What Is a Good Average Order Value for Freelancers?
You charged $800 for a logo. Your competitor charged $3,500 for the same project type. Same work, different prices. Average order value (AOV) measures how much you earn per project or client, and it directly impacts your income.
Why Average Order Value Matters for Freelancers
Project value drives income. Even with a full client roster, low AOV means trading time for modest pay. Higher AOV means earning more without working more hours.
Scope creep gets covered. When you know your AOV, you can build buffer into pricing. Changes and additions become paid work, not free labor.
Pricing confidence grows. Understanding what similar freelancers charge helps you position competitively. AOV data makes pricing less guesswork.
Client quality improves. Clients who pay more typically value work more. They communicate better, provide clearer briefs, and tip future work.
How to Check AOV in GA4
- Open Google Analytics 4
- Navigate to Monetization > Ecommerce (if tracking invoices)
- Find Average Order Value
- Segment by service type or client industry
- Compare periods to track improvements
Most freelancers track invoices in QuickBooks, FreshBooks, or PandaDoc. Export this data to calculate AOV manually or connect to analytics.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics connects to your invoicing system and shows AOV insights without spreadsheets. You can ask:
- What’s our average project value by service type?
- Which client industry pays the highest AOV?
- Has our AOV increased since launching premium packages?
A freelance writer might discover that blog posts average $300 while white papers average $2,200. That’s valuable data for steering new clients toward higher-value work.
Quick Wins
Package services. Offer “starter,” “standard,” and “premium” versions of your work. Many clients choose the middle option.
Require minimums. Set project minimums that match your ideal AOV. Say no to projects below your threshold unless strategic.
Add retainers. Convert one-off projects into monthly retainers. Retainers often exceed project AOV when summed over months.
Upskill into premium niches. Specialize in higher-paying industries. A financial writer earns more than a general blog writer.
Raise prices annually. Even 10% annual increases compound. Clients who leave are replaced by those willing to pay your new rates.