Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (2023)

0:00 Listen to audio podcast

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (1)

If you're a business looking to get a writer to handle your blog, you will run into the complex world of pricing. Some writers charge a lot! Some charge a minimal amount. You might be suspicious of the price points you see, and with good reason. There are a lot of questions that spring up.

  • Is this rate higher than the service is worth?
  • Is this ratelowerthan the service is worth?
  • Does this rate include additional non-copywriting services?

Pricing for writing can be broadly varied, and there are many considerations that you should keep in mind. I want to do what I can to elucidate freelance writing rates with some guidelines for those who haven't been steeped in it for a decade as I have.

Let's dig into the subject, shall we?

Table of Contents

Varying Pricing Methodologies

Price Per Word

Price Per Project

Price Per Hour

Retainer Pricing

(Video) How Much to Charge for Freelance Writing: 3 Ways to Determine Your Rates

Good, Fast, Cheap: Pick Two

The Broad Range of Per-Word Prices

Traps and Pitfalls

Write Right

Varying Pricing Methodologies

There are generally four pricing models for writing. This post is largely focused on one (pay-per-word articles), but I want to touch on the others as well.

Price Per Word

One of the most common pricing models is the per-word model. Content mills like Textbroker commonly use the pay-per-word model, and it's the model used by many freelance writers and used throughout various publishing programs.

This model is great because you pay for exactly what you get, no more, no less. You know what you're ordering, and the writer provides.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (2)

It has a few drawbacks, though.

  • Unless your writer strives to write the exact word article count every time – to the point of adjusting sentences to meet it – your precise cost per week/month will vary. It will usually be within a specific budgetary range, but the price will change with every new article.
  • A sentence full of fluff and a sentence tightly focused on the subject cost the same. Low-tier writers will fluff up their posts to get paid for less effort on their parts.
  • Additional Services. Do you want the writer to research, publish through your CMS, and find and use images? You'll have to negotiate additional fees for those services.

I'll talk more about this model throughout this post since it's the article's subject as a whole. For now, suffice to say that it's ubiquitous in this industry, though not always the best.

The average price per word for content writing services is about 5 cents per word.

(Video) Freelance Writing Charges || How Much To Charge As a Freelance Content Writer

Price Per Project

The second option, which is very common amongst mid-tier and high-tier freelancers, is a price-per-project model, and it's also prevalent in the publishing industry. For example, novelists get paid per project at a flat rate, with an advance and a cut of profits from their future sales.

Pricing per project has some advantages, like stability. You know that, say, a given blog post will cost you $200 every time you order one, regardless of subject, exact word count, or complexity. These predictable flat fees can be good for both businesses and writers, who value consistency.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (3)

On the other hand, the price per project cannot include additional services, like research/images/publishing. It depends on whether you're hiring the writer to write copy or manage content, and one will be somewhat more expensive than the other.

The average rate for a 1,000-word article is $80.

Price Per Hour

A per-hour rate is familiar with some types of freelancing but not with others. In the world of blogging and copywriting, a per-hour rate is typically seen with freelancers who do more than just content writing. If they're doing research, finding and editing images, handling publication, handling promotion, monitoring analytics - all of that requires money, and the easiest way to charge for it is a per-hour rate.

A per-hour rate can be more expensive (or less expensive) than comparable services in other pricing plans. Freelance writer rates vary a lot and depend on their efficiency, the services rendered, and more. I often find that it's more expensive, but it changes from freelancer to freelancer.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (4)

Whether you decide to hire a part-time or full-time writer, be mindful that there are only so many words of quality content that a person can create in a certain amount of time. Depending on the type of content, a single blog post can take an entire day, and a whitepaper could take a full week. As an extreme example, a large eBook can take months to finish. Hiring a writer by the hour doesn't necessarily mean you can squeeze as much as possible out of them and maintain a high level of quality.

The average salary for a freelance content writer is $25 per hour.

Retainer Pricing

Retainer pricing is the ultimate in stability but runs into other problems. Essentially, you pay your freelancer a fixed fee each week/month, and they render services as needed. Sometimes that might be 10 hours' worth of work; sometimes, it might be 30. If the work adds up too much, the freelancer might want to negotiate a higher rate to better compensate them for the work they're doing. Or, you may just end up with a large invoice at the end of the month for your entire content calendar.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (5)

The biggest issue with this is that it becomes very similar to a salaried position. In that case, you can run into labor laws that require you to classify them as an employee rather than a freelancer, with all the details that entail, like benefits and other labor laws.

On the other hand, you might pay them a fixed monthly fee for a set amount of work, like when you're contracting a content marketing agency. Then you're simply hiring an outside firm to handle outsourcing your content marketing.

Is one of these models better than the others? Not really. They all exist because there are use cases for them, and it all depends on the services you need and the individuals or companies offering them.

The average retainer for a content writing retainer is $1k per month.

Good, Fast, Cheap: Pick Two

There's common wisdom in commerce that there are three qualities every service can have: it can be good, it can be fast, and it can be cheap.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (6)

You can never get all three; you have to pick two.

  • Good, fast work won't be cheap.
  • Good, cheap work won't be fast.
  • Fast, cheap work won't be good.

This saying became popular becausework requires investment. You can invest in either time or money. You can get good work for a low rate if you don't have time constraints. You can get good work fast if you have the money to spend on prioritizing it. And, if you don't want to invest time or money, you can get work, but it won't be good.

I have to bring this up because one of the pitfalls of per-word pricing is very little reinforcement of this triangle. Per-word rates can be below-average and will still give you great content if you give the freelance writer time to make it. However, the writer gets paid the same amount whether they give you their project in a day or a month.

From the writer's perspective, they have to balance their work with numerous clients, prioritizing the projects with the best effort-to-return ratio. If your project is very complex, and someone else's is simple, they'll write the straightforward content first. You have to wait simply because someone else is asking for less.

(Video) What Should You Charge As A Freelance Writer?

This scenario can even vary from week to week, and different volumes of work at various times change the equation for the freelance writer. They also have to consider longevity; if they go above and beyond to work with you, are you more likely to stick with them for years, or do they suspect you're only in it for a few weeks or months? They'll usually prioritize consistent work over valuable work because it eliminates a significant source of stress for a freelancer.

The Broad Range of Per-Word Prices

If you spend any time looking for a freelance content writer online, you'll see a large variety of freelance writing rates, from a penny per word to $1.50 per word or more.

Z

Z

Z

Is your blog earning you business? If not, let's fix that.

We create blog content that converts - not just for ourselves, but for our clients, too.

We pick blog topics like hedge funds pick stocks. Then, we create articles that are 10x better to earn the top spot.

Content marketing has two ingredients - content and marketing. We've earned our black belts in both.

If you run an internet-based business and are looking to scale, schedule a call to speak with our founder:

Free Strategy Call

Let's dig into each of the different rates and pricing tiers and what you can expect from them:

Low-Tier

At the cheapest level, you can find writers offering their services for $0.01 to $0.03 per word.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (7)

These writers typically fall into one of a few categories.

  • For such a low price rate, it's barely worth spending time looking into a topic. These writers will Google the subject, find content that suits, run it through an article spinner or quickly rewrite it and send it over. This is especially common with gigs on freelance writing businesses, content mills, and other affordable writing services.
  • At such a low price, it's entirely possible that the freelance writer finds content out in the wild, copies and pastes it for you, and calls it a day. You aren't paying enough for original thought, after all.
  • ESL/Foreign. Sometimes a writer lives in a region where the cost of living is so low that they can charge a low fee and still make a decent living. In many cases, the writers are often not entirely familiar with the language you want them to write in and might produce sub-par content. Grammatical errors, typos, and funky-sounding paragraphs could kill your rankings.
  • Poor Quality. Good, Fast, Cheap; you've picked Cheap. Good is relative.
  • You'll rarely find a good blogger toiling away for sub-par rates. It's possible, of course, but it's hard to say how long that situation will last and if they'll remain reliable.

These situations are, of course, usually why it's better to avoid these price ranges when creating writing jobs. Sure, you might find a diamond in the rough, but you'll have to dig through a lot of freelance writers to get one, and it's not worth the time, effort, or energy to sort through. These are mostly brand new writers or individuals who speak English as a second language.

Quality articles can take days to write when you factor in research, graphic design, editing, formatting, optimizing, and other critical steps.

Middle-Tier

A somewhat higher level price rate is around $0.05 to $0.20 per word. This rate is middle-to-high-end content mill writing, the kind of content you see at the 4-5-star level on sites like Writer Access or Upwork, and the quality you'll find in private teams and curated love lists. It's uncommon to find any quality assignments on most of these websites, as most open assignments are 500-word articles on average or occasional 1,000-word articles.

(Video) Should freelance writers charge by the word or hour?

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (8)

This rate range is also the rate for freelancers who are confident in their skills, produce decent content, and either lack confidence or lack a client list.

Remember that if you're going through a content mill, the freelance writer is getting paid less than you're paying. The mill takes their cut, after all. They do provide a service – they protect you from bad writers, protect writers from bad clients, and do copyright checks – but if you can handle that on your own, a content mill isn't worth it.

Working with a freelancer directly when they charge this much is the peak of the bell curve, where the majority of businesses and freelancers work. It's a reasonable rate and a natural balance between price and quality.

High-Tier

The higher tiers of freelancing are all over the place. There are experienced writers out there working for high rates between $0.25 to $1.50 per word, and that's an extensive price range. The quality between those ranges could vary drastically, or not at all.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (9)

This range is hard to generalize because there aren't many writers capable of producing content at this price point. More out there think that their writing skills place them in this category, but it's very uncommon, and they don't have a lot of success with repeat clients. Plus, the writers genuinely worth this price are hard to find because they tend to find a stable client or a writing career and roll with it. They don't actively seek more work because they don't necessarily have to.

These top-tier writers usually have personal blogs of their own, and they may be industry authorities and icons themselves. At that point, you're barely hiring them as writers; your pay rate is a consulting fee to produce content for you.

These writers do a lot more than write, too, of course. They do SEO work, social media marketing, and email marketing, they can promote content with their audiences, and they do everything required for your content to succeed with little to no revisions. They usually have a wide range of high-profile clients, years of writing experience, and their articles are very successful. They're worth every penny, but they don't come cheap, and you'll never have to worry about proofreading.

Traps and Pitfalls

When hiring a freelance writer to handle your blog, you have a lot to think about.

One of the most common mistakes I see people make is when they cheap out on services. You have a small budget and want to conserve it, so you hire writers for low prices.

This practice is a mistake because it's going to get you nothing. Sure, you'll get writing, but is the writing any good? Or is it absolute surface level, bare-minimum kind of stuff? Does it have any focus on SEO, any deep research? Probably not.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (10)

When you under-pay for content, you lose out on:

  • You're not paying the writer enough for them to think about what they're writing or perform the necessary research. It might be information off the top of their head or thin surface-level content that doesn't satisfy your visitor's search query.
  • A writer who is an expert in a subject is going to charge expert rates. Everyone else is just parroting Google search results.
  • Additional services. Promotion, research, SEO, images, fact-checking; all of these are services that you don't get when you pay a low rate.

Remember, writing is just part of the content marketing process; marketing is the other half. User experience, CRO, and SEO are equally important, and if somebody isn't doing those things, then your content won't perform as well as it should.

Another common issue I see businesses making is falling into the frequency trap. The frequency trap is falling prey to the shotgun ideology of content marketing.

That is, a shotgun filled with birdshot fills the air in a given zone with pellets, increasing the likelihood that at least one of them will hit a flying bird. The bird is small and fragile, so only one shot needs to hit.

Freelance Writer Rates: What's a Normal Per Word or Hourly Rate? (11)

In blogging, the concept then becomes, the more blog posts you have published and produced, the more likely one is to hit an audience and go viral. This strategy is how sites like HuffPo and Buzzfeed got their start.

The problem is that the less investment each post has, the smaller the pellet and the broader the area it must fill. The overwhelming majority of businesses cannot afford to fill the air with enough pellets to succeed. They try to hire cheap freelance writers to produce new posts every day, and it just doesn't work.

What works much better is condensing that budget into single shots, with the time taken to aim. A single shot with one hit, that's all you need. It's more expensive per post, but you only need one post weekly;the frequency isn't that important.

Write Right

I strongly encourage everyone to invest in high-quality writing, especially when your writer is ghostwriting your content and your name and face are on it.

You want that "Good" in the "Good Fast Cheap" triad at all costs, and it's up to you to balance whether you're investing in it with time or money. I recommend money. If you invest money into blogging and start slow, once your blog begins to bring in returns, you can reinvest those returns in ramping up your blog. It's harder to do that the other way around.

(Video) FREELANCE WRITING RATES: Why You Should *NEVER* CHARGE $100 or LESS!

FAQs

Should I charge per hour or per word? ›

Per word rates are a great option for freelance writers with a specialized niche. If you're an expert in a given field, clients will likely pay higher per word rates for your content. Per word rates are also a good alternative for clients who may be put off by an hourly rate.

What is a good freelance writing rate per word? ›

Per word rate

How much should a writer charge per word? Freelance rates can start as low as $0.05 per word for blogs or high-volume content sites, and range up to $1.50 or more per word or more for elite news sites or trade publications.

What is a good hourly rate for freelance writing? ›

On Payscale, the national average is listed as $23.67 per hour. ZipRecruiter, gives an average hourly wage of $31 per hour but specifies that most writers' salaries range between $17 and $35 per hour.

How much should I charge for writing per word? ›

In the Indian Context, Generally content writers get paid 40 p- Re 1 Per word which can increase with your work experience, quality of work, and how impactful your content is. Once you establish a brand name for yourself the payment is for the asking. On average, Content Writers can start anywhere from 8000- 15000.

What is a good payment per word? ›

In our experience, there's a broad range: between $0.03 and $0.30 per word. To help you visualize, here is a loose estimation of how this might break down into different ranges.
...
Freelance Writing Rates 2017.
LevelFee Per WordEst. Per Hour (500 Words)
Experienced.13-.20$65-$100
In Demand Expert.21-.30$105-$150
2 more rows
Nov 7, 2017

What should I charge for hourly rate? ›

Calculate Your Hourly Rate

Business schools teach a standard formula for determining an hourly rate: Add up your labor and overhead costs, add the profit you want to earn, then divide the total by your hours worked. This is the minimum you must charge to pay your expenses, pay yourself a salary, and earn a profit.

How many words per hour should I write? ›

Some writers would consider 100 words an hour to be a perfectly productive rate.

How do I price myself as a freelance writer? ›

How to Price Yourself in the Freelance Market
  1. Don't suggest an hourly rate. ...
  2. Dealing with the “we don't have a big budget,” pickle. ...
  3. Compare and contrast, but don't undersell yourself based on the market. ...
  4. Quote yourself confidently. ...
  5. Offer your services in tiers. ...
  6. Asking point-blank if there is a budget.
Jul 31, 2020

How much should a beginner freelance writer charge? ›

Charging $50 to $100 for a 1,000-word article is generally a good rate for beginner freelance writers. From a word-count rate perspective, this would be $0.05 to $0.10 per word.

How many words do freelance writers write per day? ›

IF you want to become a serious freelance writer, you have to be writing more than 100 words a day. Depending on what you are writing, you will probably be averaging over 1000 words a day.

How do you negotiate freelance writing rates? ›

How to Negotiate Freelance Writing Rates
  1. Know Your Worth. Before you go to the person who will be paying you to write for them, know what your writing is worth. ...
  2. Build and Bring Your Portfolio. ...
  3. Consider the Amount of Work the Project Takes. ...
  4. Be Firm and Flexible.
Sep 23, 2021

Should I charge per word? ›

General Pricing Averages

A general guideline: 5–7.5 cents per word is below average, and more beginner rates. 8–11 cents per word is a general average. 12–15 cents per word is slightly above average for writers with more experience.

How much should I charge for a 1000 word paper? ›

The low end for a 1000-word research article is around $75, while an experienced writer may charge closer to $250 or more. Blog article. Less technical articles are often quicker to write, so you may want to charge less. A 1000-word blog article averages around $50 at the lower end and $175 at the higher end.

How much should you charge for a 500-word article? ›

Average freelance writing fees for a 500-word article

Typically most content creators will charge between $3 to $50 for a 500-word article, which is a good ballpark; however, the more experienced writers who possess not only more knowledge but also have a certain way with words can often charge upwards of $100.

What should I charge per 100 words? ›

I consider the price of $5 for 100 words to be the most acceptable and fair for a freelance writer. Based on my experience it usually takes you up to one hour to write a 500-word article. So, if your hourly rate is $25 per hour, you can do the math. The catch is that freelance writing prices can vary a lot.

Videos

1. How to Set Freelance Writing Rates + Benchmarks and Data
(Coach Carmine Mastropierro)
2. What is Freelance Writing, Exactly?
(Camryn Rabideau)
3. How to Set Your Freelance Writing Rates $$$ GET PAID TO WRITE
(Jessica Foster - The Confident Content Writer)
4. 6 Best Freelance Writing Jobs (Perfect For Beginners!) - Get Paid To Write
(Tom Blake)
5. Does Freelance Writing Pay? Freelance writing for beginners
(Elna Writes)
6. 5 Websites That Pay $100 Or More Per Article | Freelance Writing | Get Paid To Write!
(Copy My Hustle)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Delena Feil

Last Updated: 01/08/2023

Views: 5595

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Delena Feil

Birthday: 1998-08-29

Address: 747 Lubowitz Run, Sidmouth, HI 90646-5543

Phone: +99513241752844

Job: Design Supervisor

Hobby: Digital arts, Lacemaking, Air sports, Running, Scouting, Shooting, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Delena Feil, I am a clean, splendid, calm, fancy, jolly, bright, faithful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.