Start with the hourly economics
Your retainer still needs to cover the same income target, taxes, expenses, weeks off, and non-billable time as project work.
Retainer pricing
Use the calculator to find your hourly floor, then price retainers around expected monthly hours, access, priority, and recurring responsibility.
Guide
Your retainer still needs to cover the same income target, taxes, expenses, weeks off, and non-billable time as project work.
A retainer is not only a bundle of hours. It can include reserved capacity, faster response times, recurring meetings, reporting, and continuity that has business value.
Before selling a retainer, decide whether unused hours roll over, what counts against the retainer, and how out-of-scope work is billed.
Blog
The blog expands on pricing, cash flow, runway, and balance-sheet thinking without tying this page to unrelated calculators.
Next step
The calculator gives you a pricing floor. The 12-month workbook helps you see assets, debts, obligations, net worth, runway, and cash flow before you make bigger pricing decisions.
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FAQ
The calculator gives you a floor. You can quote higher when the work is urgent, specialized, strategic, or likely to involve extra coordination.
Freelance work has fewer billable hours than a normal salary job, and the tax burden sits on the business side. The inputs make that difference visible before you commit to a rate.
Yes. Start with the hourly floor, then translate it into a fixed fee, day rate, or retainer after you estimate the number of hours, access, and scope involved.
No. It is a planning tool. Confirm tax, legal, and financial decisions with a qualified professional if the numbers will affect formal filings or contracts.