Why charge a retainer fee at all?
Two reasons: cash flow and commitment. An upfront retainer fee — whether it's a 50% project deposit or a recurring monthly retainer — gets money in your account before the work starts and signals to the client that the engagement is real. Freelancers who skip this step end up financing their clients' projects, which is a fast way to burn six months on a job and still wait 60 days for the final invoice.
The retainer fee calculator above handles both shapes of that conversation. Project deposit mode covers the one-off case: a $5,000 website build where you want $2,500 before you start. Monthly retainer mode covers the ongoing case: 20 hours of design work every month for the next year. Same idea — money in advance, in writing — but the math is different.
What's a normal project deposit percentage?
Across freelancer forums, agency guides, and contract templates, the deposit standards land in a tight range:
- 50% is the default for new clients and any project under about $10,000. It's the safest split: half the cash is locked in before you start, and the client only owes the balance once the work is delivered.
- 33% (one-third up front, one-third at midpoint, one-third on delivery) works well for larger projects where the client wants a milestone structure.
- 25% is common for trusted, repeat clients on smaller engagements where the relationship has earned a lighter upfront fee.
The calculator defaults to 50% for that reason, with one-tap presets for the other two. Whichever percentage you pick, the rule is the same: it has to be in the contract, and the deposit has to be invoiced and paid before any deliverable leaves your computer.
How to price a monthly retainer
Monthly retainers are where most freelancers leave money on the table. The simplest method — multiply your hourly rate by the hours included — gives you a defensible starting number. From there, two adjustments matter:
- Commit discount. Because the client is locking in recurring hours, a 10–20% discount on your standard hourly rate is conventional. The calculator defaults to 10%. Some specialists charge a premium instead because the retainer reserves capacity; either is defensible if your contract justifies it.
- Buffer for communication and revisions. Add 15–20% to the hours you actually expect to do client work. Calls, Slack messages, and revision rounds eat real time and they're rarely budgeted.
A worked example from the calculator: 20 hours per month at $100/hour with a 10% commit discount works out to $1,800/month, an effective rate of $90/hour, and an annual contract value of $21,600. That last number is the one to remember when you're tempted to drop the rate to win the deal.
What to put in the retainer agreement
The math is the easy part. The contract is what makes the math stick. Whether you're using the project deposit or the monthly retainer mode, your agreement should spell out:
- The exact fee, payment schedule, and currency.
- The scope: deliverables for a project deposit, or hours and services for a monthly retainer.
- What happens to unused hours each month (forfeit, partial roll-over with a cap, or banked).
- The overage rate for hours beyond the cap (usually 100% of your standard hourly rate).
- Refund terms — when the retainer is earned, what happens on cancellation, and the notice period.
- The renewal cadence (month-to-month, quarterly, or annual with auto-renew).
A monthly retainer without these clauses turns into a renegotiation every 30 days. A project deposit without refund terms can leave you exposed if the client cancels mid-build.
Edge cases the calculator helps with
A few situations come up often enough to flag:
- Scope creep on a project deposit. If the original $5,000 project value grows, calculate a new deposit on the added scope and invoice it before doing the work. The original deposit doesn't stretch to cover the new scope.
- Slow months on a monthly retainer. If the client doesn't use their hours, that's their problem — you reserved the capacity. Make this explicit in the contract so it doesn't become an awkward conversation in month three.
- Discounted retainers for long commitments. Some freelancers offer a deeper discount (15–25%) for a six- or twelve-month commitment paid quarterly. Use the calculator to compare the monthly fee at different discount levels before agreeing.
A note on legal and compliance
Retainer rules vary by industry, country, and contract. This calculator handles the math, but it doesn't replace a contract review. Before invoicing an upfront retainer fee or starting a monthly retainer, confirm:
- Your contract clearly defines whether the fee is refundable, partially refundable, or earned on receipt.
- The client received the agreement and signed it before the deposit invoice went out.
- Local tax rules (VAT, GST, sales tax) are applied correctly to the retainer line.
Used the right way, a retainer fee isn't pushy — it's the difference between a sustainable freelance business and one that runs out of cash every quarter. The clients who respect the structure are the ones worth keeping.