Most freelancers stay stuck at low rates because they're afraid of losing clients. Here's how to raise rates confidently without burning bridges.
When to Raise Your Rates
You should raise rates when:
- You're consistently fully booked (demand > supply)
- You haven't raised rates in 12+ months (inflation erodes value)
- Your skills have significantly improved
- You're delivering faster/better results than before
- Market rates in your niche have increased
- Your costs have gone up (software, overhead, taxes)
Don't wait for the "perfect moment." It doesn't exist.
How Much to Increase
Conservative: 10-15% increase
Good for nervous first-timers or established relationships.
Moderate: 20-30% increase
Standard for annual adjustments or significant skill improvements.
Aggressive: 50%+ increase
When you're dramatically underpriced or pivoting to premium positioning.
Example:
- Current rate: £50/hour
- Conservative increase: £55-£57.50/hour
- Moderate increase: £60-£65/hour
- Aggressive increase: £75-£100/hour
Most freelancers should aim for 15-25% increases annually to keep pace with inflation and experience gains.
The 3-Tier Strategy
Don't raise rates for everyone at once. Use this approach:
Tier 1: New Clients (Immediate)
New clients always get your new rate. No exceptions, no negotiations.
Why: They have no reference point. £75/hour is just your rate.
Tier 2: Problem Clients (Within 30 Days)
Clients who are late payers, scope creepers, or energy drains get the new rate immediately.
Email template:
"I'm updating my rates effective [date]. My new rate is £X/hour. If you'd like to continue working together, let me know by [date]."
Result: They either accept (great!) or leave (even better!).
Tier 3: Good Clients (Grace Period)
Your best clients get 60-90 days notice and grandfather pricing options.
Email template:
"I wanted to give you advance notice that I'm raising my rates to £X/hour effective [date 60-90 days out]. I really value our relationship, so existing projects will continue at £Y until [date]."
Result: They appreciate the courtesy and usually accept.
The Announcement Email
Subject: Update to My Rates
Body:
"Hi [Name],
I wanted to let you know that I'm raising my rates to £[new rate]/hour, effective [date].
This is my first increase in [X months/years], and reflects [reason: my expanded skills/market rate changes/increased demand for my services].
I've really enjoyed working with you, and I hope we can continue our partnership under the new rate.
If you'd like to discuss this or have any questions, I'm happy to chat.
Best,
[Your Name]"
Key points:
- Professional, not apologetic
- Give clear effective date
- Offer to discuss if needed
- Keep it brief
What If They Say No?
Some clients will leave. That's okay. Here's why:
Scenario: £50 to £65 rate increase
Before:
- 40 hours/week at £50 = £2,000/week
- 4 clients × 10 hours each
After raising rates:
- 3 clients accept new rate
- 1 client leaves
- 30 hours/week at £65 = £1,950/week
You're making nearly the same money with 25% fewer hours.
Use the freed-up 10 hours to:
- Find 1-2 new clients at £65/hour
- Work 30 hours instead of 40 (same income, better life)
- Invest in marketing/skills to command £75+/hour
Within 3 months:
- 35 hours/week at £65 = £2,275/week (+£275/week)
- Better clients, more free time
Handling Objections
"That's too expensive."
Response: "I understand. My rates reflect the value and results I deliver. If budget is a constraint, I can recommend some other freelancers who might be a better fit."
Translation: I'm not discounting. Take it or leave it.
"Can we negotiate?"
Response: "My rates are based on my experience and market value. I'd be happy to adjust the scope if budget is a concern."
Translation: Lower scope, not lower rate.
"We've worked together for years!"
Response: "And I've really valued that! Which is why I wanted to give you advance notice. My skills and the value I provide have grown significantly in that time."
Translation: Loyalty doesn't mean underpricing.
The Psychology Shift
Old mindset: "I hope they don't get upset."
New mindset: "I'm worth this, and the right clients will pay it."
Old approach: "Is £X okay? Or would £Y be better?"
New approach: "My rate is £X. Let me know if you'd like to move forward."
Confidence matters. Clients sense hesitation. If you don't believe in your rate, neither will they.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Apologizing for the increase
"I'm so sorry, but I have to raise my rates..."
Wrong. You're providing a valuable service. Don't apologize for charging appropriately.
Mistake 2: Offering discounts immediately
Client: "That's high."
You: "Well, I could do £60 instead of £65?"
Now you've shown your rate is negotiable. Never backtrack.
Mistake 3: Not raising rates regularly
If you wait 5 years to raise rates, you'll need a massive jump that scares clients. Raise 15-20% annually instead.
Mistake 4: Grandfathering everyone forever
"My new rate is £80, but I'll keep charging you £50."
Your oldest clients end up being your lowest-paying clients. This is backwards.
Gradual vs. Big Jump
Gradual approach:
£50 → £60 (Year 1) → £70 (Year 2) → £80 (Year 3)
Big jump approach:
£50 → £80 (Immediate)
Which is better?
Gradual pros: Less scary for clients, easier to communicate
Gradual cons: Takes longer to reach target income
Big jump pros: Immediate income boost, filters out low-budget clients
Big jump cons: Higher client churn
Recommendation: If you're dramatically underpriced, do one big jump then annual moderate increases.
The Bottom Line
Raising rates isn't about being greedy. It's about:
- Keeping pace with inflation
- Reflecting your growing expertise
- Attracting better clients
- Creating sustainable income
You'll lose some clients. Good. They were likely your worst clients anyway.
The right clients will pay professional rates. The wrong clients won't. Your job is to work with the right clients.
Use our calculator to determine your target rate, then implement a rate increase plan within 30 days.