You've got clients, deadlines, and invoices to manage. The right tools cut through the noise so you can spend time doing what you actually love: designing. This is what works.
Last updated: March 2026
The collaborative design tool that actually plays nice with clients.
There was a time when designers worked on their machines and clients got static PDFs. Figma blew that apart. It's browser-based, so literally anyone—client, developer, stakeholder—can hop in and see what you're building. No software to install, no file versions named "final_FINAL_v3.fig." You design, they watch, feedback happens in real time.
The free tier is genuinely useful. You get unlimited projects, real-time collaboration, and prototyping. The Pro tier ($15/mo) unlocks libraries and version history—nice to have, but not essential when you're starting out. We've seen plenty of designers do full client projects on the free plan.
Invoicing software built for freelancers who hate admin work.
Invoicing takes 60 seconds in FreshBooks. You set up your template once, then it's just: client name, hours, rate, send. That's it. The software tracks which invoices are paid, which are overdue, and automatically sends gentle reminders so you're not playing detective on your own money.
The Lite plan ($17/mo) covers what most freelancers need: invoicing, time tracking, expense tracking, and basic reporting. You get to the Pro tier ($30/mo) if you want to invoice multiple projects to the same client or track project profitability. We've been impressed by how few features you actually *need* to get going. The free alternatives feel janky after you've used this.
One workspace for projects, feedback, deliverables, and your design notes.
Notion isn't a project manager in the traditional sense. It's a canvas. You set up databases for projects, clients, deadlines—whatever works for your brain. Want kanban boards? Build it. Prefer tables? Done. Timeline view? Three clicks. This flexibility is why freelancers love it. You're not forcing your workflow into someone else's system; you're building the system that fits you.
The free tier is surprising. Unlimited databases, unlimited pages, full collaboration. You only hit the limit if you need more advanced features like advanced permissions or API access. Most freelancers never upgrade. Drop in project briefs, notes from client calls, mood boards, timelines, and deliverable checklists all in one place.
Keep client conversations organized and searchable—no more lost emails.
Email works fine until it doesn't. Then you're searching through 47 threads, missed a message buried in a reply chain, and nobody remembers what was actually decided. Slack fixes this. Create a channel for each project, drop files, iterate on feedback, and everything stays in one place. Clients can join or you can keep it internal—your call.
The free tier gives you unlimited channels, message history (though capped at 90 days), and integrations. That's genuinely functional for freelancers managing a handful of clients. The Pro plan ($8.75/mo) unlocks full message history and better admin controls. Most solo designers run on free forever.
All your files in one place. Free tier covers most freelancers.
This might seem obvious, but we're putting it here because too many freelancers bounce between Dropbox, OneDrive, iCloud, and whatever else, losing files in the process. Pick one and stick with it. Google Drive is our pick because the free 15GB tier is genuinely usable, and it integrates with Docs, Sheets, and Forms. You can share folders with clients without them needing accounts, and permission controls are straightforward.
The paid tiers ($2/mo for 100GB, $10/mo for 2TB) are the cheapest around. Most solo designers stay on free forever—15GB is more than enough for Figma files, brand guidelines, and client assets. This isn't flashy, but it's the reliable backbone of your digital life.
A portfolio that looks professional without hiring a developer.
Your portfolio is your storefront. Squarespace templates are genuinely beautiful—they're designed by professionals and look polished out of the box. You drop in your work, write a little about yourself, and you're done. No coding, no fighting with layouts. This matters when clients are deciding whether to hire you.
The Personal plan ($16/mo) covers most designers: domain, unlimited pages, portfolio gallery, basic analytics. The Business tier ($33/mo) adds inventory management and abandoned cart recovery if you ever sell designs directly. Squarespace isn't the cheapest, but it's the least stressful. Build it once, stop thinking about it.
Build an audience. Stay in touch with past clients and future prospects.
Email is the most reliable marketing channel. You've done great work for clients—now build a list of people who follow what you do. ConvertKit is built for creators, not corporations, so it actually makes this intuitive. Segments, landing pages, automation—everything feels like it was designed by someone who understands your world.
The free tier supports up to 1,000 subscribers. That's genuinely useful for building your thing. Once you hit 1K, the Creator plan ($25/mo) is a no-brainer. You get sequences (automate welcome emails), landing pages, and detailed subscriber info. This isn't about spamming—it's about staying top-of-mind when someone's ready to hire a designer.
| Tool | Category | Starting Price | Free Tier? | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Figma | Design | Free | ✓ | Collaborative design, client feedback |
| FreshBooks | Invoicing | $17/mo | — | Time tracking, invoicing, expenses |
| Notion | Project Management | Free | ✓ | Custom workflows, project tracking |
| Slack | Communication | Free | ✓ | Team chat, client communication |
| Google Drive | File Storage | Free | ✓ | Document collaboration, file sharing |
| Squarespace | Portfolio | $16/mo | — | Professional portfolio, easy updates |
| ConvertKit | Email Marketing | Free | ✓ | Building an audience, automation |
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