• 2026 Edition · UK & US

Freelance Day Rate Calculator

Find out exactly what to charge per day — based on what you actually need to earn, not a rough guess.

£200–£1.2K
UK day rate range
$300–$1.4K
US day rate range
200+
billable days/year
15–25%
recommended buffer

The formula behind the calculator

Day Rate = ( Annual Target + Expenses ) ÷ Billable Days × ( 1 + Buffer % )
Free Calculator

Freelance Day Rate Calculator

Convert your annual income target into a daily, hourly & weekly freelance rate

How much do you want to earn per year?
$
Usually 260 (5 days × 52 weeks)
Vacation + public holidays
Non-billable days per year
Billable hours in a working day
h

Add % to cover tax, equipment & dry months
Your minimum day rate
Per hour
Per day
Per week
Per month
💡 Pro tip: Your billable days produce your full income. This is your minimum rate — charge more if your skills are specialist or in high demand.

What is a freelance day rate?

A freelance day rate is the fixed amount you charge a client for one full day of work — typically 7 to 8 hours. Instead of billing by the hour or by project, you agree on a daily fee upfront.

Day rates are most common in the UK contracting market, especially for IT contractors, project managers, consultants, and interim professionals. In the US, daily rates are widely used for on-site work, consulting engagements, and any project where the client wants to book a fixed block of your time.

The main advantage of a day rate over hourly billing is simplicity. You and the client both know exactly what each day costs — no time tracking disputes, no confusion about how long something took. The invoice at the end of the week is straightforward.

How to use this calculator

This tool works in four steps:

  1. Enter your annual income target — this is the amount you want to take home after business expenses (but before personal tax). Be honest here. Most freelancers underestimate what they actually need.
  2. Set your working days — start with 260 (the standard number of working days in a year) and then subtract your holidays and sick days. The result is your realistic billable day count.
  3. Add your non-billable admin days — time spent chasing invoices, writing proposals, doing your accounts, and attending unpaid discovery calls. This is time you work but cannot charge for.
  4. Choose your expense buffer — a percentage added on top to cover taxes, equipment, insurance, accountancy fees, and the dry months between contracts. We recommend 25% as a starting point for most freelancers.

Hit calculate and you get your day rate, hourly rate, weekly rate, and monthly rate — all in one go.

How your freelance day rate is calculated

The formula

The day rate formula used by this calculator is:

Day Rate = (Annual Income Target ÷ Billable Days) × (1 + Buffer %)

Here is what each part means:

Annual income target is the gross revenue you need your freelance work to generate before personal tax. It should include your desired salary plus your estimated business expenses for the year (software, insurance, accountancy, equipment, co-working space, and so on).

Billable days is the realistic number of days you will actually be paid for in a year — not just the days you are at your desk. The typical calculation is: 260 standard working days, minus 28 days holiday, minus around 5 sick days, minus 10–15 non-billable admin days. That gives most full-time freelancers somewhere between 200 and 220 genuinely billable days per year.

Buffer percentage accounts for the financial risks of self-employment: months with no contracts, tax bills that arrive quarterly, equipment that breaks, and professional development costs. A 25% buffer is the most widely recommended starting point.

Worked example

Say you want to take home £50,000 per year and your annual business expenses are £8,000. Your total revenue target is £58,000.

You plan to work 52 weeks minus 5 weeks off, giving you around 235 working days. Subtract 15 non-billable admin days and you have 220 billable days.

Without a buffer: £58,000 ÷ 220 = £264/day

With a 25% buffer added: £264 × 1.25 = £330/day

That is your minimum day rate. The 25% buffer means you can afford a month without contracts and still hit your annual income target.

What is a realistic freelance day rate in 2026?

Here are current benchmarks to help you sense-check your number:

United Kingdom — Day Rate Benchmarks (2026)

Role Typical day rate
Junior freelancer (any field) £200–£350/day
Creative (designer, copywriter, marketer) £250–£600/day
Web developer / UX designer £350–£700/day
IT contractor / software engineer £400–£800/day
Project manager / consultant £450–£800/day
Senior specialist / architect £700–£1,200+/day

The median UK consultant day rate as of early 2026 is around £550 per day, based on live vacancy data. London typically commands 10–20% higher rates than other UK regions.

United States — Day Rate Benchmarks (2026)

Experience level Typical day rate
Junior freelancer $280–$600/day
Mid-level professional $600–$1,000/day
Senior specialist $1,000–$1,600/day
Consultant / advisor $1,600–$4,000+/day

These are broad ranges across all industries. Tech, finance, and legal freelancers typically sit at the higher end; creative and admin roles at the lower end.

If your calculated rate from the tool above falls significantly below these benchmarks, you are likely undercharging. If it is well above them, make sure your experience and portfolio justify the premium.

Why most new freelancers undercharge — and how to avoid it

The single most common freelance pricing mistake is using too many billable days. When someone new to freelancing thinks “I’ll work 5 days a week, 52 weeks a year — that’s 260 billable days” and divides their income target by 260, the resulting rate is almost always too low.

Here is why that number is wrong.

You will not bill every day you work. A realistic estimate for full-time freelancers is 200–220 genuinely billable days per year. The rest goes on: chasing late payments, writing proposals that do not convert, networking, doing your accounts, and the gaps between contracts. Most experienced freelancers find that only 60–75% of their working time is genuinely billable.

You lose employee benefits that your employer used to pay. As a self-employed person, you now fund your own pension contributions, health cover, professional insurance, equipment replacement, and training — costs that were invisible when you were employed.

Self-employment tax hits harder than income tax alone. In the US, self-employment tax runs at around 15.3% on top of income tax. UK freelancers through a limited company deal with corporation tax, dividend tax, and National Insurance. Factor this in before you set your rate, not after your first tax bill arrives.

The buffer percentage in this calculator exists precisely to protect you from all three of these traps. Do not skip it.

Day rate vs. hourly rate — which should you use?

Both work — the right choice depends on how your clients think and how your work flows.

Use a day rate when: your client is booking a full day of your time, you are working on-site, the scope of each day’s work varies, or you are in an industry where day rates are the norm (UK contracting, consulting, interim management).

Use an hourly rate when: you are doing shorter, more defined tasks, the work is creative or unpredictable in scope, or your client specifically requests hourly billing.

The practical difference in earnings is small if your rates are calibrated correctly. To convert: multiply your hourly rate by the number of billable hours in your day (usually 7 or 8). A $100/hr rate with 8 billable hours gives you an $800 day rate. A £55/hr rate with 8 hours gives you a £440 day rate.

This calculator outputs both, so you can share whichever your client prefers.

FAQ

How many billable days should I use in my calculation?

For a full-time freelancer working year-round in the UK, 220 billable days is a commonly used realistic figure — that accounts for 28 days of holiday, public bank holidays, sick days, and non-billable admin time. US freelancers typically estimate 200–230 billable days depending on their industry and how much business development time they need. If you are just starting out and expect to spend more time finding clients, use a lower number — 180 is not uncommon for the first year.

No. Your day rate is the net amount you charge. VAT is added on top if you are VAT-registered. You quote your day rate, and if applicable, your invoice will show: Day rate × days worked = subtotal, then VAT at 20% added on top. The client pays the total; you pass the VAT element to HMRC.
The most effective approach is to raise rates for new clients immediately and give existing clients notice — typically 30 to 60 days. Frame it as an annual review, not an apology. Most clients expect rates to increase over time. Losing a client who will not pay a fair rate is usually better than keeping them at an unsustainable price.
(UK) IR35 is UK tax legislation that determines whether a contractor is genuinely self-employed or, in practice, working like a permanent employee. If HMRC considers you “inside IR35,” tax and National Insurance are deducted at source before you receive payment — significantly reducing your take-home pay. If you are inside IR35, your day rate needs to be roughly 15–25% higher than an equivalent outside-IR35 rate to compensate. Use our IR35 Calculator to model the difference.
Job adverts often reflect the lowest the market will accept, not what a skilled freelancer can command. If your calculated rate is higher, check three things: are the benchmarks you are comparing against for the same experience level, location, and industry? Is your buffer set appropriately? And most importantly — is your portfolio strong enough to justify the rate? If yes to all three, back yourself and quote your rate. Confidence in your pricing often determines what clients will pay.
Yes. Simply adjust the working days and hours per day inputs to reflect your actual availability. If you freelance three days a week, enter 156 working days (3 × 52) as your starting point, then subtract holidays and admin time from there. The calculator will give you a day rate calibrated to your part-time income target.

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DISCLAIMER:

Results from this calculator are for guidance purposes only. They are based on standard formulas for estimating freelance day rates. They do not constitute financial or tax advice. Day rate benchmarks cited on this page are based on publicly available market data and may vary by industry, location, experience level, and current market conditions. Always consult a qualified accountant or financial adviser for advice specific to your situation. Last reviewed: April 2026.