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How do you raise prices without losing every existing client

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I've been at $75/hour for two years. My skills have improved but I'm terrified to send the new rate to my long-term clients. Three of them account for 60% of my income. How do you actually communicate a price increase without them all leaving?

I raised rates every six months. Lost 30% of clients each time. The 70% who stayed respected the increase. The 30% who left were replaced within 60 days at higher rates. The fear is worse than the reality.

I sat on a rate increase for six months because three clients made up half my income. Finally sent it. Two stayed, one left, and I replaced him in three weeks at the new rate. The fear was worse than the actual loss.

My mentor told me to grandfather existing clients and only raise rates for new ones. Worked for a while, but then I had two tiers of the same work and it started to feel weird. Now I do annual increases across the board. Everyone expects it.

You can do a slow-roll increase. That is what a lot of companies do. So instead of increasing the cost right now, you announce price increases later.

Another option would be to boost your value with words via your platform. Show why your service is costing more.

I added a deliverable before I raised my price. Same core service, but now it includes a strategy session upfront. Clients didn't even blink at the increase because the package looked different.

The first time I raised rates I apologized three times in the email. Client said yes immediately and I realized I was negotiating against myself. Now I state it like a fact and move on.

I raised prices and lost a client who'd been with me two years. It stung for a day. Then I remembered she was also the one who always needed just one small thing that took three hours. Good riddance.

I sent my rate increase via email and stared at the screen for twenty minutes before hitting send. Two clients replied within an hour. One said about time.

My therapist told me to raise prices until I felt slightly nauseous. I did. Nobody flinched. Turns out my nausea was the only obstacle.

I added a bonus service instead of raising rates. Same price, more value. Six months later I dropped the bonus and raised the price. Smooth transition.

Okay so i raised my rates last year and literally lost sleep over it for like a week lol. sent the email and then stared at my phone for an hour waiting for the world to end. two clients said "about time" and one ghosted me. the ghoster was actually my biggest pain anyway so honestly? win win. still scary tho.

The client who threatened to leave when I raised rates? He's still here two years later. The threat was negotiation, not truth.

Ya i feel you on this. i was charging $75 for two years straight and my skills were way past that but i was terrified of losing my steady clients. finally just did it, grandfathered two of them and raised the third. the one i raised on? she stayed and referred me to someone else. sometimes your fear is the only thing holding you back fr.

I now raise rates every January like clockwork. Clients expect it. The predictability removes the drama.

Lol i did the opposite of what everyone says. i raised prices on ALL my clients at once with zero warning. lost two, gained three better ones within a month. was it reckless? absolutely. would i do it again? probably not. but man that adrenaline rush was something else.

So i tried the add value first then raise approach and it actually worked? added a strategy session to my package, let them experience it for one cycle, then bumped the price. nobody even flinched because they already saw the difference. slow and sneaky but effective.

Honestly i still haven't raised my prices and i've been at this for four years. every time i try i panic and chicken out. reading these replies is giving me courage tho. maybe this month. maybe. no promises lol.

On 6/29/2026 at 9:27 AM, xJamesQ said:

Another option would be to boost your value with words via your platform. Show why your service is costing more.

With how everyone is raising prices in the last few years, now would probably be the time to do it anyways. People are kind of expecting services and goods to go up. They have been trending up for the last 4 years at this point.

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