How to Price Your Services as a Gig Worker
Setting the right price for your services is one of the most critical decisions you will make as a gig worker. Price too high and you will not get booked. Price too low and you will burn out working for less than you deserve. This guide will walk you through a proven framework for setting rates that attract clients while ensuring you earn a sustainable income.
Why Pricing Matters More Than You Think
Most new gig workers make the same mistake: they look at what other people are charging and undercut them by $5–$10. This race to the bottom hurts everyone—including you. Here is why strategic pricing matters:
- Your rate signals your quality. Clients often associate higher rates with better work.
- Low rates attract difficult clients. Bargain hunters are statistically more likely to leave poor reviews and make unreasonable demands.
- Sustainable pricing prevents burnout. If you are not earning enough, you will take on too many jobs and the quality of your work will suffer.
- Platform fees eat into your margin. Understanding your net take-home is essential.
Step 1: Calculate Your True Costs
Before setting a rate, you need to understand what it actually costs you to work. Many gig workers forget to account for expenses that eat into their hourly earnings.
Fixed Monthly Costs
| Expense | Estimated Monthly Cost |
|---|
| Phone plan | $50–$100 |
|---|---|
| Transportation (gas, transit) | $100–$400 |
| Tools and equipment maintenance | $25–$100 |
| Insurance (liability, health) | $200–$600 |
| Software/apps | $10–$50 |
| Self-employment taxes (set aside) | 25–30% of income |
| Total fixed costs | $385–$1,250/month |
Per-Job Variable Costs
- Travel time to and from the job (unpaid on most platforms)
- Supplies and materials you provide
- Vehicle wear and tear ($0.67/mile IRS rate for 2026)
- Parking and tolls
The True Hourly Rate Formula
Here is how to calculate what you actually need to charge:
Target Annual Income + Annual Expenses + Taxes = Required Gross Revenue Required Gross Revenue / Billable Hours Per Year = Minimum Hourly RateLet us work through an example:
- Target take-home income: $50,000/year
- Annual business expenses: $8,000
- Self-employment taxes (30%): $17,400
- Required gross revenue: $75,400
- Billable hours per year (25 hrs/week x 48 weeks): 1,200
- Minimum hourly rate: $62.83/hour
Step 2: Research Your Market
Now that you know your floor, research what the market will bear. Here are average rate ranges on RentAHuman by service category:
RentAHuman Rate Ranges by Category
| Service Category | Low Range | Mid Range | High Range |
|---|
| General Tasks & Errands | $20/hr | $30/hr | $45/hr |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furniture Assembly | $25/hr | $40/hr | $60/hr |
| Moving & Heavy Lifting | $25/hr | $35/hr | $50/hr |
| Cleaning (Standard) | $25/hr | $35/hr | $50/hr |
| Cleaning (Deep/Move-out) | $30/hr | $45/hr | $65/hr |
| Handyman (General) | $35/hr | $50/hr | $75/hr |
| Handyman (Specialized) | $45/hr | $65/hr | $100/hr |
| Yard Work & Landscaping | $25/hr | $35/hr | $50/hr |
| Painting | $30/hr | $45/hr | $65/hr |
| Personal Assistance | $20/hr | $30/hr | $45/hr |
| Event Setup/Cleanup | $20/hr | $30/hr | $45/hr |
| Tech Help & Setup | $30/hr | $50/hr | $80/hr |
Factors That Affect Your Position in the Range
- Experience level: New workers typically start at the low-to-mid range
- Reviews and ratings: 4.8+ star workers can charge premium rates
- Specialization: Niche skills (electrical, plumbing, smart home) command higher prices
- Location: Urban areas typically support higher rates than rural areas
- Certification: Licensed and certified workers can charge 20–40% more
- Availability: Same-day and weekend availability justifies premium pricing
Step 3: Choose Your Pricing Strategy
There are several approaches to pricing your services. The best strategy depends on your goals and where you are in your career.
Strategy 1: Market Rate Pricing
Set your rate at the mid-range for your service category. This is the safest approach for new workers who want steady bookings.
Best for: New workers building their reputation Example: A new handyman on RentAHuman sets their rate at $50/hr—right in the middle of the $35–$75 range.Strategy 2: Premium Pricing
Set your rate at the top of the range or above it. Back it up with exceptional service, specialized skills, and strong reviews.
Best for: Experienced workers with proven track records Example: An experienced handyman with 100+ five-star reviews and an electrical license charges $80/hr on RentAHuman.Strategy 3: Penetration Pricing
Start slightly below market rate to quickly accumulate bookings and reviews, then gradually raise your rate.
Best for: New workers in competitive markets who need to build reviews quickly Example: Start at $35/hr for handyman work, complete 20 jobs with excellent reviews, then raise to $55/hr. Warning: Do not go too low. Setting your rate at $20/hr for skilled work signals low quality and attracts price-sensitive clients who are harder to please.Strategy 4: Value-Based Pricing
Instead of hourly rates, offer flat-rate packages for common jobs. This rewards your efficiency and gives clients price certainty.
Best for: Experienced workers who can accurately estimate job duration Example: Offer TV mounting for a flat $89 (including hardware), furniture assembly at $49–$149 depending on complexity, or move-out cleaning at $299 for a 2-bedroom apartment.Step 4: Factor in Platform Fees
Your take-home pay depends heavily on the platform you use. Here is how the major platforms compare:
| Platform | Platform Fee | Your Take-Home on $50/hr Job |
|---|
| RentAHuman | 8% | $46.00/hr |
|---|---|---|
| TaskRabbit | 15% + $7.99 | $34.51/hr* |
| Thumbtack | Lead fees vary | $35–$45/hr (estimated) |
| Handy | ~30% | $35.00/hr |
This is why the platform you choose matters enormously. On RentAHuman, the 92% worker pay rate means you keep significantly more of every dollar earned.
Start earning 92% of your rate on RentAHuman →Step 5: Set a Minimum Job Size
One of the biggest profit killers for gig workers is accepting small jobs that take 30 minutes of work but require 30 minutes of travel each way. Suddenly your $40/hr rate becomes $13/hr when you factor in unpaid transit time.
How to Protect Your Earnings
- Set a minimum job duration of 1–2 hours
- Charge for travel time over 20 minutes
- Add a trip charge for distant jobs ($15–$25)
- Batch jobs geographically so you minimize downtime between clients
- Use your RentAHuman profile to specify your service radius
Step 6: Know When to Raise Your Rates
You should raise your rates when:
1. You are booked more than 80% of your available hours — demand exceeds your supply 2. Your reviews are consistently 4.8+ stars — quality justifies premium pricing 3. You have completed 50+ tasks — experience commands higher rates 4. You have added new skills or certifications — expanded capabilities deserve compensation 5. It has been 6+ months since your last increase — costs rise; your rates should too 6. You are feeling burned out — higher rates let you work fewer hours for the same income
How Much to Raise
Increase by 10–15% at a time. A jump from $40/hr to $45/hr is barely noticeable to clients but adds up to thousands more per year. Monitor your booking rate after the increase—if it drops more than 20%, you may have gone too high.
Common Pricing Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Pricing Based on Emotion
Do not set your rate based on what you feel is fair. Use the math. Many workers undervalue themselves because they compare gig work to hourly W-2 jobs, forgetting that gig workers pay their own taxes, insurance, and expenses.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the Competition
While you should not simply undercut competitors, you do need to be aware of the market. A $90/hr rate for basic cleaning will not fly when the market range is $25–$50/hr.
Mistake 3: Forgetting Taxes
If you charge $40/hr and do not set aside money for self-employment taxes, you effectively earn $28/hr. Always price with taxes in mind.
Mistake 4: Not Adjusting for Job Difficulty
A straightforward 2-hour cleaning job is not the same as a complex 2-hour handyman repair. Charge more for jobs that require specialized skills, heavy physical labor, or specialized tools.
Mistake 5: Racing to the Bottom
Some platforms encourage bidding wars where workers compete to offer the lowest price. This hurts everyone. RentAHuman's model lets workers set their own rates without competitive bidding, creating a healthier marketplace for both workers and clients.
Pricing Templates for Common Services
To help you get started, here are pricing templates based on successful workers on RentAHuman:
Handyman Services
- Basic repairs (leaky faucets, door adjustments): $50–$65/hr, 1-hour minimum
- Intermediate work (drywall, tile, basic electrical): $60–$80/hr, 2-hour minimum
- Specialized work (plumbing, electrical panel, smart home): $75–$100/hr, 2-hour minimum
Cleaning Services
- Standard cleaning (maintenance clean): $30–$40/hr, 2-hour minimum
- Deep cleaning: $35–$50/hr or flat rate $200–$400
- Move-out cleaning: $40–$55/hr or flat rate $250–$500
Moving and Heavy Lifting
- Loading/unloading help: $30–$40/hr per person, 2-hour minimum
- Full move assistance: $35–$50/hr per person, 3-hour minimum
- Single item moves (furniture, appliances): Flat rate $75–$200
Assembly Services
- Simple assembly (shelves, small furniture): $35–$50/hr
- Complex assembly (IKEA wardrobes, cribs, gym equipment): $45–$65/hr
- Flat rate options: Small item $49, Medium $89, Large $149
How RentAHuman Helps You Earn More
On RentAHuman, several features are specifically designed to help workers maximize their earnings:
- 92% pay rate — the highest in the industry
- No bidding wars — set your rate and clients come to you
- AI-powered matching — you get matched with relevant tasks automatically
- Review system — build a reputation that justifies premium rates
- Flexible scheduling — work when you want, as much or as little as you want
- Instant payouts — no waiting for weekly pay cycles
The Bottom Line
Pricing your services correctly is a skill that directly impacts your income, job satisfaction, and long-term success as a gig worker. Use the framework in this guide:
1. Calculate your true costs and minimum hourly rate 2. Research market rates for your services 3. Choose a pricing strategy that matches your experience level 4. Factor in platform fees (choose platforms like RentAHuman that let you keep more) 5. Set minimum job sizes to protect your time 6. Raise your rates as your reputation grows
The workers who earn the most are not necessarily the ones who charge the least—they are the ones who deliver exceptional value and price accordingly.
Set your rate and start earning on RentAHuman → Post a Task