Marketplace project payout
A fee reserve plus tax reserve makes the real payout easier to see before you accept the work.
$1,432.50estimated net income
Load this exampleCalculator
Estimate what a project leaves after costs, platform fees, and a tax reserve.
Result
Estimate what a project leaves after costs, platform fees, and a tax reserve.
Plain-English math so the result stays easy to explain.
Payout
Gross project revenue is not the same as take-home income, especially when fees and reserves enter the picture.
This calculator helps freelancers and contractors estimate what is really left after delivery costs, platform fees, and a simple tax reserve.
Start with your best current estimate, adjust the inputs until the result feels realistic, and use the related tools below when you want to pressure-test price, profit, or payout from another angle.
Use this page when billed revenue looks healthy on paper but you still need a fast estimate of what is left after delivery costs, fee drag, and a simple tax reserve.
It works best alongside what should I charge? and the invoice total calculator, because pricing, billing, and take-home planning are easier to trust when they stay connected.
Keep moving through the launch pages without rewriting your pricing math.
Worked examples
Each example opens the same calculator with shareable URL state.
A fee reserve plus tax reserve makes the real payout easier to see before you accept the work.
$1,432.50estimated net income
Load this exampleWith no platform fee, the gap between billed revenue and net still matters.
$1,215.00estimated net income
Load this exampleApril 18, 2026
This page was reviewed for the current V1 pricing, profit, and payout toolkit scope.
FAQ
Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.
No. It is a planning reserve so you can sanity-check the payout before doing full tax work.
Use zero if no platform or payment cut applies, or add a small reserve if you want to model processor fees.