Working from the median UK salary of £32,000 for video editors, a mid-level freelancer needs about £50 an hour to match that income after overhead, tax, and unbillable time.
Recommended mid-level rate · Video Editor · UK
£50/hr
Matches the median salary after 25% overhead, tax set-aside, and 60% billable time
Rates verified 2026-07-06 · Source: Indeed UK salary data · Methodology
Prefilled with the UK median for video editors and a 25% tax set-aside — change anything.
25% covers income tax and Class 4 National Insurance for most sole traders in the basic-rate band; higher-rate earners should set aside more.
Your hourly rate
£50
1,104 billable hours/yr · rounded up to the nearest 5
| Level | Hourly | Day rate | Project floor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior×0.7 | £35 | £275 | £1,375 |
| Mid-level×1 | £50 | £375 | £1,875 |
| Senior×1.4 | £65 | £500 | £2,500 |
Junior ×0.7 and senior ×1.4 income multipliers, consistent with typical published salary spreads. The project floor is one reserved week (5 × day rate) — the smallest engagement worth switching contexts for.
The calculation starts from the median full-time salary and adds what employment quietly includes. Overhead (25%) covers the costs an employer would carry — equipment, software, insurance, workspace, accounting. A tax set-aside (25%) is applied on top of income plus overhead. 25% covers income tax and Class 4 National Insurance for most sole traders in the basic-rate band; higher-rate earners should set aside more.
hourly = (£32,000 + overhead + tax buffer) ÷ (46 weeks × 40 hrs × 60% billable) = £50,000 ÷ 1,104 hrs → £50/hr (rounded up to the nearest 5)
The divisor is the part most people get wrong. 60% billable time is a healthy, sustainable utilisation for an established freelancer — proposals, marketing, admin, and invoicing are real work that no client pays for. And 46 working weeks assumes six weeks of holidays, sick days, and quiet spells; freelancers who plan for 52 fund their time off with debt.
Per-minute-of-output pricing punishes careful editors; per-project pricing with a defined revision count protects both sides.