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    May 4, 202613 min read

    How Much to Charge: Pricing Your Services

    Pricing is where most solo businesses leave money on the table. Charge too little and you burn out; charge based on hours and you cap your income. The goal is to price the value of the outcome you deliver, with enough confidence that good-fit clients say yes.

    This guide covers the main pricing models, a simple way to set your rate, and how to raise prices without losing your best clients.

    The four pricing models

    Model
    Best for
    Upside
    Downside
    Hourly
    New freelancers, undefined scope
    Simple, low risk
    Caps income, penalises efficiency, invites scope debates
    Project / fixed fee
    Defined deliverables
    Clear for the client, rewards your speed
    Risky if scope creeps; needs a tight scope
    Retainer
    Ongoing relationships
    Predictable income, deeper client value
    Must keep proving value each month
    Value-based
    Clear business outcomes
    Highest earning potential, aligns price to results
    Requires confidence and proof; harder to quote

    How to set your price in 5 steps

    01

    Know your number

    Calculate the income you need, then your billable hours. This sets your floor. Never price below it.

    02

    Research the market

    Find what others with your experience charge. Aim for the middle-to-upper range, not the bottom.

    03

    Price the outcome, not the hours

    Frame your price around the result you deliver, not the time it takes. Outcomes justify higher fees.

    04

    Offer a clear package

    Bundle your work into one or a few defined offers. Easy-to-understand packages close faster than custom quotes.

    05

    Quote with confidence

    State the price plainly and stop talking. Hesitation invites discounting; clarity signals value.

    How to raise your prices

    Raising prices is normal as your experience and proof grow. Do it cleanly:

    • Apply the new rate to new clients first, where there's no old number to defend
    • Give existing clients notice and tie it to added value
    • Expect most clients to stay; the few who leave free up capacity
    • Let strong testimonials and results justify the increase

    Don't compete on being the cheapest. Low prices attract price-sensitive clients and can reduce trust in your expertise. A fair, confident price tells buyers you're worth it.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Related resources

    Price with confidence

    Not sure how to package and price your offer?

    Mustard Seed Solutions helps solo experts clarify their offer and positioning so they can charge what their work is worth and explain it clearly on their website.

    Book a consultation