A client asks your rate. You type a number, get scared, and delete it for a smaller one. Here is how to set a floor you never go below, and quote it without it feeling like begging.
"I typed my rate, stared at it, then deleted it and typed something lower. By the time I hit send, the job was barely worth my time."
A feeling we hear often from new freelancers
That shrinking number is the first thing a client ever learns about how you value your own work. A low rate feels safe, but it is not. It attracts the clients who do not value the work, who ask for endless changes, and who leave the moment someone cheaper appears. This lesson gives you two things: a floor you never go below, and a simple script to quote it out loud without begging.
Wrong question: "What is the lowest rate that might get me hired?"
Better question: "What is the value I give a client abroad, and what floor protects my time?"
You are not applying for a local job that pays local wages. You are offering a service to a client abroad who pays in dollars. You earn in dollars. You stay in the Philippines. So stop pricing yourself against the job down the street. Price the value you give a client across the world.
Five steps. You will leave with a floor written down and a quote ready to send.
| Step | What you do | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Find your floor | Monthly need divided by realistic billable hours equals your minimum hourly. Write it down privately. | A line you never cross |
| 2. Price in dollars | Think and quote in your client's currency, not your local one. | Stops you anchoring low |
| 3. Specialist beats generalist | Lead with one clear promise instead of a long skill list. Keep the other skills, just lead with one. | Roughly 3x the pay for a clear lane |
| 4. Quote a range | Name a range, not a single number. The bottom stays above your floor; the top is where you would love to land. | Starts a conversation, not a dead end |
| 5. Protect the floor | When a client pushes back, adjust the scope, never the floor. Below your floor, the honest answer is "not the right fit." | Walking away protects the business |
In our community data, the pay gap between a general helper and a focused specialist is roughly three times, for picking a lane. Not because the specialist works harder, but because a clear, specific skill is easier to trust and easier to charge for. Being the person who does one thing well beats being the person who does everything cheaply.
Knowing your number is one thing. Saying it out loud without your voice shaking is another. Fill in these four parts and you have a complete, confident quote, with no apology and no nervous over-explaining.
When you say your range, do three things. Pause. State the range. Then stop talking. Most people ruin a good quote by nervously adding "but I can go lower" before the client even answers. Do not fill the silence. The silence is the client thinking, which is exactly what you want.
An example person, invented, not a real client. A new social media assistant gets her first real inquiry. Her instinct is to quote low. Instead she uses the method.
There is always someone willing to go lower. The lowest price is a race you win by losing. The client who only cares about the cheapest hands will leave you for the next cheaper person anyway. Compete on clarity and trust, never on price.
"I will do this, and also this, and also that, all for the tiny price" is just underpricing with more steps. It exhausts you and trains the client to expect everything for nothing. More work is a reason to charge more, never a reason to charge less.
You should never pay to learn how to earn, and you should never pay to work either. No expensive course promising secret jobs, no fee to join a magic client list. You charge for your work. Your money flows one direction: toward you.
Audit checklist:
You feel you have not earned the right to charge, so you shrink the number. The floor removes the guessing and the guilt.
Your risk is not nerves, it is habit. You may be charging an old rate that no longer matches your skill or your specialty.
Your trap is anchoring your rate to your old office salary. Remote client work abroad is a different market with a different number.
Creatives often price by hours instead of by the value of a finished asset. A great video is worth more than the time it took.
You already understand margins from your own business. Apply that same discipline to your freelance rate.
Doing everything is exactly what keeps your rate low. The 3x specialist gap is your biggest opportunity.
For every archetype: your first rate is the anchor for everything after. It is hard to raise a price with a client who hired you cheap, and much easier to start fair and grow. Build the first number on a floor, not on fear.
Post this in BFF Facebook Group (Work At Home Geek):
When you post your quote, the lesson is passed. Naming a price like a professional is the skill.
This rate skill applies straight to the Social Media, Admin and VA, and Content roles on the Job Board. Set your floor before you open a single listing.
Hold steady, BFF Team. We keep going together.
– Lala