August 1, 2025 · 6 min read
How to Set Your DJ Rate Card
A rate card is not a menu of fixed prices — it is a framework for quoting consistently and confidently. Without one, you will second-guess every quote, undercharge out of insecurity, and overcharge when you sense a big budget. A rate card eliminates the guesswork.
1. Why You Need a Rate Card
A rate card serves three purposes: consistency (same type of gig = same base rate), confidence (you quote without hesitation), and professionalism (clients see a structured fee system, not arbitrary numbers). You do not need to share your rate card publicly — it is an internal tool that guides your quoting.
2. Structure Your Pricing Tiers
Create categories based on event type: Club/venue gigs (local), Club/venue gigs (out of town), Private events (birthdays, house parties), Weddings, Corporate events, Festivals. For each category, set a base rate (minimum you will accept), a standard rate (what you normally quote), and a premium rate (for high-demand dates or short-notice bookings).
3. Factor in Your Costs
Your rate must cover: travel time and transport costs, equipment wear and depreciation, insurance, preparation time (playlist curation, mix prep), set duration, and setup/breakdown time. Calculate your hourly cost floor first, then add your margin. A 4-hour gig with 2 hours of travel and 1 hour of setup is really a 7-hour commitment.
4. Adjust for Market and Demand
Research what comparable DJs in your city charge. If you are a resident DJ at a known venue, your rate is higher than a newcomer. If you have 10,000 followers and regular press coverage, you can command a premium. Seasonal demand matters too — New Year's Eve rates should be 2–3x your standard rate. Saturday nights pay more than Thursdays.
5. How to Negotiate Without Discounting
Instead of lowering your rate, adjust the scope: fewer hours, no encore set, or no equipment provision. Offer value-adds instead of discounts: "I can include a pre-event playlist for the cocktail hour at no extra charge." Never discount just because a client asks — it devalues your service and trains clients to expect lower prices.
A rate card is the foundation of a sustainable DJ career. Set your rates based on real costs and market research, not gut feelings. Review and adjust every 6 months as your reputation grows. GigComs stores your rate preferences and uses them when generating quotes — so every quote you send is consistent and professional.
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