now charges $150/hour. Open source on GitHub.