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How much should I charge per hour for freelance web design?
I've been working as a designer for two years and I have a BFA in Graphic Design. I've got a full-time job as a designer, but I pick up some freelance stuff. How much should I charge the client after the initial work has been done and they are looking for additional hours? I was thinking $30-$40 because my time is tight.
Unfortunately people get very scared at paying $80 per hour. I don't necessarily need working advice, just need to know how much I should charge.
I'm currently writing a proposal for a client.
There are 3 packages ranging in skill.
1. $800.00 landing page
2. $1500.00 basic site
3. $2500.00 advanced dynamic site
Clients love to ask for additional work after its done. How much per hour should I charge?
7 Answers
- desertcitiesLv 71 decade agoFavorite Answer
I would suggest that you have a good online portfolio and be specific about your prices associated with specific projects. While you can charge an hourly rate in-house, you don't see this to often for freelance work unless it's a large project like a magazine, for example.
Think about what you can do very good in the shortest amount of time and that is marketable. Perhaps consider making a graphics package for a specific software program, or a set of custom templates, then sell them to a specific group of users. Niche marketing.
You can also outsource your services on companies like Rent A Coder and even Craig's List. But it all boils down to what the project is and how long it will take you.
Mind you, we live in a global economy and there are expert designers all over the world that will work for much less then what you are getting as a designer. One day your job might be outsourced.
So stay competitive, branch out into all types of areas, niche market specific graphic products you can deliver and see what works and go with it.
Lastly, you will need your own domain name and website. Then you can appeal to other print media while showing your portfolio and contact information at the same time.
Good Luck!
- Anonymous5 years ago
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I have checked a few of your sites. Graphics are pretty good, but I am not really impressed by the coding: I have only seen html's (that is, nothing DYNAMIC. If you cannot provide fully interactive sites, your chances of making any decent living (especially in the UK!), will be compromised. Static sites (HTML and Javascript only) are paid at an average of 10-15$ per page, WHATEVER the designs, and you get them even cheaper if you go to Indian coders. Very few clients will accept to pay "by the hour", and will demand a fixed quote. Work out the specs with the client, making SURE they are complete. Then estimate the time it will take you to do the job. Double it. Multiply by your hourly rate. Double it again! That's your quote. Any small e-commerce or interactive site will take you over three weeks to achieve, and often many more weeks. On average, I have developed sites from 2000us$ to 6000us$, and from 3 to 10 weeks work (I don't develop static or uninteresting sites) Good luck!
- 1 decade ago
Freelance web designers rarely, if ever, charge an hourly rate. Instead, they usually charge based on some sort of pricing scheme, such as a fixed price for a basic page, and then add on more for extra features like a PHP/MySQL backend, etc.
That said, I would look around for other Freelance web designers, see what they're charging for different types of work, and price accordingly.
A few sites that might help you:
http://www.freelanceauction.com/freelance_web_proj...
http://www.andybudd.com/archives/2006/10/7_habits_...
http://webdesign.about.com/cs/salaries/a/aa022403a...
http://www.sitepoint.com/article/web-work-should-c...
Finally, based on what I've seen personally as a web designer, you can easily charge upwards of $200 for even a simple site (I've seen people who charge over a $1000 for full featured sites) as long as you show what you have done in a portfolio and creative an impressive site of your own to sell it on.
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- Anonymous1 decade ago
Gi higher...say $60-$80 as your local PC tech will charge anything up to $100 and yours is a specialist skill. If you undervalue yourself, clients may get the idea that you are not as good as others. Very few people actually take the cheapest quote for anything, thinking that a middle ground gives the best compromise between price and quality..just humen nature!
Good luck anyway!!
- Anonymous1 decade ago
You charge what you think you're worth - I might charge as little as $80/hr for some work - slower people charge $30/hr, and make the same as I do for the same site.
But make CERTAIN that the contract spells out not only *exactly* what they'll get but that any modifications or additions to the contracted work come at additional cost at the same hourly rate. Unless you're looking to get married to a web site. For life plus. ("But he *can't* have died - there's more work to be done on the site (that my grandfather originally hired him to write)!")
- mdigitaleLv 71 decade ago
IMO the value of a web designer is dependent on how well they do -- if you're worth it customers will pay it. If you're not, you're going to go broke :P