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The Coaching Business Revenue Calculator projects annual revenue from a typical coaching business mix: 1:1 individual sessions × hours per week × weeks per year, plus group programs × clients per month × 12. Standard coaching business: $150–500/hour 1:1 rates depending on niche and experience (executive $300–800, life coach $100–250, business coach $200–500, career coach $150–350), and group programs at 3–10× individual rate per cohort (a $500/client group with 10 students = $5,000 per cohort). Coaching business stages: New coach (under 1 year, building credibility): $75–150/hour, 5–10 clients, $30–75k annual revenue. Established (2–5 years, defined niche): $150–300/hour, 15–25 clients, $100–250k. Premium (5+ years, established authority): $300–800/hour, 10–15 high-value clients + group programs, $250k–1M+. The progression from low-rate 1:1 to high-rate 1:1 plus group programs is the standard coaching business growth path. Group programs offer the leverage that pure 1:1 lacks. A coach with 15 hours/week capacity at $200/hour caps at $156,000 annual (15 × $200 × 52). Adding two group programs per month at $500 × 10 clients = $10,000/month group revenue, or $120k annual additional. Total: $276k with similar time investment. Group programs typically take 5–10 hours/week to deliver vs 10–15 hours/week for equivalent 1:1 revenue. The cost: building cohort group programs requires longer sales cycles and stronger curriculum design. Delivery models matter: live cohorts (8–12 weeks, scheduled sessions, community) command premium pricing ($1,000–5,000 per student). Self-paced programs (recorded content + email support) cheaper ($200–500). 1:1 retainers (monthly access, 2–4 sessions/month) provide recurring revenue ($500–3,000/month). VIP days (single intensive day, $1,500–5,000) are high-leverage for established coaches. Most established coaching businesses run a mix: 60% 1:1 + 30% group + 10% high-touch retainers — providing income stability across delivery types.
Annual = (Session Rate × Sessions/Wk × Weeks/Yr) + (Group Rate × Group/Month × 12)
- 1Step 1 — Enter 1:1 session rate (start with current rate, project future rate after positioning improves)
- 2Step 2 — Enter realistic sessions per week (10–20 is sustainable, 25+ leads to burnout in most niches)
- 3Step 3 — Enter weeks per year (45–48 typical accounting for vacation and holidays)
- 4Step 4 — Enter group program rate (typically 3–10× individual session rate)
- 5Step 5 — Enter monthly group enrollments (realistic — most coaches sustain 2–8 per cohort program)
- 6Step 6 — Calculator computes 1:1 revenue: Rate × Sessions × Weeks
- 7Step 7 — Adds group revenue: Group Rate × Clients/Month × 12; outputs total annual
Solid full-time coaching practice. Most coaches reach this tier in years 2–3.
Smaller client base, higher per-engagement value
Premium positioning: fewer clients with deeper engagements + occasional intensive cohorts.
Realistic first-year revenue. Most coaches start here while building credibility and audience.
Group leverage shines — smaller 1:1 time, much higher group revenue. The premium business model for established coaches.
Coaching business revenue projection
1:1 vs group leverage analysis
Annual revenue target setting
Coach-to-consultant transition planning
Pricing strategy validation
Hiring decisions (associate coach to scale capacity)
How do I set my coaching rate?
Start with 1.5–2× the equivalent W-2 hourly for your skill level. If a manager doing similar work earns $80k = $40/hour W-2 equivalent (counting benefits), price 1:1 coaching at $60–80/hour. Increase 25–50% after 30 paying clients build evidence. Premium pricing comes from established authority + measurable client outcomes documented in testimonials/case studies. Don't price for friends; price for your ideal client.
What about packages vs hourly billing?
Most established coaches sell packages, not hours. A '12-week leadership coaching program' for $3,000 (effectively $250/session) sells better than '$250/hour, expect 12 sessions.' Packages: clearer outcome promise, simpler client decision, often higher total revenue, fewer 'how many hours did we use' conversations. Hourly only for ad-hoc consults or established clients who need flexibility.
Group programs vs 1:1 — what's the optimal mix?
Year 1–2: 80–100% 1:1 to build experience and case studies. Year 2–3: 60% 1:1, 30% group, 10% recurring retainer/VIP days. Year 4+: 30–50% 1:1 (premium tier only), 30–40% group, 20–30% retainer/intensive. Group programs require curriculum design effort (50–150 hours upfront) but pay back via leverage.
How long does it take to reach six-figure coaching revenue?
Median for full-time coaches: 18–36 months. Faster: established expertise + audience (newsletter, podcast, LinkedIn following) shortens to 6–18 months. Slower: niche-less generalist coaches starting from zero audience often take 4+ years or never reach. The audience-building phase is where most coaches stall. Build audience BEFORE going full-time if possible.
Are coaching certifications worth it?
Variable. ICF certification (International Coach Federation) is industry gold standard but expensive ($5–15k) and time-intensive (200+ hours training). Useful for: corporate clients requiring credentialed coaches, transitioning from another career, formal coaching positions in companies. Not necessary for: solo entrepreneurs serving direct consumers, niche expertise coaches (career, business, specific skill). Certification is one input, not magic credibility.
Consejo Pro
Test pricing with first paid client before full launch — many coaches discover they could charge 2–3× their initial rate without losing customers. Start with confidence-building rate, raise 25–50% every 30 clients with documented results. The audience that hires at $100 doesn't transition to $300; new audience does at $300.