Freelancing in the UK: Tax, Rates and Operating Models

How to Set Freelance Rates UK — Pricing Guide for Self-Employed Workers

How to calculate and set your freelance rates in the UK — hourly, daily, and project rates, what to charge, pricing strategies, and common mistakes.

Self-employment tax and business information is based on current HMRC rules. This is not tax or accounting advice. Consider consulting a qualified accountant for your specific circumstances.

Start here: Freelancing Hub.

Setting the right freelance rate is one of the most important decisions you’ll make as a self-employed worker. Charge too little and you’ll burn out. Charge too much and you won’t win work. Here’s how to find the right balance.

Step 1: Calculate Your Minimum Rate

Figure Out Your Annual Costs

CostTypical amountYour figure
Target take-home payWhat you want to live on after tax£______
Income tax20%+ of profits above £12,570£______
National Insurance (Class 2 + 4)~9% on profits £12,570–£50,270£______
Pension contributions5%–15% of income£______
Accountant£300–£1,500/year£______
Insurance (professional indemnity, public liability)£100–£500/year£______
Software and tools£50–£500/month£______
Equipment (laptop, phone, etc.)£500–£2,000/year£______
Marketing and website£200–£2,000/year£______
Office/coworking space£0–£500/month£______
Holiday fund (you don’t get paid leave)5.6 weeks’ worth of income£______
Sick day fund2 weeks’ worth of income£______
Quiet period buffer10%–20% of total£______
Total annual costs£______

Calculate Your Billable Days

ItemDays
Working days in a year260
Minus holiday (28 days)–28
Minus sick days (5–10)–10
Minus admin/marketing (1 day/week)–46
Minus quiet periods (2–4 weeks)–10
Billable days per year~166–200

Calculate Your Day Rate

CalculationExample
Total annual costs needed£55,000
Billable days180
Minimum day rate£55,000 ÷ 180 = £306/day
Minimum hourly rate (7.5hr day)£306 ÷ 7.5 = £41/hour

Worked Example

ItemAmount
Target take-home pay£35,000
Tax and NI (estimated)£7,500
Pension (10%)£3,500
Business costs£4,000
Holiday and sick fund£3,500
Quiet period buffer (10%)£5,350
Total needed£58,850
Billable days180
Minimum day rate£327/day
Minimum hourly rate~£44/hour

Step 2: Research Market Rates

IndustryJunior rateMid-level rateSenior rate
Web development£200–£350/day£350–£550/day£550–£800+/day
Graphic design£150–£300/day£300–£450/day£450–£700/day
Copywriting/content£200–£350/day£350–£500/day£500–£800/day
Marketing/digital marketing£200–£400/day£400–£600/day£600–£1,000/day
Photography£200–£400/day£400–£700/day£700–£1,500/day
Accounting/bookkeeping£25–£40/hour£40–£70/hour£70–£150/hour
IT consulting£300–£500/day£500–£750/day£750–£1,200/day
PR/communications£250–£400/day£400–£600/day£600–£900/day
Training/coaching£500–£1,000/day£1,000–£2,000/day£2,000+/day
Translation£0.08–£0.12/word£0.12–£0.18/word£0.18–£0.25/word

Rates vary significantly by location (London premiums), specialisation, and client type. These are indicative ranges.

Step 3: Choose Your Pricing Model

ModelHow it worksBest forProsCons
Hourly rateCharge per hour workedAd-hoc work, ongoing supportTransparent, flexiblePenalises efficiency; clients may haggle hours
Day rateCharge per full or half dayConsulting, contracting, agency workSimple, professionalMay under-charge for complex work
Project rateFixed fee for a defined scope of workDefined projects with clear deliverablesMost profitable; charge for value not timeRisk of scope creep; need clear specification
RetainerMonthly fee for ongoing access/workOngoing clients needing regular supportPredictable incomeCan be hard to manage alongside project work
Value-basedPrice based on the value/ROI to the clientHigh-value consulting, strategyHighest earning potentialRequires understanding the client’s business deeply

Setting Project Rates

StepAction
1Estimate the time the project will take (be realistic)
2Multiply by your day/hourly rate
3Add a buffer for revisions and unexpected complexity (20%–50%)
4Consider the value to the client — can you charge more?
5Round to a clean number

Example: Website Design Project

ItemEstimated timeAt £400/day
Discovery and planning1 day£400
Design (3 pages)3 days£1,200
Revisions1 day£400
Development/build5 days£2,000
Testing and launch1 day£400
Buffer (20%)£880
Project quote£5,280
Rounded£5,500

Pricing Strategies

StrategyHow it works
Anchor highStart with a higher rate — you can always negotiate down, never up
Package your servicesOffer bundles (e.g. “branding package” rather than “logo design + business cards + letterhead”)
Three-tier pricingOffer Basic, Standard, and Premium options — most clients choose the middle
Value pricingIf your work will make the client £100,000, charging £10,000 is reasonable
Annual rate reviewIncrease rates 10%–15% per year for existing clients
Premium positioningHigher rates attract better clients who value quality

Three-Tier Pricing Example (Content Writer)

PackageIncludesPrice
Basic4 blog posts/month (1,000 words each)£800/month
Standard8 blog posts/month + SEO optimisation£1,400/month
Premium12 blog posts/month + SEO + social media snippets + monthly strategy call£2,200/month

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy it hurts
Charging too littleBurnout, resentment, attracting difficult clients
Not accounting for unpaid timeAdmin, marketing, invoicing, etc. are not free
Forgetting tax and NIYour gross rate must cover ~30%+ in tax and NI
Not budgeting for holiday/sick payYou don’t get paid when you don’t work
Quoting before understanding the scopeLeads to under-pricing and scope creep
Competing on priceRace to the bottom — compete on quality and value instead
Not increasing ratesInflation means your real rate decreases each year
Doing free “test” workDevalues your skills — offer a paid trial instead
Billing monthly instead of upfrontCash flow risk — take 50% upfront for projects

Negotiating Rates

SituationWhat to say
Client says “that’s too expensive”“I understand. Here’s what’s included and the value it delivers. Shall we look at adjusting the scope to fit your budget?”
Client asks for a discount“I can offer a reduced scope at a lower price, but I keep my rates consistent to ensure quality”
Client compares you to cheaper freelancers“You’re welcome to explore other options. My rates reflect my experience and the quality of work I deliver”
Raising rates with existing clients“From [date], my rates will increase to [amount]. This reflects my growing experience and market rates. I’m happy to discuss this with you”

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Working for yourself
  2. HMRC — Self-employed tax