If you're freelancing on Fiverr or Upwork, the rate you set and the money you take home are two very different numbers. Platform fees, payment processing charges, and withdrawal costs silently eat into your earnings โ often more than most freelancers realize. Here's the full picture for 2026.
Fiverr's fee structure is the simplest of the major platforms: a flat 20% service fee on every order, regardless of order size or client history.
To take home your target hourly rate on Fiverr, you need to charge 25% more than your rate to offset the 20% deduction.
Upwork uses a sliding scale based on lifetime billings with each individual client. As you earn more from the same client, the fee percentage drops. This rewards long-term relationships.
The blended fee for a new client relationship drops quickly once you pass the $500 milestone. For a freelancer billing $5,000 from the same client, the effective rate works out to around 11% โ meaningfully better than Fiverr's flat 20%.
This is why Upwork heavily rewards retainer relationships and long-term contracts. A developer who bills the same client $20,000 in a year effectively pays only about 6% in fees on those earnings.
On top of platform service fees, withdrawing your money costs extra depending on the method:
On a $500 Fiverr gig paid via PayPal to a bank account in a different currency, the real deduction can easily reach 25โ27%. Most freelancers dramatically underestimate this when setting their prices.
Use our platform fee calculator to see precisely how much you keep after all deductions.
๐ฆ Open Platform Fee Calculator โFor one-off projects, Fiverr and Upwork start at the same 20% fee. For repeat business with the same client, Upwork becomes cheaper quickly. For very large or long-term engagements, Upwork's 5% tier makes it far more economical.
The best strategy: build platform reputation early, move to direct client relationships later. Once a client trusts your work, taking them off-platform (while respecting each platform's terms of service) eliminates fees entirely.