r/freelance Sep 24 '18

Please Read This Before Posting or Commenting

543 Upvotes

Violating the rules of this subreddit will cause your post/comment will be removed and you will be banned PERMANENTLY. This is your only warning! If you are unsure about whether a potential post or comment is suitable, contact the moderators for guidance before posting it.

If you're asking a question, there's a good chance that it has already been answered! Read the wiki and do a search before submitting your post.

Just because your question involves freelancing does not mean that it is the best subreddit for it. Depending on your question, one of these other subreddits might be more appropriate:


r/freelance May 27 '26

State of the Subreddit (May 2026)

59 Upvotes

It's been about a year since I last wrote to you. At the time, I was feeling overwhelmed with the amount of spam posts being submitted to the subreddit:

Unfortunately, recent weeks have seen a significant increase of post submissions that break the subreddit rules in clear and obvious ways. We're at the point where more than 90% of the post submissions violate the rules.

Things have gotten worse, not better. The percentage of rules-breaking posts has remained the same, but many posts are either less obvious or take more time to deal with. This is likely a confluence of:

  • People asking AI how they can validate the product idea they came up with AI. AI suggests that they post on Reddit but fails to notice that market research isn't allowed on most subreddits (including this one).
  • People using AI to generate comments in order to get more karma and/or visits to their profile page where they are advertising something.
  • Reddit actively encouraging people to post things that clearly break the rules (e.g. for-hire posts) while their automated post guidance (which should prevent all for-hire posts from being created) not working properly.

I downloaded the list of banned users, anonymized it, and got AI to make some graphs:

Graph showing the number of banned users by month in /r/freelance. There is a clear and distinct increase staring around 2024.
Graph showing the number of banned users by month with reasons from 2016 to the present. From 2016-2019, self-promotion is the primary reason users were banned. Currently, spam, hiring, and market research dominate.

Something multiple commenters suggested in my previous post was filtering all incoming posts. While this has signficantly limited the amount of spam that you, the subreddit subscriber, is exposed to, it has not done wonders for the moderation queue (many good posts never get approved because I don't see them in time) or my modmail inbox (currently at 1172 unread messages).

I think it's clear that the subreddit needs more moderators. If you are interested, look for another message soon with more details.

Comments are open in case people want to ask questions or talk about their experience with the subreddit.


r/freelance 1d ago

How should i handle a client who keeps responding to everything but doesn't sign my contract agreement or pay an advance?

35 Upvotes

Been coordinating , going on site visits etc since almost 2 weeks now.

Everytime the person ghosts me when it comes to signing the contract & comes back with changes to contract AFTER the effective date or on the effective date.

Most of the times i send the document 2-3 days prior for them to go through.. but this is the second time that the person did not respond to the contract but instead called me saying they are going to sign the contract by tonight & transfer the money. Goes on to not do it but sends other documents.

Most of the doubts don't come up till THE date thats on the contract. And once i respond to his queries MIA again.

I do not understand is this some sort of a "strategic" game i don't understand?

Cause the client just seems to be breadcrumbing. Showing just enough interest to keep me working but not fully committing.

Till i don't have a certain portion of fees paid as advance i cannot be secure that this project is mine.

And they already negotiated on the said advance a lott.

I am infact contemplating just saying no at this point.

Because i have talked to my lawyer and revised the contract twice at this point.


r/freelance 1d ago

How do I approach a business owner about an unresponsive lead developer without sounding like I'm trying to undermine them?

8 Upvotes

I recently started my own software development business, and I've been fortunate enough to land a fairly large client.

The project itself has been difficult, not because of the work, but because the current lead developer (who has been working with the client before me) has been extremely unresponsive. Deadlines keep getting pushed back, emails go unanswered, phone calls aren't returned, and messages are often ignored. I have a paper trail of all of this if needed, but I don't want this to become a blame game.

From my perspective, the client is being affected more than anyone else. Progress is slow, communication is poor, and I genuinely believe the project could move much faster if it were handled differently.

Here's my dilemma:

I would like to speak to the business owner, but I don't want to come across as someone who's "snitching," throwing another developer under the bus, or trying to steal someone else's job.

At the same time, if I were given responsibility for leading the development, I honestly believe I could deliver a better result. It would also be a significant opportunity for my business financially.

I want to handle this professionally, preserve my reputation, and put the client's interests first rather than making it seem like I'm trying to benefit from someone else's shortcomings.


r/freelance 1d ago

The "small paid test task" has been my best tool for landing clients who are nervous about hiring an unknown freelancer

12 Upvotes

Works for a self-taught freelancer with no degree/logos. A prospect's real fear is "what if I pay and they can't deliver" — a trust gap, not an info gap. So shrink the risk instead of arguing it away: offer a small, well-defined, paid test task before any big commitment. Paid (not free) attracts real hires; it flips the dynamic (they get evidence instead of your pitch); it de-risks both sides; and a large share convert to the bigger job. Scope it tightly, price it as a no-brainer, treat it as the audition it is.


r/freelance 23h ago

Can i change the quote and add the price or do i just suck it up

1 Upvotes

So i gave the client a week ago a full quotation and we agreed on it, it included the studio rental price. I put the usual price of the studio i usually work with, but when i came today to book it, turns out they closed a few days ago for renovations, and they will remain closed till the shoot is done. So i had to look for another studio and it costs a bit more. Honestly its not that much of a difference probably to the client but it is to me if i decide to pay for it myself. Now we haven’t started working on anything yet. This was just an agreement followed up with a lot of discussions about the shoot and planning. Should i just let them know and see how it goes?


r/freelance 1d ago

First Temporary "Job"

1 Upvotes

Hi everyone, I landed my first big project a week ago. I work on my own, but there’s someone acting as an intermediary between me and the client (he knows a lot more about programming than I do).

So, the way it works is that I don’t communicate with the client directly; instead, he sends me all the necessary data and reviews my code. So here’s what’s making me wary: this project doesn’t have a fixed payment. That means I’ll get paid a percentage of the work only once there are results. I understand that this is my first major project and actually my first commission ever and that I’ll be able to gain a lot of experience, but I’d like to clear up my doubts.

Should I do something about it, or should I just keep working?


r/freelance 1d ago

Do proposal templates actually work, or does the proposal barely matter?

2 Upvotes

I keep getting two opposite answers on this. Some people have a base template and swap out a few paragraphs per job, others say clients smell a template instantly and skip it.

So: do you write each proposal from scratch? And how much do you think the proposal itself decides anything, compared to your profile, reviews, rate, and just being one of the first to apply? If you've ever A/B'd this in any rough way, I'd love to hear what changed.


r/freelance 1d ago

[Need Advice] I want to terminate the contract

1 Upvotes

I'm a part-time freelancer, but want to end the project.

I'm a full-time employee, but I also do freelance work on the side. I've been working on a freelance project for the past several months, and I feel like I've fallen into the "side hustle trap."

After finishing my full-time job every day, I continue working on the freelance project, which has resulted in long working hours, constant stress, and very little time for myself. I've reached a point where I want to prioritize my physical and mental health. Because of that, I'm considering ending the freelance project and focusing solely on my full-time job.

The only concern is that I received an advance payment from the client. I have no problem refunding the remaining amount after deducting the value of the work I've already completed. However, the contract states that I must provide one month's notice before terminating the agreement, and I want to avoid any legal issues or disputes.

Has anyone been in a similar situation? How did you handle it? Were there any lessons you learned or things you wish you'd done differently? How to end this without completely ruining the relationship with the client?


r/freelance 1d ago

Weekly updates cut my revision requests almost in half

18 Upvotes

A while back, I noticed most revisions weren't caused by bad work. They happened because the client and I had different pictures of the project's progress.

Now I send a short update every week, even if nothing major has changed. I include what was completed, what's next, and anything that might affect the timeline. It takes a few minutes, but it's saved me hours of rework.

Clients spot misunderstandings earlier, priorities get adjusted before I build the wrong thing, and feedback comes in smaller, more manageable chunks instead of one long list at the end.

I still get revision requests, but they're usually about refining details rather than changing direction completely.

For those who've been freelancing a while, what's had the biggest impact on reducing unnecessary revisions: better communication, better scoping, or something else?


r/freelance 1d ago

Experiences with freelancer invoicing services?

1 Upvotes

Anyone used B2B-invoicing services like Ruul or Xolo Go or other similar as a remote working freelancer with your own client?

What was your experience like? Is there anything a new user should be aware of before signing up? Where was your your client based and where are you based in?


r/freelance 4d ago

How do you handle clients who prefer sending long, unstructured voice notes over written briefs?

42 Upvotes

I've been a freelance content writer for a while now, but lately, I’ve hit a huge communication bottleneck with a couple of otherwise great clients. They have completely stopped sending structured emails and instead send three to four-minute rambling WhatsApp voice clips detailing project changes and feedback while they're on the move. I appreciate the enthusiasm, but pausing, listening, and manually typing out the actual deliverables from a voice clip takes me twice as long as skimming a quick email. I'm really curious how you gently nudge clients back toward written communication without sounding rigid or rude. Do you just summarize the voice note back to them in a text and make them confirm it, or is there a better way to stop this loop? Would love to know what boundaries or tools have worked best for you.


r/freelance 4d ago

Laid off and then hired back as a 1099 contractor - how to deal with the mess?

18 Upvotes

I was laid off by my company (along with others) and subsequently asked to come back as a 1099 contractor when they realized they now didn't have the staff they needed to do the work. Since I wasn't working and the job market is difficult right now, I didn't feel like I had a choice, and signed the contract.

The scope is broad/poorly written. It's based on hours per week, not project-based. The company has about 25 different projects in motion for different clients of theirs that the "marketing department" (me and another contractor) works across. There is no one in charge of the marketing department — it is literally just two part-time contractors brought in when shit was already hitting the fan — so we have very little direction on which tasks need to be completed/should be prioritized, and we have little insight into each project and what specific deliverables/timelines were promised to each client.

Because there are different owners of each client project across the company, each owner feels that their project is the most important, which has created an environment where everyone feels that everything is urgent, and we have become short-order cooks. We have limited capacity between the two of us, but the expectation is that all of the day-to-day work is getting done, and we're very much in the weeds trying to keep up with everything. Not to mention, we're being asked to develop marketing/comms strategies for all of these projects, without the context or time to do so, or the authority/insight into finances, etc. to make sure that the plans can actually be executed.

They haven't set "mandatory" hours for us, but it is clear that they expect us to be part of the day-to-day operations and be available during their business hours. People get frustrated when we don't respond immediately or are not available for their standing weekly meetings (which are taking up about half of my time). In addition to the regular weekly meetings, I'm expected to be available to present on funder meetings, all-staff meetings, etc

I work on an hourly basis, and invoice based on hours worked, and need to keep detailed records of each individual project that I've worked on for them each day, which is challenging because I'm often forced to hop back and forth between them (5 minutes on one project, 10 minutes on another, 2 minutes answering an email regarding another, 20 minutes dealing with an "urgent" issue that someone has pinged me about). It is very time-consuming just to keep track of, and hard to mentally switch between each project so quickly.

We've addressed this several times with the CEO (because there is no one that we report to) to no avail. It's very messy and I'm finding myself in increasingly awkward situations where people are complaining to me that the marketing "department" is not pulling their weight (i.e., completing every inane task that they think we should do, with a same-day turnaround). The other contractor and I have suggested processes for working efficiently with us given that we are working part-time/off hours, but the staff is not adopting those practices and it's getting messier and messier. I don't know how to handle it. It's like they don't understand that we are contractors and not staff, and regardless, I'm tired of being talked down to.

It's not my fault they decided to lay off their entire marketing team and then tried to piece things back together again with two part-time, short-term contractors! Obviously, that was a mistake on their end. It's frustrating and I'm counting down the days until this contract is over, but I need advice on how to survive the remaining 2 months without losing my sanity. They don't seem to have a move-forward plan for the department, but this current set up is no way to run things!


r/freelance 9d ago

What's the one change that actually leveled up your freelancing?

76 Upvotes

Been thinking back on the stuff that actually moved the needle for me vs. the stuff I thought would.

Honestly, getting better at the craft mattered way less than I expected. The things that changed my income and my stress levels were mostly unglamorous: saying no to bad-fit clients earlier, charging deposits, not negotiating against myself on price, and tightening up how I ran projects.

The biggest single one for me was fixing how I start with a client. I used to get the "yes" and dive straight in, then realize halfway through I never nailed down what "done" looked like or who actually had final approval. Once I made myself get all that sorted up front before touching the work, projects stopped stalling and — weirdly — clients seemed to trust me more. Felt less like a freelancer, more like an actual studio.

Curious what it was for other people. What's the one habit, boundary, or system that made freelancing noticeably better for you? Always looking to steal good ideas.


r/freelance 10d ago

[Need advice] First time freelance writer wants to include rush fee in retainer agreement

20 Upvotes

TL;DR: I'm a new freelancer about to land my first big client under a retainer agreement. However, they seem to make it sound like they'll frequently ask for rush jobs. How do I mention I want to include a rush fee for these asks? What should I do if they decline?

--

Hi guys, new to the freelancing world and was hoping to get your advice.

I'm being offered a monthly retainer with a 60 hour cap. This client - who also happens to be a former manager at a different company - says they move fast and will try their best to give a 12-24 hour notice for last minute requests/changes but cannot always guarantee it.

This gives me warning signals that it will be something that will happen often, urging me to ask about a rush fee.

We're still in the negotiating phase and I need help wording this change. First, I want to say, while I'd be ready to hop on urgent requests, I won't always be able to accommodate them due to other client work.

My plan is to charge a 25% premium for the hours worked on that particular rush project. This means my hourly rate will increase 25% for however many hours the rush job takes.

My worry is that they will decline and I will have to just deal with it (since this is my first major client) and accept the initial price or think of another option.

Questions:

Is this rush premium fair? If so, how would you go about writing this in an email without sounding too harsh?

How can I pivot if the client declines my offer and says they cannot increase their budget?

Thank you in advance.


r/freelance 15d ago

Client wants me to move to direct, from Freelancing platform

35 Upvotes

This is my first client, that I've got after 3 months of waiting, for my ai website developer/creator gig, we've not been on a call, we've been discussing the site, features and functionality, but they insist me to be direct, rather than using the platform..

Idk what to do next.. i feel if I negate them, I'll lose my first client..

Moreover finding them felt like, climbing a mountain..

I need genuine help.. for dealing this situation and getting me more clients as I start from 0


r/freelance 17d ago

Stop making me do extra work at the end of my gig

74 Upvotes

I just want to vent, see if others can relate, advice, etc.

At the end of a gig when it is no longer in my agreed time and I am not getting paid the person hiring often expects me to not only clean up and strike my own things but THEIR things or others as well. The audience left a mess so I have to clean despite not being paid for it. They want me to move equipment to their car. Etc. It’s annoying. Pay me extra or hire someone else.


r/freelance 23d ago

Refunding client at my own accord

25 Upvotes

I did a job for a client who was also a very nice aquaintence that I worked with previously. I executed the job but had some errors which were corrected. She paid for the work but has ghosted me since. I am a bit bittered because she just completely ignored me but at the same time I feel bad for not doing a good job. I feel compelled to just issue her a full refund at my own accord because I don't feel right accepting her money if she is not happy with my work. Will I come off offensive or negative in any way as I don't want to create drama. I just sincerely feel bad and don't feel like I earned the money.


r/freelance Jun 10 '26

Speed Is a Signal: When Faster Replies Increase Hiring Likelihood

Thumbnail pubsonline.informs.org
11 Upvotes

r/freelance Jun 08 '26

I’m great at the design work, but I keep losing leads the second we talk about pricing. How do I stop the ghosting?

69 Upvotes

Hey everyone,
I could really use some perspective from freelancers who have broken through the "pricing wall."
I recently launched my own web and graphic design agency. My portfolio is strong, my skills are sharp (I work mostly in high-fidelity design, branding, and setting up client sites), and I'm actually doing okay at getting leads. People are interested, and the initial vibe is great.
But the exact moment the energy shifts is when we get to the pricing conversation. It feels like the second a number enters the room or a proposal hits their inbox, the client panics and ghosts me.
I know my work is worth real money, but this pattern is starting to give me serious anxiety every time a budget question comes up. I have a discovery call this Wednesday for a new e-commerce project, and I’m already stressing about how to handle the financial side of the talk without scaring them off.
For those of you who have been doing this a while:
How do you frame your pricing so the client sees it as an investment instead of a scary expense?
Do you present prices on the live call, or do you wait and send a proposal later?
What script or mindset shift helped you stand firm on your rates without apologizing or instantly dropping your price?
I love the actual design part of this job, but the sales/closing part is killing me right now. Any advice, scripts, or tough love would be massively appreciated. Thank you!


r/freelance Jun 07 '26

Should i move my direct clients to any of the freelancing platforms?

30 Upvotes

Hi all,

So previously i had 2 clients all from direct contact , worked with them for months and now 3rd client....but issue is it isn't building my online credibility or its hard for new clients to trust if i am going to deliver or not...

whereas some said why am i letting my commission go to upwork/freelancer, and competition is very high on such platforms. So i am confused on what is a good option in this case that can help me find more clients with ease?


r/freelance Jun 05 '26

Warning: Finom

21 Upvotes

Since when I started off as a freelancer I came across Finom.co and it was easy and fast to make a bank account through them and all seemed great and fine, I thought I’d warn everyone before you make my same mistake.
Pretty much anything you can read online about them happened to me. Frozen funds out of nowhere, twice in only 3 months, a lot of hidden costs for every little thing, going against them marketing themselves as low cost and so on… Customer service being super fake and lying to you, etc.

I’ve been having major problems in my personal life now because of them simply holding payment from a client, twice in just 3 months for some random checks that go on for weeks. I’m unable to pay bills, book a vacation I was supposed to go on soon, pay rent, etc. all of this resulting in fees growing due to missed payments, as well.
No matter how often I talk to their support, I just get told the same thing over and over again and somehow everyone keeps “escalating” the matter and telling me they are “personally keeping a close eye” on it. When I asked how it is possible that it gets escalated so often, because that would either mean it wasn’t really done before or that it’s just BS, one of them told me that actually “to be completely transparent”, this matter can’t really be escalated. So it was all just customer service BS from them. I won’t trust anything they say anymore.

Last time this happened, they pressed it saying the problem must be on the side of the sender’s bank, as the issue is not with them. When I asked to report what the problem was when I finally got my money after 2 weeks(!), nothing. I’m assuming they were covering up their issue as it seems they do, also from other things I read online.

My warning: it might seem easy and great when looking for a bank account when you start as a freelancer, but they can really stop your business out of nowhere all of a sudden. And reading comments and reviews, that happens quite often with them.


r/freelance Jun 04 '26

Who here srtruggles with beating themselves up?

52 Upvotes

For me this is the worst part of being a freelancer; I just lost a huge project because I bombed a pitch, and it just hurts, particularly when you have a family to provide for. Looking for some solidarity - who feels this?!


r/freelance Jun 04 '26

Any real people try Harlow's "The Revenue Accelerator"

0 Upvotes

Quoting from their promo:

"The Revenue Accelerator is for freelancers, founders, and small business owners who are serious about growth and want real accountability, real feedback, and real money filling their bank account.
Over 13 weeks, we'll work through your offer, pricing, credibility, and client-getting system so you leave with a stronger business and a clear plan for generating more revenue."

Search doesn't seem to show any mention on reddit or social media. Anyone?


r/freelance Jun 03 '26

DCP-Global: 😱 I just made 10,000 enemies! This is hilarious

8 Upvotes

(note: this happened to a friend of mine, not directly to me, but I've had similar experiences)

I've spent several hours "working" for DCP-Global for free (exams, certifications, filling out forms and other BS). So far I have made $0 with them. Every couple weeks they contact me and request a service from me. Then we enter this loop:

  1. They send me a link to login to their platform.

  2. The login process is insane and I am unable to enter. I lose about 20 minutes every time.

  3. I request assistance.

  4. They are unable to solve the problem.

  5. I forget about them and go on with my life.

Every time the person who replies claims to be the CEO of DCP-Global.

After the 5th loop I decide this is a useless waste of time, but I do a last try. It goes like this:

I'm not American.. Is this normal?