Consulting Fee Calculator

Consulting Fee Calculator

Recommended Pricing Structure

Hourly Rate $0
Daily Rate (8hr) $0
Monthly Retainer $0
Annual Revenue Goal $0
function calculateConsultingFee() { var desiredIncome = parseFloat(document.getElementById('desiredIncome').value) || 0; var annualExpenses = parseFloat(document.getElementById('annualExpenses').value) || 0; var billableHoursPerWeek = parseFloat(document.getElementById('billableHours').value) || 0; var weeksOff = parseFloat(document.getElementById('weeksOff').value) || 0; var profitMargin = parseFloat(document.getElementById('profitMargin').value) || 0; if (profitMargin >= 100) { alert("Profit margin must be less than 100%"); return; } var workingWeeks = 52 – weeksOff; if (workingWeeks <= 0) { alert("Please enter a valid number of weeks worked per year."); return; } var totalBillableHoursYear = workingWeeks * billableHoursPerWeek; // Formula: Revenue = (Income + Expenses) / (1 – Margin) var targetAnnualRevenue = (desiredIncome + annualExpenses) / (1 – (profitMargin / 100)); var hourlyRate = targetAnnualRevenue / totalBillableHoursYear; var dailyRate = hourlyRate * 8; var monthlyRate = targetAnnualRevenue / 12; document.getElementById('hourlyRateDisplay').innerText = '$' + hourlyRate.toLocaleString(undefined, {minimumFractionDigits: 2, maximumFractionDigits: 2}); document.getElementById('dailyRateDisplay').innerText = '$' + dailyRate.toLocaleString(undefined, {minimumFractionDigits: 0, maximumFractionDigits: 0}); document.getElementById('monthlyRateDisplay').innerText = '$' + monthlyRate.toLocaleString(undefined, {minimumFractionDigits: 0, maximumFractionDigits: 0}); document.getElementById('annualRevenueDisplay').innerText = '$' + targetAnnualRevenue.toLocaleString(undefined, {minimumFractionDigits: 0, maximumFractionDigits: 0}); document.getElementById('resultsArea').style.display = 'block'; }

How to Calculate Your Professional Consulting Fees

Transitioning from a salaried role to independent consulting requires a fundamental shift in how you view your time and value. Unlike a traditional job, where your salary is your gross take-home pay, a consultant's fee must cover taxes, health insurance, marketing, software, and "unbillable" time spent on business development.

The Core Components of a Consulting Rate

To ensure your business is sustainable, you must account for three primary factors:

  • Labor Cost (Desired Income): This is the amount you want to pay yourself before personal taxes. If you earned $100,000 as an employee, you should aim for a higher figure as a consultant to account for the loss of benefits.
  • Overhead: These are the costs of doing business. This includes professional indemnity insurance, home office costs, SaaS subscriptions (like Zoom, Slack, or accounting software), and hardware.
  • Profit Margin: Business profit is different from your salary. Profit provides a buffer for slow months, allows for reinvestment in the business (like training or hiring), and ensures the business is actually "profitable" rather than just a high-paying job.

Accounting for Billable vs. Non-Billable Time

A common mistake new consultants make is assuming they will work 40 billable hours every week. In reality, a significant portion of your week will be spent on:

  • Invoicing and administrative tasks
  • Sales calls and lead generation
  • Creating marketing content or networking
  • Internal research and education

Most successful consultants find that 20 to 25 billable hours per week is a realistic target for a full-time practice. Our calculator uses this "Billable Efficiency" to ensure your hourly rate covers the hours you can't charge for.

Example Calculation

Suppose you want to take home $120,000 annually. You have $20,000 in business expenses. You plan to take 4 weeks off per year and expect to bill 25 hours per week. You also want a 15% profit margin for business growth.

In this scenario, your total required revenue would be approximately $164,705. To reach this goal over 48 working weeks (1,200 billable hours total), your required hourly rate would be $137.25.

Beyond Hourly: Project and Value-Based Pricing

While an hourly rate is a critical internal metric, many consultants move toward Project-Based Pricing or Value-Based Pricing. Once you know your minimum hourly requirement, you can estimate how many hours a project will take and add a contingency buffer. Value-based pricing goes further by charging based on the ROI you provide to the client, which often results in significantly higher margins than simple hourly billing.

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