— Growth Guide
Your starting rate was the price you charged to get in the door. It was never meant to be permanent. Here’s when to raise it, how to say it, and how to handle every type of client response.
Last updated: May 2026
● Beginner to Intermediate
● Category: Growth
On this page
Related guides
Platforms
Job Paths
Job Paths
Scam Awareness
Beginner
Your starting rate was the door opener. It was never meant to be permanent. Raise it once you have proof — and you’ve been building proof every day since you started.
Three months in. You have a client, you know the work, you’ve delivered consistently. And you’re still earning what you agreed to when you had zero experience and zero proof of anything. The rate made sense then — it was how you got the first yes. But somewhere around month two or three, a quiet thought starts: is it time to ask for more? For most Filipino online workers, the answer is yes — and the main thing stopping them isn’t the client, it’s not knowing how to have the conversation.
The fear around raising your rate is real. Clients feel like they can be lost. The rate conversation feels confrontational. And there’s a deeper cultural reluctance among many Filipinos to assert value openly — to say “I’m worth more now” without feeling like they’re being ungrateful or demanding.
But here’s what not raising your rate actually costs. If you stay at your starting rate for a year, you’re effectively getting a pay cut each month as inflation rises, as your skills grow, and as the work you’re delivering becomes more complex than what was originally scoped. Clients who don’t expect you to grow your rate over time aren’t treating you as a professional — they’re treating you as a fixed cost.
Good clients — the kind worth keeping — expect this conversation. They’ve hired before. They know that a person who’s been delivering reliable, quality work for three to six months is worth more than a brand-new hire. If you’ve been doing the job well, you’ve already earned the conversation.
Stop framing this as "asking for more money." Reframe it as communicating your updated market value. You're not making a demand — you're having a professional conversation that every working relationship eventually requires. Clients who react poorly to a professionally delivered rate discussion were not good long-term clients anyway.
Three months is a milestone, not an automatic trigger. Whether you’re ready to raise your rate depends on what those three months actually contained. Be honest.
✓
You’re ready if…
!
Wait if…
The readiness test matters because a rate conversation coming on the heels of a problem (late delivery, a mistake, a complaint) lands very differently from one coming after a strong track record. Timing is as important as the message.
The message matters more than the medium — but for most online work relationships, a written message (Slack, email, or whatever you normally use to communicate) is the right way to start this conversation. It gives the client time to think, removes real-time pressure from both sides, and creates a record.
Three parts: acknowledgment of the working relationship, your updated rate and when it takes effect, and a simple invitation to discuss if needed. That’s it. Don’t over-explain. Don’t apologize.
For a first rate increase, 15–25% is the typical range for Filipino online workers who’ve been working consistently for three to six months. A 50% increase on your first ask is a significant jump that requires proportional justification. A 10% increase may not move your income meaningfully enough to be worth the conversation.
If you started at ₱200/hr, moving to ₱240–₱250/hr is reasonable. If you started at ₱350/hr and have added meaningful new skills or tasks, ₱420–₱430/hr is a sensible target. Frame it in round numbers — it’s easier for clients to process and easier for you to remember.
If the client says no or pushes back, you have three options: accept their answer and stay, negotiate a smaller increase or a timed review (“could we revisit in three months?”), or decline gracefully and move on to a client who will pay your new rate. Don’t threaten. Don’t go silent. Don’t immediately back down completely — that signals that you didn’t actually mean the rate you asked for.
This happens rarely — but when it does, it's information, not a punishment. A client who ends the relationship over a professional rate conversation (delivered with notice and without ultimatum) was not a stable long-term client. The income you feel you're "losing" would have been a ceiling, not a floor. Your rate conversation just accelerated finding a better match.
This isn’t universal — it depends on your skill, your niche, and how aggressively you develop. But it reflects what’s commonly achievable with consistent effort and deliberate skill growth.
₱150–₱250/hr for most VA and admin roles. ₱200–₱350/hr for social media or light creative work. This rate reflects zero client track record — not zero skill. It's the price of proving yourself, not the price of your time permanently.
If you've delivered well, built trust, and ideally added one capability since you started — this is the moment for your first conversation. ₱200/hr becomes ₱240–₱250/hr. ₱300/hr becomes ₱350–₱375/hr. Small increase, significant signal.
Six months in, you have a track record. You have either expanded what you do within your current client relationship, or you have experience to apply for higher-paying roles elsewhere. ₱350–₱450/hr becomes realistic for a skilled VA with demonstrated reliability. ₱500–₱700/hr becomes possible for specialized skills (bookkeeping, appointment setting, technical VA work). (link to: Virtual Assistant guide)
One year in with a consistent track record, a portfolio of real results, and (ideally) at least two client relationships: ₱500–₱1,000/hr is achievable for specialized or high-trust roles. This isn't guaranteed — it reflects what's possible when skill development and client relationship management are taken seriously from the start.
Scenario — VA who raised rate and kept the client
The client had been expecting this. They’d worked with Filipino VAs before and understood that a fair raise after strong performance is how long-term working relationships stay healthy. Marita realized she’d waited longer than she needed to — she could have asked at month two.
Scenario — data entry worker who lost a client but gained two better ones
Ric thanked them and stayed at the same rate — for one more month. He used that month to apply to two new listings on OnlineJobs.ph at ₱250/hr, citing his four months of experience with e-commerce data. He landed both. He gave his original client two weeks’ notice and transitioned out professionally.
1
Never asking because they’re afraid of losing the client
2
Over-explaining or apologizing in the message
3
Asking for an increase right after a mistake or complaint
4
Immediately backing down when the client shows any hesitation
5
Raising rates with new clients at the same low rate you charged before

Don't wait to feel like you deserve a raise — you'll keep waiting. Put a recurring calendar reminder every three months to ask yourself: has my skill grown? Has my value to the client grown? Am I below market rate? This forces the conversation into your schedule rather than leaving it to chance.

When rate review time comes, you want to be able to articulate what you've done — not just that you showed up. Keep a monthly log of specific tasks completed, problems solved, or new capabilities added. "I learned and implemented their HubSpot CRM system this quarter" is a much stronger rate justification than "I've been working hard."

A rate increase is easier to communicate when you can point to a new capability alongside it. "I've added project management in Asana to my workflow" or "I now handle your email and your calendar, which wasn't in my original scope" gives the client a concrete reason to say yes. Learning one new relevant tool per quarter is a habit that compounds into salary growth.

Even if you're happy with your current clients, apply to one or two new listings every few months at a higher rate than you currently charge. If you get interviews — that tells you the market will pay it. If you get hired — you now have a data point that validates your new rate with existing clients too. Market research is always happening whether you participate in it or not.

Timing a client testimonial request before a rate conversation has two benefits: you get the testimonial while the relationship is warm, and it subtly reminds the client of the value you've been delivering. When you then send the rate increase message a week later, the positive framing is fresh in their mind. Ask something simple: "Would you be willing to write a short note about working with me? I'm updating my profile."

Before sending a rate increase message, be clear with yourself: if the client says no, will you stay at the current rate, negotiate a smaller increase, or leave? Having this decided in advance means you respond from a position of clarity rather than anxiety. The conversation goes better when you know what you're willing to accept — and what you're not.
Three months of consistent delivery is the minimum signal that a rate conversation is appropriate. Six months of strong delivery and skill growth makes it overdue for most Filipino online workers.
The conversation is simpler than it feels. It’s four sentences, given with notice, delivered professionally. Most good clients say yes. The rest tell you something useful about whether the relationship was going to last anyway.
3. Research your current market rate before you decide on a number — Search OnlineJobs.ph for listings in your role and experience level. What are clients currently offering for someone with your skills and three to six months of experience? If your current rate is below what the market is posting, your ask is already justified by market data — not just by your individual judgment. See our data entry guide → or VA guide → for current rate benchmarks by skill level.