Advertisement
Updated for 2026

Video Editor Hourly Rate Calculator

Stop guessing what to charge. Work backwards from the income you actually want to keep and get a rate you can quote with confidence — hourly, day rate, and per finished minute.

Your numbers

$
What you want to actually keep — not revenue.
$
Presets ≈ $3,900: software $1,500 · stock music/footage $600 · plugins $600 · hardware/storage $1,200. Edit to fit you.
Real billable hours — not 40.
Recommended hourly rate
$91/ hour
Includes a 20% buffer for revisions & late payers.
Minimum rate
$76
bare break-even / hour
Day rate
$730
recommended × 8 hrs
Per finished minute
$137
YouTube ≈ 1.5 hrs/min
Billable hours
1,200
used / year
2026 market benchmark
$45–$85 / hr Mid
In line with the market range.
Runs entirely in your browser. Guidance only — not financial advice.
Advertisement

Last reviewed: July 2026 · Free · No sign-up required

How much should a video editor charge in 2026?

Setting your rate is one of the hardest parts of working as a freelance video editor. Charge too little and you burn out editing through the night for pennies; charge too much without a reason and clients quietly disappear. This calculator works backwards from the income you actually want to take home in 2026 — after tax and business costs — and turns it into a clear hourly rate, day rate, and price per finished minute you can quote without second-guessing yourself.

How to calculate your video editing rate

Most editors pick a number that "sounds about right" and hope for the best. A sustainable rate is built from your own numbers instead. Here is the method this tool uses:

  1. Start with your take-home goal. Decide how much you want to actually keep in a year — rent, food, savings, all of it. This is your target income, not the total you invoice.
  2. Add your business expenses. Editing software (Adobe Creative Cloud, DaVinci Resolve Studio, plugins), stock music and footage, a fast computer, drives, and cloud storage add up quickly. Most working editors spend anywhere from $3,000 to $10,000+ a year.
  3. Be honest about billable hours. This is the number editors get wrong most often. A "full-time" week is not 40 billable hours. Once you subtract finding clients, revisions, admin, exports, and unpaid back-and-forth, most freelancers bill 20–25 hours a week. Twenty-five is a realistic starting point.
  4. Subtract time off. Nobody works 52 weeks straight. Four weeks is a sensible default for holidays and slow spells.
  5. Account for tax. You only keep part of what you invoice. Setting aside roughly 30% for tax keeps year-end from becoming a nasty surprise — your exact rate depends on where you live.
  6. Add a buffer. The minimum rate keeps the lights on if everything goes perfectly. The recommended rate adds a 20% margin for the messy reality: scope creep, late payers, and the jobs that always run long.

The calculator divides your income goal plus expenses by your real billable hours, grosses that up for tax, then adds the buffer — giving you a rate that is sustainable, not just survivable.

2026 freelance video editor rates

Rates vary by skill, niche, and region, but these ranges reflect what freelance editors are charging in 2026. Use them as a sanity check against the number the calculator gives you.

Experience tierTypical hourly rate
Junior (0–2 years)$25–$45
Mid (2–5 years)$45–$85
Senior (5+ years)$85–$150

If your calculated rate lands far below your tier, you are probably under-counting your expenses or over-counting your billable hours. If it lands far above, you will need a strong reel, fast turnaround, or a specialty like motion graphics to defend it.

Hourly vs. per finished minute vs. project-based

There is no single "correct" way to charge. The best editors switch between three pricing models depending on the job.

Hourly

Transparent and fair for open-ended or fast-changing work, but it quietly punishes you for being efficient — the faster you edit, the less you earn. It works best for messy projects where the scope genuinely is not clear yet.

Per finished minute

This prices the deliverable rather than your time. A 10-minute YouTube video might take 15 hours to edit, so you would quote roughly 15 × your hourly rate ÷ 10 as your per-minute price. Clients understand "cost per minute of final video," and the model rewards speed. The calculator estimates it using realistic edit-time ratios per project type — short-form is fast, while corporate and motion-heavy work is slow.

Project-based (flat fee)

What most experienced editors move toward. You quote one price for the whole job based on your hourly or per-minute math, then protect yourself by capping the number of revision rounds. Clients love the certainty, and you keep the upside whenever you work fast. A good habit: calculate the job in hours first, then present it as a flat or per-minute price — you anchor to your real cost but quote in the format the client prefers.

Frequently asked questions

How many hours can I actually bill per week?
For most full-time freelancers, 20–25. The rest of the week goes to finding work, revisions, admin, rendering, and communication. Building your rate on 40 billable hours is the fastest way to accidentally undercharge yourself.
Should I charge hourly or per finished minute?
Per finished minute — or a flat project fee — usually earns more once you are fast, because you are paid for the result instead of the clock. Charge hourly when the scope is unclear or the revisions look likely to be endless.
How much should I charge for motion graphics?
Motion graphics and VFX are specialized and slow, so they command a premium — often 1.5–2× a standard edit. If a project is motion-heavy, use a higher edit-time ratio (the "Corporate" project type assumes the most editing time per minute) or add motion work as a separate line item.
Do I really need to set aside 30% for taxes?
Roughly, yes — though your exact rate depends on your country, income, and deductions. Setting aside about 30% of what you invoice is a safe default so tax season is not a shock. Confirm the number with a local accountant.
Why is the recommended rate higher than the minimum?
The minimum rate only covers your income goal, expenses, and tax if every single thing goes perfectly. The recommended rate adds a 20% buffer for revisions that run long, clients who pay late, and the gaps between projects — the normal friction of freelance life.

Guides & resources