Conversion rate for salary vs hourly contract position (for wife)

1,596 Views | 7 Replies | Last: 7 mo ago by hijakeroo123
hijakeroo123
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AG
Quick question: My wife is on the job hunt and is considering a possible contract/freelance role which would average 30-40 hours per week. Her past two jobs have been salaried, her last one with full benefits (health insurance, 401k, etc.). With this in mind, does anyone have suggestions for a rough formula for determining what she should be negotiating for an hourly rate based on a comparable salaried position? If she moves forward, she will be paying health insurance, retirement, etc. out of pocket, along with self-employment tax.
I Am A Critic
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2X her previously hourly rate would be a good start. Maybe more.
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FrioAg 00
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AG
For most companies, covered benefits are about 20-25% compared to the cost of salaries.

Brian Earl Spilner
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I would do the hourly rate x 40 x 50 to get a rough ballpark estimate of the yearly salary, and then add whatever you think the benefits might be worth. (Ie. 401k 6% match, HSA employer contribution, etc)

Then convert the result back to the hourly rate.
Casey TableTennis
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If someone is just changing to hourly I usually advise a conversion of salary + benefits as others suggested. If it is trimming/shaping the role, especially to more impact, rate needs to go up to reflect the higher value per unit hour. Double is a good proxy if you are doing what you are best at, getting rid of a lot of the busy/crap work. Can be bigger jump if the work carved out to be in scope is very high value.
Janccall
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@doodle jump google To estimate an hourly rate from a salary, start by dividing the salary by annual work hours (about 2,000). Then add extra to cover benefits, taxes, and self-employment costsusually 20-30% more. So if the salary was $60K, a rough freelance rate might be around $36-$40/hour.
A. G. Pennypacker
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Not sure if this would be true for your wife's case or not, but when my wife worked contract she had to pay extra self-employment tax - I believe about 15%. So at a minimum just to break even, not counting loss of benefits you need to cover the extra 15% in taxes.

Also no paid holidays - usually about 10 days per year. And no paid vacation, another 10-20 days per year. 25 days a year works out to around 11% loss.

If she had a 401k with company match - typically 3% to 6%, that's another loss to consider.

So all together, just to break even you need a rate that is equivalent to about a 30% to 35% increase over the salary rate (salary / 2080 hrs per yr).

And that doesn't consider other benefits - like medical insurance etc. My wife never used her company insurance because we were always on my employer's insurance plan.
hijakeroo123
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Thanks so much for y'all's help, this is very valuable info!
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