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Billable Hours Ratio Calculator

See exactly how much of your week turns into billable hours — with a utilization rate, benchmark coloring, and projected weekly, monthly, and annual revenue at your hourly rate.

Track billable vs non-billable in one screen Color-coded against industry benchmarks Projected weekly, monthly, annual revenue
Where your week goes (hours) Entered: 40 / 40
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Result

Utilization rate
60%healthy range
Billable
24 hr
Non-billable
16 hr
Projected revenue
Weekly
$2,400
Monthly
$10,392
Annual
$124,800
Preview:

Utilization: 24/40 billable hours (60%) → at $100/hr = $2,400/wk, $124,800/yr.

This is a single-week snapshot. Track your billable hours ratio over 4–6 weeks to spot real patterns — one busy or quiet week isn't your true utilization rate. Benchmarks shown reflect a solo freelancer or consultant; agency teams typically aim higher (70–85%).

What this billable ratio calculator gives you

Most freelancers think they bill 35 hours a week and actually bill 22. This tool puts a number on the gap so you can fix it — or accept it.

60–80%

Healthy freelancer range

Industry data puts a sustainable utilization rate between 60% and 80%. The calculator color-codes your number so you know instantly where you sit.

15 hr/wk

Average non-billable load

Most full-time freelancers lose 12–18 hours a week to admin, marketing, calls, and learning. The category breakdown shows you exactly where yours go.

+$X,000/yr

Real revenue impact

Pair the billable percentage with your hourly rate to see how a 5-point bump in utilization translates into weekly, monthly, and annual revenue.

Why your effective hourly rate is lower than you think

If you charge $100 an hour but only bill 22 hours a week out of 40, your real rate is $55. The billable hours ratio is the metric that makes that gap visible.

  • Time tracking apps measure tasks, not utilization. Toggl, Harvest, and Clockify show you how long a project took. They don't tell you what percentage of your work week actually turned into invoiced revenue — that's the utilization rate.
  • Non-billable work fills any space you give it. Email, slack, sales calls, proposals, and bookkeeping silently expand. Without a weekly billable percentage to anchor against, the non-billable side of your week creeps from 30% to 50% before you notice.
  • Raising your hourly rate doesn't fix low utilization. If 18 of your 40 hours are billable, doubling your rate doubles your revenue — but you still have 22 unpaid hours per week. Improving the ratio compounds with every rate increase.
  • One bad week feels like the whole year. Without a number, every slow week feels like a crisis. A tracked utilization rate over 4–6 weeks shows whether you have a real problem or just normal variance.

What this calculator handles

Built around the way freelancers, consultants, and small agencies actually split their week — not just a single billable hours formula.

Category-by-category breakdown

Pre-loaded with the six categories that eat most freelance weeks — client work, admin, marketing, learning, internal, breaks — and you can mark any of them billable or non-billable, rename them, or add your own.

Live mismatch warning

If your category hours don't add up to your weekly total within 2 hours, the tool flags it. No more accidentally calculating a 110% utilization rate because you forgot lunch.

Benchmark coloring

Your billable percentage shows in red below 40%, amber from 40–60%, emerald in the healthy 60–80% zone, and amber again above 90% to flag burnout risk.

Revenue projection at your rate

Add your hourly rate and the calculator projects weekly, monthly (×4.33), and annual (×52) billable revenue. Useful for income planning and for justifying rate increases.

How to calculate your billable hours ratio

Three inputs, one number that tells you whether your week is paying you what it should.

  1. Step 1

    Enter your weekly hours

    Use your real number — not a fantasy 40. If you're working 50, put 50. The utilization rate only means something if the denominator is honest.

  2. Step 2

    Split your week by category

    Fill in hours per category for an average week. Toggle each row between billable and non-billable. Add custom categories for anything specific to your work.

  3. Step 3

    Read your utilization rate

    The calculator shows your billable percentage, the benchmark band you're in, and — if you've added an hourly rate — the weekly, monthly, and annual revenue it projects.

Why your utilization rate matters more than your hourly rate

If you only track one number this quarter, make it the utilization rate calculator output — your billable hours ratio. Here's why: a freelancer charging $80/hour with 75% utilization out-earns a freelancer charging $120/hour with 40% utilization, every single week. The hourly rate is what you negotiate. The billable percentage is what you actually take home.

This is the metric agencies obsess over because it directly drives revenue. A solo freelancer with a 50% utilization rate and a $100 hourly rate effectively earns $50 per working hour. Bump the ratio to 70% and the same hourly rate now produces an effective $70 — a 40% revenue jump with no rate negotiation, no new clients, and no extra working hours.

Healthy benchmarks: what a "good" billable percentage looks like

The numbers shift by role and business model, but the published benchmarks are remarkably consistent across consulting firms, marketing agencies, and freelancer surveys:

  • Solo freelancers and consultants: 60–80% utilization rate. Below 60% usually means too much marketing or admin; above 80% sustained means you've stopped reinvesting in the business.
  • Marketing and creative agencies: 70–85% for production roles (designers, developers, copywriters). Account managers and strategists typically run lower because client communication is non-billable.
  • Senior consultants: 80–90% during active engagements. Often paired with deliberate down-quarters for thought leadership work.
  • Law and accounting: 60–75% across the year, with weekly peaks much higher during filing or trial windows.

The Service Performance Insight global benchmark for professional services hovers around 69%. Your number doesn't need to beat the benchmark — it needs to be sustainable for the business model you actually run.

What counts as non-billable (and what shouldn't)

Most freelancers under-count their non-billable hours by 30–40%. The categories that get missed:

  • Email and Slack triage — yes, even client messages, unless you've negotiated a "communication retainer".
  • Proposals and pitches — almost always non-billable until the contract is signed.
  • Invoicing, bookkeeping, and chasing late payments — fully non-billable, even though they're directly tied to revenue.
  • Marketing: portfolio updates, social posts, newsletters, content creation, networking calls.
  • Learning and certifications — non-billable unless a specific client is paying for upskilling.
  • Internal projects — your own website, your CRM setup, your invoicing template.

Anything you can't hand a client and say "I worked on your project for X hours" is non-billable. Track it honestly and your utilization rate becomes useful immediately.

Three ways to improve your billable hours ratio

The fastest gains come from three places, and they don't require longer hours:

  1. Batch the admin. Two 60-minute windows per week (Monday morning, Thursday afternoon) for email, invoicing, and ops will recover 3–5 billable hours compared to letting admin scatter all day.
  2. Productize the repeat work. Proposals, onboarding emails, project kick-off docs — every freelancer rewrites the same documents from scratch. Templates plus a five-minute customization beat a fresh draft every time.
  3. Bill for revisions and scope creep. "Just one small change" eats more freelance utilization than any other single category. Either include a fixed revision count in the contract or bill incremental rounds at the hourly rate.

A reasonable goal: lift your billable percentage by 5 points per quarter. At a $100 hourly rate over a 40-hour week, that's roughly $200 more revenue per week, or about $10,000 per year, with no new clients and no new hours.

Common mistakes that wreck the calculation

Three patterns make a billable hours calculator output meaningless:

  • Counting breaks as work. If your weekly hours include lunch and walks, your utilization rate will look artificially low. Either include breaks in the denominator and assign them to a non-billable row, or exclude them from both.
  • Over-counting admin as billable. A status email sent to a client during a paid project? Billable. The same email sent before the SOW is signed? Non-billable. Be honest with the line.
  • Using one bad week as the baseline. Utilization swings 15–20 points week to week even for established freelancers. Average over 4–6 weeks before you make any decisions about rates, capacity, or hiring.

When a low billable percentage is actually fine

Not every dip is a problem. If you're in a deliberate investment quarter — building a productized service, writing a book, launching a course, or onboarding a major retainer — your utilization rate will fall on purpose. The point of tracking the billable ratio isn't to hit 80% every week; it's to know when the dip is intentional and when it's the kind of slow drift that quietly costs you a five-figure year.

Use the calculator above for a single-week snapshot. Re-run it monthly, write the number down, and after a quarter you'll have something most freelancers never get: an honest picture of where your week actually goes — and the levers to change it.

Frequently asked questions

What is a good utilization rate for a freelancer?
For a solo freelancer, a healthy utilization rate sits between 60% and 80% — that's roughly 24 to 32 billable hours in a 40-hour week. Below 60% you're leaving money on the table or carrying too much overhead; consistently above 85% is usually a burnout signal because you've stopped investing in marketing, learning, and rest.
What's the difference between billable and non-billable hours?
Billable hours are time you can put on a client invoice — research, design, writing, calls, revisions tied to a specific project. Non-billable hours are everything else that keeps the business running: admin, email, bookkeeping, proposals, marketing, sales calls, training, and internal projects. Both are real work; only one generates direct revenue.
How do I calculate my billable hours percentage?
Divide billable hours by total hours worked, then multiply by 100. If you billed 28 hours out of 40, that's (28 / 40) × 100 = 70%. This calculator does the math for you and adds the category breakdown so you can see where the non-billable hours actually go.
Should breaks count as part of my work week?
Only if you're counting them in your hours-per-week input. The cleanest approach: enter the time you're at your desk or on the clock, then assign breaks to a non-billable row. If you don't include lunch in your weekly total, don't add it to a category either.
Why is the utilization rate for an agency higher than for a freelancer?
Agencies usually quote 70–85% billable utilization for production roles because the non-billable work — sales, marketing, finance, HR — is handled by separate teams. A solo freelancer carries all those functions personally, which is why a 60–70% utilization rate is healthy for one-person businesses.
How can I improve my billable percentage?
Three high-leverage moves: (1) batch admin into one or two windows per week instead of letting it scatter, (2) systemize repeat tasks like proposals and onboarding so each one takes minutes instead of hours, and (3) say no to scope creep — unpaid revisions are the single biggest silent destroyer of freelance utilization rates.
Is a low utilization rate always bad?
No. If you're in a deliberate growth phase — building a course, writing content, or launching a new service — your billable percentage will dip on purpose. Low utilization only matters when it's accidental. The tool is for catching the accidental kind.
How often should I track my billable hours ratio?
Weekly is ideal, monthly is fine. One week is too noisy — a sick day or a launch can swing the number 20 points. Tracked over 4–6 weeks, your average utilization rate becomes the most honest productivity metric in your business.

Turn billable hours into a sent invoice in two minutes

Once you know your weekly billable hours, generate a clean invoice for them in InvoiceCat — free, no signup, downloadable as PDF.

Open the invoice generator

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