freelance-rate-converter.hub2.day

Freelance Rate Converter

Convert hourly, day, week, month, and year rates instantly.

What it does

This tool converts freelance pricing across common billing units so users can compare rates quickly and price work with more confidence.

  • Hourly to daily
  • Daily to weekly
  • Weekly to monthly
  • Monthly to annual
  • Annual to hourly

Simple assumptions

Conversions use adjustable billable-time inputs instead of fixed payroll rules, making the results more useful for freelancers and consultants.

  • Billable hours per day
  • Billable days per week
  • Billable weeks per year
  • Optional monthly view

How to use it

Enter one known rate, set billable-time assumptions, and review the matching values for other time periods. Users can tweak inputs to test pricing scenarios.

  • Start with any rate type
  • Adjust work assumptions
  • Compare all outputs instantly

Who it helps

The converter is built for independent professionals who need fast pricing checks before proposals, renewals, or client negotiations.

  • Freelancers
  • Consultants
  • Contractors
  • Small agencies

Questions

How do I convert hourly to salary?

Multiply the hourly rate by billable hours per day, billable days per week, and billable weeks per year. The result is an estimated annual freelance income, not payroll salary.

What is a good day rate from an hourly rate?

Multiply the hourly rate by the number of billable hours in a typical workday. Many freelancers use a shorter billable day than a full office day.

Why does freelance annual income differ from employee salary?

Freelance income usually depends on billable time only. Vacation, sales work, admin tasks, and project gaps can reduce the number of paid hours or days.

How many billable hours should I use?

Use the number of hours you can realistically charge to clients in a day. Many users choose fewer than 8 hours to reflect meetings, admin work, and revisions.

Can I convert a day rate to hourly?

Yes. Divide the day rate by your billable hours per day to estimate an hourly rate.