Comparison
Quick answer
A sole proprietorship is a legal business structure — the simplest form of business ownership where there is no legal distinction between the owner and the business. A freelancer is a work arrangement style — someone who works independently on a project or contract basis rather than as a traditional employee. Most freelancers are sole proprietors, but the terms describe different dimensions of self-employment.
Most freelancers are sole proprietors by default — the two terms usually describe the same person from different angles. The important decision is not whether to call yourself a freelancer or sole proprietor, but whether to upgrade from sole proprietorship to an LLC or S-Corp as income grows. An LLC provides liability separation; an S-Corp election can reduce self-employment tax on income above ~$80,000/year. Consult a CPA and business attorney when your freelance income reaches a meaningful level.
Hourly rate
$150–$500/hr
Wide range reflects specialization — IP and corporate law command higher rates than general advisory
Per session
$200–$750
Typical for a 60–90 minute contract review, legal strategy, or compliance consultation
Project rate
$500–$5,000+
Flat-fee engagements for entity formation, contract drafting, or trademark filings