the challenges facing young freelance creatives
- Written by Heidi Ashton, Associate professor, University of Warwick

If you’re a freelancer, you know there are many perks to how you make a living. For some, this includes being free to work when and how you please, setting your own rates, and being your own boss. But you also know there are downsides[1] to this form of working life.
And if you’re plotting your path towards going freelance, you’ll want to consider both the good and the bad aspects.
While some people want to work on a freelance basis, others – by virtue of the industry they are in – have less choice. The cultural and creative industries rely heavily on a flexible, skilled freelance workforce[2]. Many of these freelancers work from project to project with no single workplace, which can lead to challenges.
Over the last decade or so, I have researched freelance work and freelance workers in the cultural and creative industries, examining their experiences and understanding how these are shaped by structural and political forces.
Freelancers often rely on their reputation or word-of-mouth to gain future work. This can be helpful: a good reputation can lead to recommendations and repeat work. Equally, it can mean that freelancers do not always report poor practices and behaviour, especially early in their career. “You don’t want to be seen as a troublemaker,” a freelancer in my ongoing research said in 2023.
“You have to take the work that’s there at whatever level it is. You can risk turning something down and waiting for something better but then you could end up with nothing,” a freelancer I spoke to for my PhD research[10] said.
It can be difficult for freelancers to build contacts at higher levels, particularly when the person employing them directly is also a freelancer and therefore may perceive any relationship building above them as a threat to their future employment.
A common area of concern for young freelancers is the precarity[11] and financial insecurity of their work. They may need to juggle multiple jobs[12] and roles.
Freelancers also lack holiday pay or regular working hours, as well as support[13] for periods of under-employment. This can lead to increased stress and burnout for those who do not have other means of financial support.
“I have multiple side-hustles … It’s exhausting,” one freelancer said[14].
The accumulated impact on mental health can be significant. The Film and TV Charity[15], an independent charity for those working behind the scenes, found that 64% of workers in the sector were considering leaving due to poor mental health – with freelancers and younger age groups particularly vulnerable.
Having a mentor or someone who genuinely wants to support you and your career can help, as do communities of workers and unions providing support of various kinds. Anonymous reporting can be used to hold people and organisations to account for poor behaviour.
For many of the freelancers I work with, though, it’s worth it. There’s a collective sense that, although it’s tough, they wouldn’t want to do any other job.
References
- ^ there are downsides (warwick.ac.uk)
- ^ freelance workforce (lordslibrary.parliament.uk)
- ^ Quarter Life series (theconversation.com)
- ^ TV, film (www.tandfonline.com)
- ^ theatre (www.thestage.co.uk)
- ^ has explained (www.bbc.co.uk)
- ^ technically illegal (www.gov.uk)
- ^ one freelancer (warwick.ac.uk)
- ^ gnepphoto/Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
- ^ PhD research (scholar.google.com)
- ^ precarity (warwick.ac.uk)
- ^ juggle multiple jobs (freelancersmaketheatrework.com)
- ^ support (warwick.ac.uk)
- ^ freelancer said (warwick.ac.uk)
- ^ Film and TV Charity (filmtvcharity.org.uk)