TL;DR
- Upwork pays agencies more. Average Upwork project is $800, with 32% of 2026 jobs at $1,000+. Fiverr's average order is $50 to $500, with $342 spent per buyer per year.
- The fee gap is smaller than you think. Fiverr takes a flat 20% from sellers. Upwork moved to a flat 10% service fee in 2026. After buyer fees, withdrawal fees, and Connects, Upwork's effective tax for agencies lands around 11% to 13%.
- Fiverr was built for gig buyers. Upwork was built for agencies. Upwork has a dedicated agencies page, Enterprise talent clouds, and 145,000 clients spending $5K+ per year. Fiverr Pro sells individual vetted freelancers, not agencies.
- The calculator below models your monthly revenue on each platform with real fee math. At $20K/month gross, Upwork leaves $1,800 to $2,400 more in your pocket than Fiverr.
- If you're building an agency past $5K/month, Fiverr is a trap. Use it for small-ticket work, not pipeline.
What's in this article
Every quarter, two or three agency owners in GigRadar's onboarding calls ask me the same question: should I run my agency on Upwork or Fiverr?
My answer is the same every time. If your average project is above $300, Upwork. If your average project is under $100, Fiverr.
There is almost no middle ground, and the math behind it is cleaner than most people expect.
The platforms look similar from the outside. Both charge sellers a commission, both have millions of buyers, both let you list services or apply to projects.
Inside, they run on entirely different economics. Fiverr is a product catalog where buyers pick gigs off a shelf.
Upwork is a marketplace where projects get posted and agencies bid with proposals. One rewards volume at $50 per order, the other rewards relationships at $5,000 per contract.
This piece breaks down which platform actually pays agencies more in 2026, with the fee math, the buyer behavior, and the calculator I use when agencies ask me to run the numbers for them.
The number that decides everything: average project size
I pulled the most recent platform data I could find. Upwork's average hourly rate sits between $30 and $50 per hour for agency-tier talent, with 32% of 2026 contracts paying $1,000+ per project. Backlinko's analysis of Upwork user data shows 145,000 clients spend over $5,000 per year on the platform, and 4,000 clients spend over $100,000 per year.
Fiverr publishes different numbers. Their 2024 investor reports show 3.1 million annual active buyers spending an average of $342 per year. The average order value sits between $50 and $500, with the long tail heavily weighted toward the $50 side.
For an agency, that single stat is the whole argument.
If you need to hit $20,000 in monthly revenue, on Upwork you need 25 contracts at $800 each. On Fiverr you need 58 orders at $342 each.
The math is not close.
Fiverr averages are skewed by $5 and $10 gigs that make up the majority of listings. For an agency with 3 to 5 people, the sustainable ticket size on Fiverr is usually $150 to $500. That still sounds fine until you remember Fiverr buyers expect one-shot delivery. No ongoing retainer, no monthly engagement, no upsell. Every order is a new sale.
Upwork vs Fiverr fee calculator (interactive)
Before we get into buyer behavior, let's run the math on your own numbers. Enter your monthly revenue target and average project size. The calculator below shows net take-home on each platform after fees, and the project volume you'd need to hit that target.
Upwork vs Fiverr Agency Revenue Calculator
Enter your monthly gross revenue target and average project size. The tool calculates your real take-home on each platform.
The real fee math on each platform in 2026
Platform fees get oversimplified on both sides. "Upwork takes 10% now" and "Fiverr takes 20%" are both technically true and both misleading. The actual cost of earning a dollar on each platform depends on a stack of fees agencies usually forget about.
Upwork's 2026 fee structure
Upwork moved to a flat 10% service fee across all freelancers and agencies in 2026. The old tiered system (20%/10%/5% based on lifetime earnings with a client) is gone. Flat 10% on every dollar.
But 10% is not where it stops. Here is the full stack for an agency doing $20K/month gross on Upwork:
| Cost | Rate | On $20K/month |
|---|---|---|
| Service fee (flat) | 10% | $2,000 |
| Connects (bidding) | $0.15 per Connect | $150 to $400 |
| Withdrawal fees (Payoneer/wire) | 1% to 2% | $180 to $360 |
| Agency membership (optional) | $20/month | $20 |
| Effective take rate | 11% to 13% | |
Fiverr's 2026 fee structure
Fiverr did not change its 2024 structure. Flat 20% seller commission.
The buyer pays an additional 5.5% service fee plus a $3.50 small-order fee on anything under $100.
None of those buyer fees touch your take, but they affect your pricing because every buyer sees the higher total.
| Cost | Rate | On $20K/month |
|---|---|---|
| Seller commission (flat) | 20% | $4,000 |
| Promoted gigs (optional) | Auction CPC | $50 to $300 |
| Withdrawal fees (PayPal/Payoneer) | ~1% | $160 |
| Seller Plus (optional) | $29/month | $29 |
| Effective take rate | 21% to 22% | |
Fiverr's effective take rate is almost exactly double Upwork's. On $20K gross, that difference is around $2,000 per month. Across a year of consistent agency revenue, you're looking at $24,000 in fees you would not pay on Upwork.
Agencies often forget Connects are a real marketing expense. A 12-Connect proposal costs $1.80. At a 10% reply rate and 25% close rate, that's $72 per hire in proposal spend. Most agencies overestimate Connects cost and underestimate withdrawal fees. Run your real numbers before deciding which platform is cheaper.
Upwork was built for agencies. Fiverr was built for gig buyers.
Platform structure tells you everything about what they actually want from you. Upwork runs a dedicated agencies landing page with case studies, trust signals from Microsoft and Airbnb, and an explicit "Bring it to life with an agency" headline. Fiverr does not have an equivalent page. Fiverr Pro exists, but it sells individual vetted freelancers, not agencies.
Upwork runs a dedicated agency landing page with enterprise trust signals. No equivalent exists on Fiverr.
Fiverr Pro pitches individual vetted talent. Agencies are treated as customers here, not sellers.
This is not cosmetic. Every agency-oriented feature on Upwork (Talent Clouds, Enterprise, Plus memberships with per-agency seats) flows from the same assumption: agencies are sellers, and the platform wants them to win. Fiverr's product treats agencies as an edge case.
The practical consequence shows up in buyer behavior. A client posting on Upwork usually knows they want an ongoing relationship.
They describe the project, the timeline, and the budget. A buyer on Fiverr picks a gig card off a shelf and places an order.
One is a sales conversation. The other is a transaction.
Fiverr Pro marketing implies it's a gateway to high-end clients. For agencies, that positioning is misleading. Fiverr Pro buyers still browse gigs; they're just vetted companies. The sales motion is identical to regular Fiverr. No RFP, no proposal, no call. If your agency model requires a discovery call to scope properly, Fiverr structurally fights you at every step.
Who pays for ongoing work: Upwork vs Fiverr buyer intent
The deepest gap between the platforms is what buyers actually want. I pulled this from Backlinko's 2026 Upwork data and Fiverr's own investor reports. The pattern is almost identical to what I see in GigRadar customer accounts.
| Metric | Upwork | Fiverr |
|---|---|---|
| Active buyers (annual) | 794,000 paying clients | 3.1 million buyers |
| Avg annual spend per buyer | $5,035 | $342 |
| Avg project size | $500 to $5,000 | $50 to $500 |
| Repeat engagement | High (retainers common) | Low (one-shot typical) |
| Clients spending $5K+/year | 145,000 (18%) | Rare |
| Clients spending $100K+/year | 4,000 | Effectively zero |
| Typical hiring signal | Posts project, invites proposals | Browses gigs, places order |
The Upwork buyer base is 4x smaller than Fiverr's, but spends roughly 15x more per buyer annually. If you're an agency built around retainers, monthly engagements, or anything resembling a long relationship, that math never reverses in Fiverr's favor.
Real agency-adjacent users on Reddit still cite Fiverr's 20% take as a reason not to switch, even when Upwork frustrates them.
That Reddit thread is the pattern I see repeatedly. Agencies frustrated with Upwork look at Fiverr as a fallback.
Then they run the fee math and realize Fiverr's 20% commission is twice what Upwork actually takes. They stay.
Decision tree: which platform for your agency?
Here is how I help agencies decide in my onboarding calls. Three questions, honest answers.
What is your average project size?
Under $100: Fiverr makes sense. You can compete on catalog-style gigs with fast delivery. $100 to $500: It's a coin flip. Run both and see which platform your ideal clients post on. Above $500: Upwork. Fiverr's average order is $50 to $500. Your agency doesn't fit Fiverr's buyer expectations.
Do you want retainer clients or one-shot work?
Retainer: Upwork. Buyers post jobs looking for ongoing relationships. Fiverr has no native retainer mechanic. One-shot: Fiverr. Single orders, fast turnaround, no discovery calls. Both platforms can technically do both, but the dominant buyer behavior pushes you toward the platform's shape.
Is your agency positioned on expertise or on output?
Expertise-led: Upwork. Proposals let you show understanding, case studies, and strategy. Gigs on Fiverr are effectively spec'd deliverables. Output-led: Fiverr can work. If you sell "10 logos for $200" at volume, Fiverr's catalog format sells for you.
Most agencies I talk to answer Upwork on 2 of 3 questions. That's usually enough to commit.
How GigRadar makes Upwork's fee gap work for you
Picking Upwork over Fiverr is step one. Making the Upwork pipeline work at agency scale is step two.
The average agency burns through Connects faster than they realize. Most bid on 60% of jobs they shouldn't have, because sorting feed noise from fit in real time is hard.
GigRadar filters your Upwork feed for fit before the Connects fire. We pull your positioning, your portfolio, your avg project size, and score every incoming job in real time. The average GigRadar customer bids on fewer jobs, replies from higher-fit matches, and pays roughly $64 per hire in Connects spend at a 25% close rate.
Those numbers are what a well-filtered Upwork pipeline looks like. $64 per hire beats every cold email service, LinkedIn ad, and trade show on the market.
It also beats Fiverr, where your Connects equivalent (promoted gigs spend plus Fiverr's 20% take) lands closer to $200 per acquired client.
Common questions agencies ask before switching platforms
Can I run my agency on both Upwork and Fiverr at the same time?
Yes, and I usually recommend it for the first 60 days. List your catalog-style services on Fiverr (anything delivered same-day or same-week) and run your proposal pipeline on Upwork.
After 60 days, look at which platform drove revenue and which drove noise. The answer is almost always Upwork for agencies above $5K/month.
Is Fiverr Pro worth it for an agency?
Fiverr Pro vets individual freelancers, not agencies. If one of your team members passes Pro vetting, they can list solo gigs under Pro.
The agency as an entity does not get Pro status. For positioning purposes, Upwork Enterprise Talent Clouds are a closer parallel.
What is Upwork's effective fee really, after Connects and withdrawal?
For most agencies running an active pipeline, Upwork's effective take rate lands between 11% and 13%. That includes the 10% service fee, 1% to 2% withdrawal, and Connects spend as a percentage of gross revenue. Fiverr's effective take rate is 21% to 22%.
Do Upwork clients have bigger budgets than Fiverr clients?
On average, yes. The average Upwork client spends $5,035 per year, and the average Fiverr buyer spends $342 per year.
Upwork has 145,000 clients spending $5K+ per year. Fiverr has effectively none.
If you need enterprise budgets, Upwork is structurally where they are.
What if I already have a Fiverr agency making decent money?
Don't shut it down. Run both.
Let Fiverr be the catalog arm of your agency for small deliverables and fast-turn projects, and build Upwork as the retainer and high-ticket arm.
Most agencies above $30K/month eventually consolidate on Upwork, but there's no rush to kill a working Fiverr presence.
The bottom line
For agencies, the platforms are not comparable. Upwork is a higher-revenue, higher-margin platform with buyers who expect to build relationships.
Fiverr is a volume-first marketplace with buyers who expect to transact.
The 2x fee gap amplifies the revenue gap, and after Connects spend is factored in, Upwork still wins on every scenario where your average project is above $300.
If you're starting an agency today and running one platform, run Upwork. If you already have Fiverr revenue, don't kill it.
But every hour you spend on Fiverr positioning should be matched by two hours on Upwork positioning.
The agencies that make this call early and consolidate their pipeline on Upwork are the ones hitting $30K, $50K, and $100K per month predictably.
The agencies that hedge on Fiverr forever plateau around $10K and wonder why scaling doesn't work.
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