People ask me this constantly, usually right after finding out I quit a “stable” dev job to freelance: “But isn’t it scary? Wasn’t the office job just… easier?”
Short answer: yes and no. Long answer: grab a coffee, this one’s a bit of a ramble.
The Version Nobody Posts on LinkedIn
Let’s get the myth out of the way first. Freelancing isn’t “laptop on a beach, coffee in hand, income rolling in while you vibe.” And in-house jobs aren’t some soul-crushing cubicle prison either. I lived both. Neither extreme is true, and honestly, I think this false dichotomy does freelancers a disservice.
Here’s what I actually experienced, no sugar-coating.
What I Miss From My In-House Job
I’ll be real — there were things about my 9-to-5 (okay, more like 9-to-7, let’s not pretend) that I genuinely miss:
- Predictable paycheck. Same amount, same date, every single month. I didn’t appreciate this until it was gone.
- Team energy. Bouncing ideas off people in real time, not just in a Slack thread three hours later.
- Someone else worrying about clients. Sales wasn’t my job. I just built stuff.
- Clear boundaries. Work stayed at work (mostly). Now my “office” is six feet from my bed and the line gets blurry.
What I Do NOT Miss
But then there’s this list, which honestly is longer and probably explains why I never went back:
- Sitting in meetings that could’ve been a two-line email
- Working on projects I had zero say in choosing
- The performance review anxiety spiral every six months
- Asking permission to take a random Wednesday off
- Feeling like a cog, even a well-paid one
Side-by-Side, In My Opinion
I put together this little comparison based purely on my own experience — not gospel, just my honest take:
| Category | In-House Job | Freelancing |
|---|---|---|
| Income stability | High, predictable | Variable, feast-or-famine early on |
| Control over projects | Low to medium | High |
| Work hours flexibility | Fixed | Flexible, but self-discipline required |
| Admin/business tasks | None (someone else handles it) | Constant (invoices, contracts, taxes) |
| Growth pace | Steady, structured | Fast, but self-directed |
| Loneliness factor | Low | Higher, especially early on |
| Ceiling on earnings | Capped by salary band | Uncapped, but unpredictable |
The Thing That Actually Made the Difference
If I’m honest with myself, the deciding factor wasn’t money or flexibility. It was ownership. I wanted my work to actually feel like mine — the wins, the mistakes, all of it. In-house, even great work often disappears into “the team’s success.” Freelance, it’s undeniably yours, good or bad.
That’s not better or worse objectively. It’s just what mattered to me.
Who Should Actually Consider Freelancing
I don’t think freelancing is some universally superior path — I’ve seen people burn out badly trying to force themselves into it. From what I’ve noticed, freelancing tends to suit people who:
- Genuinely enjoy wearing multiple hats (dev + marketer + accountant, fun times)
- Can handle irregular income without spiraling
- Are self-motivated without external deadlines pushing them
- Actually want client-facing work, not just code
If none of that sounds like you, that’s totally fine — an in-house role isn’t a consolation prize. It’s a legit, good choice for a lot of people, including past-me for five whole years.
So, Was It Worth It?
For me? Yes. But I say that sitting here two years in, past the scariest parts, with a stable-ish client base and a much better handle on my finances than year one.
If you’d asked me during month three, panicking over an invoice that was two weeks late, I might’ve given you a very different answer.
That’s the real, unfiltered comparison — not “freelance is freedom” or “in-house is stability,” but two genuinely different lifestyles with different trade-offs. Pick the one that fits your risk tolerance, not the version that looks best on Instagram.






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