Calculator

What Should I Charge

Work from your target hourly value toward a project quote that still feels worth it.

Result

What Should I Charge

Work from your target hourly value toward a project quote that still feels worth it.

Use the buffer to protect the quote from revisions, admin time, or light scope creep.

Suggested project price
$1,311.00
Buffer amount
$171.00
Effective hourly rate
$99.25

Breakdown

Plain-English math so the result stays easy to explain.

  • Base labor value
    $1,020.00
  • Project expenses
    $120.00
  • Buffer %
    15.0%

Pricing

What Should I Charge?

Start from the value you need the work to clear, then turn that into a project quote you can defend.

This calculator is built for sellers, freelancers, and contractors who want a fast pricing anchor without overcomplicating the first pass.

How to use this page

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.

This page is built for the first pass at pricing, when you need a quote that covers your time, expenses, and a reasonable amount of delivery risk without overcomplicating the process.

After you land on a draft number, use freelancer net income or price to net 500 when payout math still needs another check.

Related calculators

Keep moving through the launch pages without rewriting your pricing math.

Worked examples

Start from a realistic scenario

Each example opens the same calculator with shareable URL state.

Small website project

Estimate a quote from hourly value, expected hours, and a practical buffer.

$1,311.00suggested project price

Load this example

Larger contractor quote

Use a higher hour count and stronger buffer when scope risk is higher.

$3,204.00suggested project price

Load this example

Last updated

April 18, 2026

This page was reviewed for the current V1 pricing, profit, and payout toolkit scope.

FAQ

Quick answers

Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.

Why add a pricing buffer?

Because most real work includes revisions, admin, or uncertainty that does not fit neatly inside the first hour estimate.

Can I still use this for productized services?

Yes. It works well for repeatable offers where you have a rough delivery time and a target hourly value.