When Clients Say “Your Prices Are Too High”
When Clients Say “Your Prices Are Too High”
What they’re actually saying and what you should say back
This conversation is inevitable.
If you charge anything meaningful, you will hear it.
“Your prices are too high.”
“Can you do it for less?”
“This is outside our budget.”
Most freelancers panic at this point.
They either discount immediately or emotionally check out.
Both reactions kill long-term income.
Let’s slow this down and look at what’s really happening.
There are only two real reasons behind price resistance
When a client says your price is too high, one of these is true.
Reason one:
They genuinely do not have the budget.
Reason two (far more common):
They are not confident that you are worth the investment.
In my experience, the second reason explains the situation in about 90% of cases.
This is important because these two reasons require completely different responses.
Most freelancers treat them as the same problem and make bad decisions.
First rule: never push and never discount immediately
The worst thing you can do in this moment is start selling harder.
Do not say:
“Let’s somehow make this work”
“I can reduce my price”
“What if I do it cheaper this month?”
Cutting your price before understanding the objection signals insecurity, not flexibility.
A simple rule I follow:
Never lower your rate unless multiple qualified clients have rejected you for the same reason.
One rejection is not market feedback.
It’s just information.
Your next move is a question, not a defense
Instead of reacting, ask calmly:
“Can you tell me what’s holding you back from moving forward?”
This question does two things.
First, it forces the client to think instead of hiding behind “budget.”
Second, it gives you clarity on what the real objection is.
At this point, you’ll usually hear one of these answers:
“We don’t have the budget right now”
“We’re not fully sure this is the right investment”
“We’re comparing with someone cheaper”
“We’re unsure about the ROI”
Now you’re no longer guessing.
You’re operating with information.
If it’s not about money, make them visualize outcomes
When confidence is the issue, your job is not to justify your price.
Your job is to reframe the decision.
Instead of defending cost, shift the conversation to outcomes.
For example:
If they invest $1,000 per month for three months, that’s $3,000.
If your work helps them generate $6,000–$7,000 in return, the conversation changes.
Now it’s no longer:
“Can we afford you?”
It becomes:
“Can we afford not to solve this problem properly?”
Clients rarely struggle with spending money.
They struggle with uncertainty.
As the expert, it’s your responsibility to reduce that uncertainty.
Why this works: clients don’t know what you know
Clients are not specialists in your field.
You are.
They don’t know:
How long SEO takes
What realistic timelines look like
Where most projects fail
What results are achievable and what isn’t
When you clearly explain the process and the likely outcome, you’re not “selling.”
You’re helping them make a better decision.
That’s what experts do.
If they still hesitate, don’t force a decision
If the client says they need time, respect that.
Offer to:
Share relevant past work
Send case studies
Walk them through similar projects you’ve done
Do not rush them.
Rushed decisions often turn into difficult clients anyway.
Your confidence here matters more than your persuasion skills.
If they say no, don’t burn the bridge
This is where most freelancers lose future money.
If they decide not to move forward:
End the conversation politely
Leave the door open
Stay professional
Many clients return later when:
Budgets change
Funding comes in
Previous hires fail
Priorities shift
You want to be the first person they think of when that happens.
The long game most freelancers ignore
Here’s a strategy very few people use.
Stay in light touch even after rejection.
Occasional check-ins
Relevant suggestions
Congratulating them on milestones
Thoughtful, non-pushy messages
You’re not chasing.
You’re staying visible.
Over time, this positions you as a trusted operator, not a desperate seller.
A surprising number of high-quality clients come back months later because of this.
Where this fits in the Global Trust Ladder
Price resistance is not a pricing problem.
It’s a Proof + Safety problem.
Proof: Have you demonstrated enough credibility?
Safety: Does the client feel confident the investment won’t be wasted?
When these are strong, price becomes secondary.
Final truth
Clients saying “your price is too high” is not an insult.
It’s a signal.
How you respond tells them:
How you handle pressure
How confident you are in your value
Whether you operate as a vendor or a professional partner
Don’t discount reflexively.
Don’t get defensive.
Slow the conversation down.
Clarify the objection.
Reframe the decision.
That’s how you close better clients without racing to the bottom.
What they’re actually saying and what you should say back
This conversation is inevitable.
If you charge anything meaningful, you will hear it.
“Your prices are too high.”
“Can you do it for less?”
“This is outside our budget.”
Most freelancers panic at this point.
They either discount immediately or emotionally check out.
Both reactions kill long-term income.
Let’s slow this down and look at what’s really happening.
There are only two real reasons behind price resistance
When a client says your price is too high, one of these is true.
Reason one:
They genuinely do not have the budget.
Reason two (far more common):
They are not confident that you are worth the investment.
In my experience, the second reason explains the situation in about 90% of cases.
This is important because these two reasons require completely different responses.
Most freelancers treat them as the same problem and make bad decisions.
First rule: never push and never discount immediately
The worst thing you can do in this moment is start selling harder.
Do not say:
“Let’s somehow make this work”
“I can reduce my price”
“What if I do it cheaper this month?”
Cutting your price before understanding the objection signals insecurity, not flexibility.
A simple rule I follow:
Never lower your rate unless multiple qualified clients have rejected you for the same reason.
One rejection is not market feedback.
It’s just information.
Your next move is a question, not a defense
Instead of reacting, ask calmly:
“Can you tell me what’s holding you back from moving forward?”
This question does two things.
First, it forces the client to think instead of hiding behind “budget.”
Second, it gives you clarity on what the real objection is.
At this point, you’ll usually hear one of these answers:
“We don’t have the budget right now”
“We’re not fully sure this is the right investment”
“We’re comparing with someone cheaper”
“We’re unsure about the ROI”
Now you’re no longer guessing.
You’re operating with information.
If it’s not about money, make them visualize outcomes
When confidence is the issue, your job is not to justify your price.
Your job is to reframe the decision.
Instead of defending cost, shift the conversation to outcomes.
For example:
If they invest $1,000 per month for three months, that’s $3,000.
If your work helps them generate $6,000–$7,000 in return, the conversation changes.
Now it’s no longer:
“Can we afford you?”
It becomes:
“Can we afford not to solve this problem properly?”
Clients rarely struggle with spending money.
They struggle with uncertainty.
As the expert, it’s your responsibility to reduce that uncertainty.
Why this works: clients don’t know what you know
Clients are not specialists in your field.
You are.
They don’t know:
How long SEO takes
What realistic timelines look like
Where most projects fail
What results are achievable and what isn’t
When you clearly explain the process and the likely outcome, you’re not “selling.”
You’re helping them make a better decision.
That’s what experts do.
If they still hesitate, don’t force a decision
If the client says they need time, respect that.
Offer to:
Share relevant past work
Send case studies
Walk them through similar projects you’ve done
Do not rush them.
Rushed decisions often turn into difficult clients anyway.
Your confidence here matters more than your persuasion skills.
If they say no, don’t burn the bridge
This is where most freelancers lose future money.
If they decide not to move forward:
End the conversation politely
Leave the door open
Stay professional
Many clients return later when:
Budgets change
Funding comes in
Previous hires fail
Priorities shift
You want to be the first person they think of when that happens.
The long game most freelancers ignore
Here’s a strategy very few people use.
Stay in light touch even after rejection.
Occasional check-ins
Relevant suggestions
Congratulating them on milestones
Thoughtful, non-pushy messages
You’re not chasing.
You’re staying visible.
Over time, this positions you as a trusted operator, not a desperate seller.
A surprising number of high-quality clients come back months later because of this.
Where this fits in the Global Trust Ladder
Price resistance is not a pricing problem.
It’s a Proof + Safety problem.
Proof: Have you demonstrated enough credibility?
Safety: Does the client feel confident the investment won’t be wasted?
When these are strong, price becomes secondary.
Final truth
Clients saying “your price is too high” is not an insult.
It’s a signal.
How you respond tells them:
How you handle pressure
How confident you are in your value
Whether you operate as a vendor or a professional partner
Don’t discount reflexively.
Don’t get defensive.
Slow the conversation down.
Clarify the objection.
Reframe the decision.
That’s how you close better clients without racing to the bottom.
Built Trust
with international clients.
Build income
that feels predictable.
Build a freelance
career that travels across borders.
Subscribe to begin.
Join 1,000+ readers of
The International Freelancer
learning how international clients
evaluate trust, risk, and reliability before they hire.
I will never spam or sell your info. Ever.
Built Trust
with international clients.
Build income
that feels predictable.
Build a freelance
career that travels across borders.
Subscribe to begin.
Join 1,000+ readers of
The International Freelancer
learning how international clients
evaluate trust, risk, and reliability before they hire.
I will never spam or sell your info. Ever.