Please note that the suggested rates below are minima; that rates for copyright works are for limited licences; and that VAT is not included.
See notes on negotiating rates and
find a freelance.
Rates vary enormously. On the one hand, simple sub-editing on a stable production system may pay little more than magazine sub-editing, even though more technical knowledge is required and mathematically rigid style constraints may be essential to the production working at all.
In the middle, design work that involves the use of authoring and styling languages (HTML and CSS at a minimum, increasingly often XML and Flash scripting and so forth) can pay in the scale of computer programming work rather than sub-editing.
On the far other hand, some jobs are in effect business consultancy - what the client needs to know is how a website can change the way they make their living. Rates of £425 per hour were on offer for this in January 2006.
Read me first! Editing+Production advice
Uploaded: 2008-05-05; if you have a printout, check the current version at www.londonfreelance.org/feesguide/OnEdiRat.html
Reported rates, to compare for Editing+Production
NUJ members discuss rates etc for shifts in general| RATES:
Sub-editing Editing+Production | ||
|---|---|---|
| Sub-editing with HTML coding: per day | ![]() |
240 |
| Sub-editing/day | ![]() |
160 |
<em>simple codes</em> that determine the appearance of the run of text or <div class="abstract">structural markup</div> - it should attract a higher fee.
The National Union of Journalists must not, can not and would not wish to dictate rates or terms of engagement to members or to editors. The information presented here is for guidance and as an aid to equitable negotiation only.
Suggestions apply to contracts governed by UK law only. In any event, nothing here should be construed as legal advice.