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How to Raise Your Video Editing Rates (Without Losing Clients)

Last updated: July 2026 · A ReelRate guide

Most freelance editors set a rate once and ride it for years. Meanwhile everything underneath it moves: in Payoneer's global freelancer survey, only 38% had raised their rate in the previous year — and UK freelancer day rates stayed completely flat through double-digit inflation. A rate that stands still is quietly shrinking. This guide covers when to raise, how much, exactly what to say, and the arithmetic that makes a raise far safer than it feels. To see what your rate should be today, run our free video editor rate calculator first.

Standing still is a pay cut

Two numbers make the case for you. First, US consumer prices rose about 9% across 2023–2025 — so a rate untouched since 2023 buys roughly 9% less life than it used to. Second, your core tool got dramatically more expensive: Adobe moved Creative Cloud All Apps from $54.99 to $59.99 in late 2023, then rebuilt it as Creative Cloud Pro at $69.99/month in June 2025 — a 27% jump in about twenty months. Costs climbed on their schedule; your rate only moves on yours. That's why the Freelancers Union recommends an annual review, an inflation buffer in quotes, and an automatic escalation clause in retainer contracts.

The signals it's time

How much — and the math of losing a client

Small and regular beats rare and dramatic. Moxie's guide puts it simply: review your rate on a schedule like an employee's annual review, and never double it in one jump. For maintenance, at least match inflation each year; when you're repositioning — better reel, new skills, full calendar — a step of 15–25% is the kind of worked example Nation1099 walks through.

Here's the arithmetic that takes the fear out of it. Raise rates 20% and revenue stays identical even if one client in six walks away (1 − 1/1.2 ≈ 17%). At Nation1099's 25% example, you could lose one in four and break even — while winning back a quarter of your scarce billable hours to fill with better-paying work. In practice, guides like Millo tell editors to budget for losing 10–20% of clients — which the math says you can afford. Losing your weakest client at a higher rate isn't failure; it's the mechanism.

You raise byBreak-even client loss
+10%~1 in 11
+20%~1 in 6
+25%1 in 4

Break-even = same revenue from fewer clients at the higher rate, with hours freed up on top.

The two-tier rollout (lowest risk)

  1. New clients first. Quote the new rate to every new lead starting today. There's no relationship to strain and each win validates the price. One rule from Nation1099: never take a new client below what existing clients pay.
  2. Existing clients with notice. Tell them personally, 30–60 days ahead (HoneyBook's standard; Millo calls 90 days ideal). On retainers, check the contract first — a price lock may legally hold until renewal, which is exactly why your next contract should include an annual escalation clause.
  3. Soften the landing for your best people. Grandfather loyal clients at the old rate for a defined window, or pair the new price with something extra — a monthly strategy call, an added deliverable. HoneyBook's tiered variant: the old price becomes your basic package, the new price buys the premium one.

What to actually say

The email (steal this). "Hi [Name] — a quick business update: starting [Sept 1], my rate moves from $[X] to $[Y] to reflect current costs and demand. Nothing changes about how we work or your priority in my calendar. Anything booked before [Sept 1] stays at the current rate — so if you'd like to lock in upcoming projects, now's a great time. Thanks for being a client I genuinely enjoy working with."

Notes on tone: no apology, no essay of justification — one concrete reason is plenty, and confidence reads as professionalism. The pre-increase booking window isn't just politeness; Millo notes it reliably pulls extra projects forward before the new rate lands.

If a client pushes back, walk down this ladder instead of caving: offer to defer their increase 60 days; or hold their budget and trim scope — "at the new rate, that budget covers [N] hours, so here's what fits"; or give a sunset period (one final project at the old rate) and part ways warmly. A discount with no trade teaches clients that your prices are suggestions.

Charge for value you can prove

The strongest raises come with receipts. For YouTube work, editing quality is measurable: YouTube's own analytics expose intro retention and the exact moments viewers leave or rewatch — numbers your cuts directly move, on a platform where recommendations drive the large majority of watch time. Bring two or three before/after retention wins to a rate conversation and you're no longer selling hours — you're selling outcomes. The same logic powers motion-graphics premiums in corporate work and every pricing model that pays for results instead of time.

Find out what your rate should be now

Your costs and hours have changed since you last set your price — Adobe alone costs 27% more than in 2023. Re-run your numbers and see where today's rate should sit before you write that email.

Open the rate calculator →

Frequently asked questions

How often should I raise my video editing rates?
Review once a year, like a salary review. At minimum keep pace with inflation; raise more when demand, skills, or scope have clearly grown. In freelancermap's 2025 study, 41% of freelancers planned a raise within twelve months — staying still is the unusual move, and over time it's a real-terms pay cut.
How much notice should I give existing clients?
30–60 days is the working standard, and 90 days is generous for retainer relationships. Tell clients personally rather than in a mass announcement, and check retainer contracts first — a price lock may hold until renewal. Going forward, add an annual escalation clause so raises happen by default.
What if a client refuses the new rate?
Offer a 60-day deferral, or keep their budget and reduce scope to match the new rate, or give a sunset period at the old rate and part ways warmly. Remember the math: at a 20% raise you can lose one client in six and earn the same — with hours freed for better-paying work.
Should new clients pay more than existing ones?
Temporarily, yes — that's the safest rollout. Quote every new lead the new rate today, let those wins validate the price, then move existing clients with notice. Never take a new client below your existing clients' rate, and reserve grandfathering for your best long-term relationships.

Read next: How Many Hours Can a Video Editor Actually Bill? (2026) · Hourly vs Per-Minute vs Flat Fee (2026) · How to Price a YouTube Video Edit (2026) · Rate Calculator