Looking for best freelancing websites? We have compiled a list of websites that offer best freelance careers.
There is something extremely attractive about being a freelancer. You paddle your own canoe. You decide how and when you work. Your personal growth and success depend only on your engagement. But to keep this beautiful idea alive you need to provide yourself with a sufficient number of beneficial job offers and (most importantly) a group of regular customers.
There is a whole ocean of job boards on the web, but some of them definitely stand out. I collected 20 that I’m sure you will be happy to use.
Remote Tech Jobs
Remote Tech Jobs is a job board many freelancers go to to find full-time freelance positions. Browse through thousands of active tech jobs or subscribe to the categories of your choice. Remote Tech Jobs removes all jobs after 30 days to keep its listing active.
Freelancer
Freelancer is a giant that took over GetAFreelancer.com, EUFreelance.com, LimeExchange, and several other outsourcing portals. At the time when I’m making this list, they have 6,939,608 offers for verbatim everyone.
This is arguably one of the best freelance websites available. Are you a jeweler? A gardener? Maybe you want to participate in a flash mob or translate some text from Urdu? Here you can approve yourself. Getting a job on Freelancer involves bidding. Once the offer is published, you have to bid for work, setting a price, presenting your skills, and promoting your services. So it’s all up to you.
Hubstaff Talent
Hubstaff Talent is the freeway for businesses and freelancers to connect – there are no fees and no markups. Once you create a profile businesses can search for you based on skill, location, or experience and contact you directly if they feel you’d be a good fit for their gig – no middlemen involved. Freelancers can also browse through hundreds of remote jobs on the Hubstaff Talent Remote Job Board.
People Per Hour
People per hour is a useful freelancer site with a variety of options. You can choose from pre-selected gigs to a custom project. The quality of workers is different based on different needs.
Go for the workers with the best reviews and you will have better quality work.
This site offers free registration, frequent updates of job offers. Find your niche in one of many categories: design, web development, software development, writing, translation, tutorials, marketing, business support, audio, video & photo, art, and social media. You can post your offers on the wall, communicate with clients personally, and promote your services in several easy ways.
TopTal
TopTal is a freelance marketplace with absolutely niche talent. They primarily specialize in keeping top-quality talent for software development. If you are looking for the absolutely no-nonsense talent you must go here. The quality of work is absolutely top notch and people are highly skilled at the same time reasonably affordable.
As a freelancer, If you are a senior developer, Toptal is where you want to work. Toptal is a specialized marketplace for top developers and top companies. Unlike Elance, ODesk, or Guru (where you can find also writers, marketers, etc) Toptal is focused on developers. Every developer in the network has a proven record as a senior, expert-level engineer, and each has passed a tough screening process including English testing. Only the top 3% of applicants are accepted but they earn premium wages in comparison to other sites and work with top clients like Airbnb, JP Morgan, and Zendesk.
Fiverr
Fiverr is a real playground for freelancers. You can sell whatever you are good (as long as it’s legal 😉 ) starting at $5. You can also expand your services, adding new gigs and pricing them as you want.
Upwork (Formerly ODesk)
No matter how experienced you are, UpWork will find you a job you will enjoy. The monthly post over 100.000 offers, both long and short term, paid for the per project or hourly, easy or more complicated – depending on your skill level. You choose the way you want to work and get paid. If you do good work and deliver it on time, clients will rate you, so you will be more recognizable and, therefore, more likely hired.
Guru
Become a guru in your profession. Create a profile and start looking for offers that suit you or allow yourself to be found by potential employers. There are a lot of niches and categories from development to law, so you will surely find something that matches your skills.
99designs
99designs craves for designers in all possible meanings. If you can design logos, business cards, websites, apps, infographic, t-shirts, cards, invitations, product packages, books, and magazine covers, you can boldly participate in a contest… Wait, what contest? On 99desgins whether you get a job or not depends on how good you get along with a potential employer. This is how it works: the customer launches a design brief in a marketplace. If you pick this brief and start brainstorming it, it’s more than likely that several freelancers like you are doing the same. After 7 days customer chooses the winner and pays him a pre-determined price. So the better you deal with it, the bigger the possibility you will be the winner.
Smashing Jobs
Smashing Jobs is Smashing Magazine’s job board. You can find here some attractive offers, mostly for designers and programmers, but also for game developers, project managers, writers, digital sellers, and photographers. You can switch between full-time and freelance jobs.
Craigslist
Although Craigslist is known mostly for selling and buying stuff, it is also an awesome way to find serious freelance job offers. Just pick the town on the right side of the page and go over to the jobs and temp jobs sections. It can take a long time before you find something interesting but believe me, sometimes you find some real gems.
Text Broker
Writers only. Create a profile and solve a short writing skills test. If you are rated well, you will be able to choose from thousands of professional offers. Additionally, they provide you with a lot of practical writing resources, such as tutorials, videos, and articles.
IFreelance
Extensive freelance jobs base with 13 main categories, including.: business consulting, engineering, architecture, graphic design, networking, photography, traditional art, education, and writing. Moreover, each category contains from 7 to 15 subcategories… Phew! That’s a lot! What else is on iFreelance? What distinguishes them from some competitors is although the registration is paid, they charge absolutely no commission on the money you earn.
Simply Hired
Simply Hired is more a job search engine than a definite job portal. You will find here both full-time and freelance offers from various customers from all over the world. You don’t have to register, just pick a category and sort results by filters: location, job type, company, and your education and experience.
ProBlogger
If you love to write and want to do it for a living, you should check out this site. This is the place where companies are looking for qualified bloggers. There are always plenty of pretty lucrative jobs to grab, but there’s something you should know – they are very, very picky. Read offers carefully, answer quickly, and do your best to convince employers that you are the alpha and omega of blogging… A little bragging sometimes pays off 🙂
Freelance writing
Freelance writing supports writers of different shades with tons of articles, tutorials, and videos. They also have their own job search engine that displays jobs for writers from others sites. It’s a very convenient solution.
ArtWanted
If you are an artist (painter, graphic or photographer), you surely will be happy to join the ArtWanted community. You will be able to create your own portfolio, receive feedback about your artwork, share your knowledge on forums and sell your works (free registration and no commission). You can also create a premium account and enjoy some extra benefits like Private Artwork Galleries, Unlimited Portfolio Images, Personal Blog, etc…
Dice
Search engine for strictly technological job offers. Displays precisely selected offers in a particular tech niche. Full-time, part-time, and contracts.
Behance Job
Do you dream about changing your creativity into money? This is the place where you can be found and recognized. Behance Jobs gathers a portfolio of freelancers who specialize in creative jobs such as advertising, animation, architecture, art direction, branding, calligraphy, and cartooning.
Coroflot
Coroflot gathers the professional designers in the world. Register for free, pimp your portfolio, and you will get a personal URL and mobile access to it. The bar is high, but if you do well, maybe you will be able to design some stuff for Nike or Sony 🙂
Crowd Spring
They advertise themselves as the world’s #1 marketplace for logos, graphic design, and naming. Make your portfolio and compete with others to get your dream job. Click “participate” in a chosen offer and convince the customer to pick you. How? Be creative, figure something outstanding out.
Authentic Jobs
It’s fun and easy to find some great offers here. There are 8 main categories of jobs, then you choose the location and filter categories you are interested in (full-time, part-time, freelance, contract, etc.). There are a lot of jobs for developers, designers, managers, information architects, and content strategists.
Elance
They have about 90.000 jobs posted monthly, so it’s more than likely that you will find something for you, whether you are a designer, writer, attorney or architect. You can create a profile for free and look for satisfying offers. You can also let their system do it for you. What’s really cool is that they do all the boring stuff like paperwork, invoicing, and payment for you.
DesignHill
I hope this list brings some value to your freelance lifestyle. It’s important to often check job updates, and do not be discouraged if you don’t find a suitable offer quickly. If you actively participate in each job board life, you will certainly get noticed. So be as alert as a dragonfly and do not waste your opportunity 😉
Did this list work for you? Did you find some cracking offer? Or maybe you know another job portal that should appear on this list? I’d love to hear from you!
Article Updates
- Updated Sep 2017 – Added More websites and fixed minor fixes.
- Updated May 2017 – Added More websites and fixed minor fixes.
Jan Godlewski, creative writer at TimeCamp. Jan writes about productivity hacks, self-growth, time tracking and project management.