Why Most Freelancers Underprice
The classic mistake: take your previous W-2 salary, divide by 2,000 hours (40 hours × 50 weeks), and quote that hourly. Salary $80,000 → quote $40/hour. Sounds reasonable. Two years later you realize you're earning less than you did at the day job, working more, with no benefits.
The math missed three things: self-employment tax (15.3% on top of income tax in the US), business expenses (software, equipment, insurance, accountant, training), and non-billable time (sales, admin, learning, scoping — typically 30-50% of working hours). Doing the math right means charging significantly more than the naive salary-divided-by-hours number.
The Microapp Freelance Rate Calculator handles all three corrections. Plug in your numbers and get the rate you ACTUALLY need to charge.
• Total revenue needed: ($75,000 + $5,000) ÷ (1 − 0.30) = $114,286
• Billable hours: 50 weeks × 40 × 0.60 = 1,200 hours/year
• Required hourly rate: $114,286 / 1,200 = $95/hour (rounded)
Compare to the naive math: $75,000 / 2,000 = $37.50/hour. Charging $37.50 = earning poverty wages after tax and expenses.
The Three Corrections, Explained
1. Self-Employment Tax
In the US, employees pay 7.65% FICA tax (Social Security + Medicare); employers pay another 7.65% on the employee's behalf — invisible to the employee. As a freelancer, you pay both halves: 15.3% self-employment tax, on top of regular income tax.
So if you're targeting a 22% federal income tax bracket + 5% state tax + 15.3% SE tax = ~42% combined marginal rate. Your effective rate (averaged across income) is lower because of standard deductions and lower brackets, but freelancers should plan for at least 25-30% combined effective tax.
2. Business Expenses
Real freelance expenses for knowledge work, annual:
| Category | Range |
|---|---|
| Software (Adobe, Figma, code editors, productivity) | $1,000-3,000 |
| Hardware amortized (laptop replaced every 3 yrs, monitor, chair) | $500-1,500 |
| Professional liability + general liability insurance | $1,000-3,000 |
| Accountant or bookkeeping software | $500-2,000 |
| Training, courses, conferences | $500-3,000 |
| Health insurance (if not covered by spouse) | $5,000-20,000+ |
| Retirement contribution headroom (Solo 401k, SEP-IRA) | +$5,000-20,000 |
| Marketing / website / domain | $200-1,000 |
Knowledge-work freelancers typically have $5,000-15,000/year in business expenses excluding health insurance. With health insurance, that doubles or triples. Many freelancers significantly underestimate this category.
3. Non-Billable Time
Working 40 hours doesn't mean billing 40 hours. Realistic time allocation for solo consultants:
| Activity | Hours/week |
|---|---|
| Billable client work | 20-28 |
| Sales, prospecting, scoping | 4-8 |
| Admin (invoicing, taxes, planning) | 2-4 |
| Learning, skill development | 2-4 |
| Marketing, content, networking | 2-4 |
50-70% billable is the realistic range. Below 50% means you're either still building the business (early-career) or have inefficient sales/admin. Above 75% usually means you're skipping skill development and burning out.
The Salary × 2.5 Rule
A faster heuristic: take your previous W-2 salary, multiply by 2.5, divide by 2,000 hours = your minimum hourly. Example: $80,000 salary → $200,000 / 2,000 = $100/hour.
The 2.5x accounts for: ~1.3x for the SE tax + lost benefits, × ~1.7-2x for the non-billable hours. The product (1.3 × 1.85 ≈ 2.4-2.5) shakes out to that 2.5 multiplier.
The rule is approximately right. The Microapp calculator gives a more precise number based on your specific situation, but if you don't have time to enter all the inputs, the salary × 2.5 rule is a defensible quick estimate.
What to Do With the Number
This is your floor. The hourly rate from the calculator is what you need to charge to hit your target take-home. Premium positioning, faster turnaround, specialized expertise, or scarce skills should command 30-100% above this floor.
Hourly vs project pricing. Many experienced freelancers move away from hourly to project or value-based pricing — clients prefer cost certainty, and freelancers often capture more value when their efficiency improvements don't reduce their pay. Use the hourly number as your INTERNAL benchmark for whether a project price is fair, even when you quote the project a flat fee.
Negotiation framing. When a client pushes back on your rate, you have two responses: (1) reduce scope (less work for less money, same effective rate), or (2) explain that your rate accounts for tax + expenses + non-billable time, which is what makes you a sustainable provider. Race-to-the-bottom freelancers who charge less either burn out or quietly raise rates after they get experience.
Common Pitfalls
Forgetting health insurance. US freelancers without spouse-provided coverage face $5-25k/year in health insurance. This MUST be in business expenses if it's not covered separately, or your take-home target will fall short.
Ignoring retirement. A "$75k take-home" target without retirement contributions is poverty for old-you. Solo 401k allows up to ~$66,000/year of contributions in 2024 — building this into your business expenses is the path to actually retiring.
Pricing per project without the rate sanity check. Quoting a $5,000 project that ends up taking 80 hours = $62.50/hour. If your minimum is $100, you lost money. Always check project quotes against your hourly floor.
Race-to-the-bottom from platforms. Upwork/Fiverr/etc. push rates down. If your rate from this calculator is $100/hour and Upwork buyers expect $25, you either need to find different clients or work on a different platform. Don't lower your rate to match unsustainable benchmarks.
Educational Tool — Not Tax Advice
Tax rates are estimates only. Actual self-employment taxes vary by state, income level, deductions, and entity structure (sole prop vs LLC vs S-corp). Consult a CPA familiar with self-employed taxation for your specific situation — the right entity structure alone can save thousands annually.
Related Tools
For converting an annual salary to an equivalent hourly rate (the W-2-style calculation, useful for comparison), use the Salary to Hourly calculator. For business break-even analysis (when does your freelance practice cover its overhead?), see the Break-Even Calculator. For tracking your overall financial picture beyond just hourly pricing, the Net Worth Calculator is the right place.