Calculator

Estimate Calculator

Use this when you need a rough estimate that still stays connected to your real pricing floor.

Result

What Should I Charge

Work from your target hourly value toward a project quote that still feels worth it.

Use the buffer to protect the quote from revisions, admin time, or light scope creep.

Suggested project price
$1,311.00
Buffer amount
$171.00
Effective hourly rate
$99.25

Breakdown

Plain-English math so the result stays easy to explain.

  • Base labor value
    $1,020.00
  • Project expenses
    $120.00
  • Buffer %
    15.0%

Save locally

Keep this calculator handy

Favorites and saved setups stay on this device. No account needed.

Saved items appear on the Favorites page from this device.

Quoting

Estimate Calculator

Use this when you need a rough estimate that still stays connected to your real pricing floor.

This calculator helps sellers and freelancers create a more grounded estimate before the scope or final quote is fully locked.

How to use this page

Start with your best current estimate, adjust the inputs until the result feels realistic, and use the related tools below when you want to pressure-test price, profit, or payout from another angle.

Work from your target hourly value toward a project quote that still feels worth it.

Use the calculator with the examples below to test ideas quickly and come back to the same setup later.

Related calculators

Keep moving through the launch pages without rewriting your pricing math.

Worked examples

Start from a realistic scenario

Each example opens the same calculator with shareable URL state.

Discovery-stage estimate

A rough estimate with room for refinement before the final quote.

$1,062.00suggested project price

Load this example

Multi-step estimate

An estimate for a broader scope where a stronger buffer is justified.

$2,879.20suggested project price

Load this example

FAQ

Quick answers

Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.

Should an estimate be lower than a final quote?

Not necessarily. The estimate should reflect the best current information, while the final quote becomes firmer as scope sharpens.

Why use a buffer on an estimate?

Because uncertainty is usually higher earlier in the process, and a buffer helps keep the estimate realistic instead of overly optimistic.