Most freelance writers accept the first number they are offered. Not because they think it is fair, but because they do not know what to say to make it higher.

This guide fixes that. You will get the exact scripts to counter a low offer, raise rates with existing clients, and anchor high before any number is mentioned.

73%
of freelancers who negotiate their rates successfully on the first attempt

Negotiation feels risky. But the actual risk of asking for more money as a freelancer is extremely low. The worst realistic outcome: they say no and you accept their original offer. The upside: you earn 20-50% more for the same work.

Before Any Negotiation: Know Your Floor Rate

Your floor rate is the minimum you will accept per project, per word, or per hour. If you do not have one, you will always feel pressured to accept whatever is offered because you have no benchmark.

Calculate yours now. Take your desired monthly income, add 25% for taxes and overhead, divide by realistic billable hours per month. That is your minimum hourly equivalent. Convert to per-word or per-project from there.

Script 1: Countering a Low Initial Offer

A client or editor offers $0.05/word (or $100 for a 2,000-word article). You know your floor is $0.15/word. Here is what to say:

Hi [Name], Thank you for the offer. I'm excited about this project — the topic aligns well with my experience in [niche]. My rate for this scope is [your rate]. That reflects [brief value justification: "my 5 years in this niche" / "the research-heavy nature of this piece" / "my track record with similar publications"]. Would that work for you?
Key mechanics: State your number once, clearly, without hedging. Justify with one specific reason. End with a simple question that requires a yes/no answer. Do not apologize, do not give a range, do not offer to "discuss."

Script 2: When They Push Back on Your Rate

They come back with "We don't have that in our budget." This is almost always an opening position, not a firm ceiling. Here is how to respond without caving:

I understand budget constraints. Here are a couple of options that might work: Option A: I deliver the full piece at my rate of [your rate]. Option B: I deliver a shorter version [X words instead of Y] at [adjusted rate]. Which works better for your needs?
Why this works: You are not reducing your rate. You are reducing scope to fit their budget while keeping your per-word or per-hour equivalent the same. This is a negotiation technique called "shrinking the ask," and it works because it gives them a win without costing you one.

Script 3: Raising Rates With an Existing Client

This is the negotiation most writers avoid longest — and it is often the highest-leverage one. A 20% rate increase with a client who gives you 10 hours of work per month is a significant income change that requires one email.

Hi [Name], I've loved working on [project/content type] with you. We've done [X pieces / X months] together, and I hope it has been useful. I'm writing to let you know that I'll be updating my rates starting [date, 4-6 weeks from now]. My new rate for [this type of work] will be [new rate]. I'd like to continue working together at this rate. If that works for you, nothing needs to change — I'll just invoice at the updated rate from [date]. If you have any questions, happy to chat. Best, [Your name]
Why this approach works: You are not asking for permission. You are informing them of a business change and assuming continuity. The 4-6 week runway is respectful and gives them time to adjust budgets. Most clients who value your work accept without complaint.

Script 4: Anchoring High Before a Number Is Named

When a client asks "What are your rates?" before you have discussed scope, this is your chance to anchor high. Anchoring means naming a number first, because the first number mentioned shapes all subsequent negotiation.

My rates depend on the scope, research requirements, and turnaround. For long-form content (1,500-3,000 words), my rates typically run $400-$800 per piece. For ongoing retainer work, I offer a monthly rate that usually comes out cheaper per piece. What does the scope look like for this project?

This positions you at the high end without committing to a number until you understand the actual scope. And it pre-frames any later discussion against your stated range rather than theirs.

The Three Principles Behind All Rate Negotiation

  1. Silence is a tool. After you state your rate, stop talking. Do not fill silence by walking your price back. Let them respond.
  2. Everything can be negotiated. Rate, scope, turnaround, rights — any of these can be adjusted. Never reduce your rate in isolation. If they need a lower price, reduce scope or rights accordingly.
  3. Walk-away power is real. If you have no ability to walk away from a project, you will always be in a weak negotiating position. Build a pipeline of potential clients so that any single one becoming difficult is not a financial emergency.

What to Do When They Say No

A clean "no, we cannot go higher" response is actually useful. It tells you the ceiling of this relationship and helps you decide whether to take the work or invest that time pitching better-paying clients instead.

If you accept at their rate anyway, do the work well — and raise rates when renewing the contract. Every "no" today can become a "yes" six months from now when you have more leverage.

Get 9 Rate Negotiation Scripts (And 40+ More Templates)

The Pro Writer Templates Pack includes complete scripts for every negotiation scenario: countering low offers, raising rates, retainer proposals, scope creep pushbacks, and late payment follow-ups.

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Quick Reference: Rate Negotiation Rules

The writers who earn the most are not always the most talented. They are the ones who treat rate negotiation as a normal, professional business conversation — and have the scripts ready so they never freeze up at the critical moment.