Contractor Hourly to Salary Equivalent
Convert a contractor hourly rate to an equivalent W-2 salary by accounting for billable-hour yield, benefits, and self-employment overhead.
2,080 = 40 hr × 52 weeks (full-time W-2 equivalent). Most contractors realize 1,500-1,800 billable because of admin, sales, and downtime.
Health insurance, retirement match, PTO, employer payroll tax share. The appropriate percentage depends on the benefits being matched on the W-2 side; adjust based on your own cost of self-funded health coverage, retirement contributions, and the employer FICA share (7.65%).
Equivalent salary reverses the benefits/overhead gap so you can compare a contractor rate to a W-2 offer on the same total-compensation basis. The overhead percentage is a user input reflecting your own cost structure; the tool does not prescribe a figure.
About this tool
The most common freelance-pricing mistake is treating a $75/hr contractor rate as equivalent to a $150k W-2 salary ($75 × 2,000 hours). It is not. Two things eat the gap. First, most contractors do not bill 2,000 hours. Between sales, admin, invoicing, and between-project downtime, a typical solo realizes 1,500-1,800 billable hours per year. Second, the contractor has to cover benefits and payroll-tax overhead that a W-2 employer pays on top of the salary: health insurance, retirement contributions, paid time off, the employer share of FICA (7.65% under 26 USC 3111), and usually a few more.
This calculator converts a contractor hourly rate into the W-2 salary that matches it on a total-compensation basis. Enter your hourly rate, your realistic billable hours per year, and your benefits/overhead percentage. The output shows the gross annual revenue the rate generates and the equivalent W-2 salary that, grossed up for those same benefits and overhead, would match.
The overhead percentage is a user input reflecting your own cost structure, not a regulatory figure. Values depend heavily on your own health-coverage costs, retirement contribution targets, and what benefits you are comparing against. Use this when comparing a contract offer to a full-time salary offer, or when setting a rate from a target W-2 income. For the W-2 side, the withholding estimator handles take-home math. For the self-employment tax side of a contractor career, see the quarterly estimated taxes calculator.
How it works
Gross revenue = hourly_rate × billable_hours_per_year. Equivalent W-2 salary = gross_revenue / (1 + overhead_pct / 100). The divisor reverses the overhead uplift a contractor has to build into their rate, so the remaining number is comparable to a W-2 salary where the employer pays benefits on top.
The 2,080-hour full-year benchmark (40 hr × 52 weeks) is the standard used on Form I-9 and across federal wage regulations. Most solo contractors do not hit 2,080 billable because 10-25% of time goes to non-billable work: sales calls, proposal writing, invoicing, accounting, training, and between-project gaps. A steady mid-career solo often lands at 1,600-1,800; a first-year solo often lands at 1,200-1,400.
The overhead percentage is purely a user input. There is no canonical figure. Reasonable anchors to compute your own: employer FICA share is 7.65% of wages (26 USC 3111); marketplace health insurance premiums for a single filer vary widely by state and plan; employer 401(k) matches in BLS National Compensation Survey data average around 3-5% of salary; paid time off at 2-3 weeks is roughly 4-6% of salary. Sum the components that apply to your comparison.
Examples
Solo consultant at $75/hr hitting a typical realistic utilization. At 30% overhead, this rate matches a mid-$90k salaried position on total-compensation basis, often lower than contractors expect when they compare just to gross.
Senior solo consultant with above-average self-funded benefits. $150/hr at 1,500 billable hours matches a salary in the mid-$160k range. Senior rates often feel high until the benefits gap comes into view.
First-year solo or part-time contractor. $50/hr with 1,200 billable hours and modest overhead matches only a $48k salary. A common mistake is using a rate in this range without adjusting for low utilization.
When to use
Use this when deciding between a contract offer and a W-2 offer, when setting a contractor rate from a target income, or when a prospective client pushes back on your rate and you need a clean way to justify it. For the full decision (not just dollars), also consider benefits preferences, 401k match, job security, and the tax treatment of business expenses. For the W-2 take-home side, the withholding estimator covers it. For the self-employment tax obligation, the quarterly estimated taxes calculator handles Schedule SE and income tax together.
Related concepts
- Standard 2,080-hour work year : 40 hr × 52 weeks federal wage benchmark
- Employer FICA share : 26 USC 3111, 6.2% SS + 1.45% Medicare on wages the employer must pay
Frequently asked questions
Why is billable hours so much lower than 2,080?
Most contractors spend 10-25% of their time on non-billable work like sales calls, proposal writing, invoicing, accounting, training, and between-project gaps. A solo with steady client flow can hit 1,700-1,800 billable. A solo building a practice often sits at 1,200-1,400.
Does this include taxes?
No. Both sides of the comparison are pre-tax. The contractor pays self-employment tax (see the quarterly estimated taxes tool) and the W-2 employee pays employee FICA, but both pay income tax at similar rates on similar income. The benefits/overhead percentage is about non-tax overhead.
What if my overhead is different from the defaults?
Set the percentage to match your actual cost structure. For a contractor covered by a spouse's health insurance who does not contribute to retirement, 15-20% may be realistic. For a single contractor paying full marketplace health insurance and contributing to a solo 401(k), 35-45% is more accurate. The tool does not prescribe a figure.
How do I pick a realistic billable-hours number?
Track your actual time for a quarter if you have not. For a new solo without data, 1,400 is a reasonable starting point; most people overestimate their own utilization. Reduce it further if you also do significant content marketing, open-source maintenance, or business development that does not bill.
Sources
- 26 USC 3111, FICA: Employer contribution
(primary, accessed Apr 16, 2026)
Statutory basis for the 7.65% employer share of FICA that a W-2 employer pays on top of wages.
- IRS Topic 554, Self-Employment Tax
(secondary, accessed Apr 16, 2026)
Overview of Schedule SE; context for the self-employment tax side of the overhead gap.
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