Skip to content

Calculateur de tarif freelance

Calculateur de tarif freelance gratuit - calculez et comparez les options instantanement. Aucune inscription requise.

Chargement de la calculatrice

Préparation de Calculateur de tarif freelance...

Révision et méthodologie

Chaque calculatrice utilise des formules standard de l'industrie, validées par des sources officielles et révisées par un professionnel financier certifié. Tous les calculs s'exécutent en privé dans votre navigateur.

Dernière révision:

Révisé par:

Rédigé par:

Comment utiliser le calculateur de tarif freelance

  1. 1. Entrez vos valeurs - remplissez les champs de saisie avec vos chiffres.
  2. 2. Ajustez les parametres - utilisez les curseurs et selecteurs pour personnaliser votre calcul.
  3. 3. Consultez les resultats instantanement - les calculs se mettent a jour en temps reel lorsque vous modifiez les donnees.
  4. 4. Comparez les scenarios - ajustez les valeurs pour voir comment les changements affectent vos resultats.
  5. 5. Partagez ou imprimez - copiez le lien, partagez les resultats ou imprimez pour vos dossiers.

Freelance Rate Calculator

This calculator helps freelancers and independent contractors determine the hourly or project rate needed to meet their income goals. By factoring in taxes, benefits, business expenses, and non-billable time, it finds the minimum rate required to match employee-equivalent compensation. Most new freelancers set their rate by looking at what employees earn — but to actually net the same income, freelancers typically need to charge 40-60% more than the equivalent employee salary would suggest.

How Your Freelance Rate Is Calculated

The formula accounts for the full cost of being self-employed:

  1. Required gross revenue = Target Net Income + Benefits + Business Expenses + Taxes
  2. Self-employment tax = 15.3% on 92.35% of net profit (approximately 14.1% of gross revenue)
  3. Income tax = estimated federal + state marginal rate applied to net profit
  4. Annual billable hours = Total Working Hours x Billable Utilization Rate (typically 60-70%)
  5. Minimum hourly rate = Required Gross Revenue / Annual Billable Hours

A simplified version: take your desired employee salary, multiply by 1.4 to 1.6, then divide by your realistic annual billable hours. To net $75,000, you need approximately $105,000-$120,000 in gross revenue. At 1,200 billable hours, that requires $87.50-$100/hour.

Worked Examples

Example 1 — Graphic designer, targeting $60,000 net income, part-time benefits situation Target net: $60,000. Health insurance (individual): $7,200/year. Retirement savings (10%): $6,000. SE tax (14.1% of gross): ~$10,500 on an estimated $74,400 gross. Income tax (22% federal + 5% state): ~$19,100. Business expenses (software, equipment, coworking): $5,000. Required gross: approximately $97,800. At 1,100 billable hours/year: minimum rate = $89/hour. Many designers in this position charge $95-$110/hour to build in a buffer.

Example 2 — Software developer, targeting $120,000 net income, 1,400 billable hours Required gross revenue (using 1.5x multiplier): $180,000. SE tax: ~$25,400. Federal + state income tax: ~$42,000. Health insurance family plan: $18,000. Retirement (15%): $18,000. Expenses: $8,000. Total outflows before net income: $111,400. Add net income target: $231,400 required gross. At 1,400 billable hours: $165/hour minimum. Developers at this income level typically price between $150-$200/hour depending on specialization.

Example 3 — Marketing consultant, transitioning from a $85,000 salaried job with full benefits The employer-paid portion of the old benefits package: $9,500 health + $3,400 401(k) match + $6,500 PTO value = approximately $19,400. To match total compensation: $85,000 + $19,400 = $104,400 equivalent value. Applying 1.45x multiplier for SE taxes, income taxes, and lost benefits: required gross ~$151,000. At 1,200 billable hours: minimum rate of $126/hour. The consultant cannot simply charge what colleagues earn as salaried employees; the freelance premium is real.

Freelance Rate Reference Table

Target Net IncomeHealth Ins.SE + Income TaxExpensesBillable HoursMin Hourly Rate
$40,000$7,200$14,000$3,0001,100$58
$50,000$7,200$18,000$5,0001,200$67
$60,000$7,200$22,000$5,0001,200$78
$75,000$12,000$28,500$8,0001,200$103
$75,000$12,000$28,500$8,0001,000$124
$100,000$18,000$38,000$10,0001,200$138
$100,000$18,000$38,000$10,0001,400$119
$125,000$18,000$48,000$12,0001,400$145
$150,000$18,000$58,000$15,0001,400$172
$200,000$18,000$80,000$15,0001,500$209

When to Use This Calculator

  • Before quoting a new client to make sure the project rate actually covers your tax and benefits obligations
  • When transitioning from employment to freelancing, to set a rate that matches your previous total compensation — not just salary
  • When reviewing your rates annually to check whether rising health insurance costs or inflation have eroded your effective net income
  • When deciding whether to accept lower-rate work during a slow period by calculating the true net income of the discounted rate
  • When setting project-based rates: calculate your hourly minimum first, then multiply by estimated hours and add a 15-25% scope buffer

Common Mistakes

  1. Forgetting self-employment tax. W-2 employees pay 7.65% FICA; the employer pays the other 7.65%. As a freelancer you pay both sides — approximately 14.1% of gross income. On $100,000 in freelance revenue, this is $14,100 that a salaried employee at the same gross income does not pay. Many new freelancers are blindsided by this at tax time.
  2. Calculating billable hours based on a 40-hour work week. In practice, freelancers spend 30-40% of their time on non-billable activities — client proposals, invoicing, admin, skill development, and marketing. Using 2,080 hours as billable hours overestimates capacity by 40-50% and leads to rates that are far too low.
  3. Ignoring benefits as a cost. The employer-paid portion of a standard benefits package — health insurance, dental, 401(k) match, paid leave — is worth $15,000-$30,000/year for a mid-career professional. Not pricing this into a freelance rate means working for significantly less than the equivalent employee, not more.
  4. Setting rates based on what the market charges, not what you need. Market rates are a ceiling check, not a floor. If you need $95/hour to hit your income targets and the market rate is $80/hour, you either need to find higher-value clients, specialize to command premium rates, or adjust your income expectations — not accept $80/hour and quietly fall short of your goals.

Real-World Applications

Freelance rate benchmarks vary significantly by field. As of 2025, the median freelance software developer charges $100-$175/hour; UX designers average $85-$140/hour; content writers range from $50-$120/hour depending on specialization; marketing consultants charge $100-$200/hour. These rates reflect the built-in premium needed to cover the factors this calculator quantifies. Platforms like Toptal and Upwork report that top-tier freelancers in technical fields are increasingly pricing on value delivered rather than hourly rate, often charging $5,000-$15,000 for fixed-scope projects that would imply $200-$400/hour effective rates. Understanding your minimum viable rate through this calculator lets you negotiate confidently and recognize when to walk away from underpriced opportunities.

Tips

  1. Calculate your minimum viable rate first — the absolute floor below which you cannot cover expenses and taxes — and post it somewhere visible to avoid the temptation to undercut yourself
  2. Target 1,000-1,200 billable hours per year (20-25 hours/week) rather than trying to fill 40 hours; the remaining time builds the business pipeline that keeps you booked
  3. Raise rates by 10-15% for new clients immediately when you are consistently booked more than 80% of available time — full capacity signals you are priced below market
  4. Open a separate business checking account and transfer 30-35% of every payment into a tax reserve account on the day the payment arrives; quarterly estimated taxes are due in April, June, September, and January
  5. Track all project hours even when billing fixed rates — this data is essential for accurate future project pricing and reveals which clients take more time than their budget implies
  6. Review your rate annually each January: recalculate based on actual prior-year expenses, any changes to health insurance premiums, and the new SE tax rate for the coming year
  • Hourly to Salary Calculator — see the employee salary equivalent of your freelance hourly rate for direct comparisons with job offers
  • Take Home Pay Calculator — model your after-tax take-home based on projected annual freelance revenue
  • Tax Calculator — estimate your full self-employment and income tax obligation on freelance income
  • Commission Calculator — if you earn referral fees or subcontractor splits on top of direct client billing, factor those into total annual income

Questions fréquentes

Comment determiner le bon taux horaire en tant que freelance ?
Commencez par le revenu annuel souhaite, puis ajoutez le cout des avantages que vous devez autofinancer (assurance maladie a 6 000-15 000 $/an, epargne retraite a 10-15 % du revenu), les cotisations sociales (15,3 %), l'impot sur le revenu (22-32 %) et les frais professionnels (3 000-15 000 $/an). Divisez le total par vos heures facturables annuelles realistes (generalement 1 000 a 1 400 pour les freelances a temps plein). Par exemple, pour obtenir un revenu net de 75 000 $, vous devrez peut-etre facturer plus de 120 000 $, et avec 1 200 heures facturables, cela necessite un taux minimum de 100 $/heure.
Comment prendre en compte les impots et les avantages sociaux pour fixer mon tarif freelance ?
En tant que freelance, vous payez les deux parts des cotisations FICA (15,3 % sur 92,35 % du revenu net), plus les impots federaux et d'Etat sur le revenu. Vous devez egalement autofinancer l'assurance maladie, l'epargne retraite, l'assurance invalidite et les conges payes. Une regle approximative : multipliez votre salaire equivalent W-2 souhaite par 1,4 a 1,6 pour obtenir le chiffre d'affaires brut necessaire. Si vous souhaitez l'equivalent d'un emploi salarie a 70 000 $ avec avantages, vous devez generer 98 000 a 112 000 $ de revenus freelance. Votre taux horaire doit couvrir tous ces couts tout en laissant une marge pour le temps non facturable.
Dois-je facturer a l'heure ou au forfait ?
Les deux approches ont leurs avantages. La facturation horaire est plus simple et vous protege lorsque le perimetre du projet s'elargit, ce qui la rend ideale pour le travail continu ou les projets mal definis. La facturation au forfait recompense l'efficacite et vous permet de gagner davantage a mesure que vous devenez plus rapide, mais elle comporte un risque si le perimetre augmente. De nombreux freelances experimentes preferent la tarification basee sur la valeur ou au forfait, car elle decouple leurs revenus des heures travaillees. Pour une tarification au forfait, estimez les heures, multipliez par votre taux horaire, ajoutez une marge de 15 a 25 % pour les depassements de perimetre, et presentez le montant fixe au client.
Comment negocier mes tarifs avec des clients qui trouvent mes prix trop eleves ?
Tout d'abord, orientez la conversation sur la valeur plutot que sur les heures : expliquez ce que le projet apportera a leur entreprise en termes de revenus, d'economies ou d'efficacite. Si vous devez baisser le prix, reduisez le perimetre plutot que votre tarif. Vous pouvez proposer des offres par paliers (basique, standard, premium) qui donnent au client des options a differents niveaux de prix. Ne consentez jamais une remise de plus de 10 a 15 % et conditionnez-la (contrat plus long, paiement anticipe, droits d'etude de cas). Refuser les clients qui sous-evaluent votre travail est souvent preferable a accepter des tarifs qui generent frustration et epuisement.
Quand et comment augmenter mes tarifs freelance ?
Revisez vos tarifs au moins une fois par an, surtout si vous etes regulierement occupe a plus de 80 % de votre temps disponible : c'est un signal que la demande depasse l'offre et que les tarifs doivent augmenter. Prevenez vos clients existants 30 a 60 jours a l'avance des augmentations de tarifs et expliquez la valeur qu'ils ont recue. Augmentez de 10 a 20 % a la fois pour les clients existants et immediatement pour les nouveaux clients. Les declencheurs courants pour augmenter vos tarifs incluent l'acquisition de nouvelles competences ou certifications, une demande croissante, des resultats positifs pour les clients et la hausse des references du marche. Si personne ne conteste vos tarifs, vous facturez probablement trop peu.
Calculatrices