How DayRate works
Most rate calculators give you a number with no working. DayRate shows every step, because the only rate you can defend in a negotiation is one you understand.
The formula
day rate = (income + overheads + pension) × (1 + margin) ÷ (1 − employer tax) ÷ billable days
You start from the income you actually want, add back everything an employer used to cover, add a margin for risk, then divide by the days you can realistically bill. Here is what each part means.
Billable days, not calendar days
A year has about 260 weekdays. Take off holiday, public holidays and sick days and you’re nearer 220. Then knock off the admin, sales calls, proposals, learning and gaps between contracts — the work you don’t get paid for. Most freelancers bill around 200 days a year, not 250. Our default assumes 5 weeks off, public holidays, 5 sick days and 90% utilisation, which lands at roughly 200 billable days.
The costs an employer used to cover
- Overheads (default 20%) — insurance, software, equipment, accounting, a workspace and marketing. Beginners assume 5–10%; the real figure is usually 15–30%.
- Pension (default 10%) — no employer is contributing any more, so you fund it from the rate.
- Profit / buffer margin (default 15%) — for quiet periods, late payers, equipment and growth. Without it you have a job, not a business.
- Employer tax — for UK contracts caught by IR35, employer national insurance (≈15% from April 2025) comes off the top, so the rate is grossed up to compensate.
A worked example
You want £50,000 a year, working as a sole trader. Add 20% overheads (£10,000) and 10% pension (£5,000) to reach £65,000. Add a 15% buffer (£9,750) and you need to bill £74,750. Over ~200 billable days that’s about £375 a day (≈£50/hour). Your break-even — before any profit — is about £325 a day. Below that, you’re working at a loss.
Where the benchmarks come from
Every market benchmark is derived from public, official data and shown with its source and date. Where a country only publishes employed salaries, we convert them to an equivalent freelance day rate using the same methodology above — and we label it as derived. We don’t pretend to have live market rates; we give you defensible, dated estimates.
- Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), occupation (4-digit SOC 2020) — Office for National Statistics (2024)
- Contractor day-rate medians by role — IT Jobs Watch (2026)
- Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), national — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2024)
- Wage data by occupation (NOC) — Government of Canada — Job Bank / Statistics Canada (2024)
- Employee earnings by occupation — Australian Bureau of Statistics (2024)
- Earnings and labour costs — Central Statistics Office (Ireland) (2024)
- Earnings statistics by occupation — Statistisches Bundesamt (Destatis) (2024)
- Wages and earnings statistics — INSEE (2024)
- Earnings statistics — Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek (CBS) (2024)
DayRate gives estimates to help you set a fair rate. It is not financial, tax or legal advice — confirm your tax position with a qualified accountant.