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brand designer

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Free to postStripe-secured payments300+local freelancersABN required
300+ local Aussie freelancers
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Best brand designers in Australia

Ranked by verified rating, review volume, proximity and profile completeness. Every freelancer joins with an ABN and an Australian mobile.

Showing 5 of 19 freelancers.
KL

Katie L.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 20+ yrs
Graphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Logo & Brand IdentityPresentation & Pitch Deck Design +4 more
MC

Maria Florencia C.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 15+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Presentation & Pitch Deck Design +11 more
ZD

Zach D.

Just joined
Melbourne, VIC 14+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityWebsite & UI/UX DesignGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print) +2 more
BR

Bart R.

Sydney, NSW 10+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityAdvertising & Marketing CreativePresentation & Pitch Deck Design +8 more
DR

Dhimanth R.

Sydney, NSW 9+ yrs
Animation & Motion GraphicsLogo & Brand IdentityAdvertising & Marketing Creative +2 more

What's the cost of a brand designer in Australia?

$133/hr
Est. hourly rate $73$222/hr
brand designer Ave. hourly rate · Updated today
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Brand designer in Australia, questions

More than a logo. A full brand identity usually covers the logo suite (a primary mark, a secondary or stacked version, and a one-colour version), a colour palette, fonts for headings and body, an image or illustration style, and a short brand guidelines doc that ties it all together. Many freelancers also build the everyday templates you'll actually use: social tiles, a business card, an email signature, maybe a letterhead or pitch deck. The point is a kit you can roll out anywhere without guessing.

If you're testing an idea or just need a clean mark to start trading, a logo gig is enough. Go for a full brand identity when you're about to roll out across a few places at once, a website, signage, packaging, socials, and want them all to look like the same business. Doing it as one identity gig now saves you stitching mismatched bits together later.

Consistency, plus a few things that are unmistakably yours. A strong identity holds together whether it's on a shopfront, an Instagram grid or an invoice, and it owns a colour, a type style or a shape that people start to recognise as you. The research backs it: consistent branding across channels lifts revenue by around 23% on average, and brands that use distinctive assets well are far more likely to report big profit gains. Distinctive and consistent beats clever every time.

Most freelance brand identity projects run 3 to 6 weeks, longer than a standalone logo because there's more to design and align. Expect a discovery chat, a moodboard or direction stage, the logo and core elements, then the guidelines and templates. The biggest delay is usually sign-off time on your side, so agree up front who has the final say.

At minimum: the logo suite as vector files (AI, EPS or SVG) plus high-res PNGs, your colour codes (HEX, RGB and CMYK), the fonts or links to them, and a brand guidelines doc. If templates were part of the gig, you get the editable files for those too. Vector files matter because printers and signwriters will ask for them, and they scale to any size without going blurry.

It's the rulebook for your brand: how to use the logo, the exact colours and fonts, spacing, and what not to do with the mark. You need one the moment more than one person touches your brand, a printer, a signwriter, a social freelancer or a new hire, because it keeps everything on-brand without you re-explaining it each time. Even a tight one-pager does the job for a small business.

You can assemble pieces in Canva or with an AI generator, and for an early test that's fine. The catch is cohesion and ownership: a real identity is a system where the logo, colours, type and templates all pull together, and generated kits often look like a thousand others with murky usage rights. A freelance designer builds something that's genuinely yours, in proper source files, that still holds up as you grow.

You should, outright. Make sure the gig includes full transfer of rights and the editable source files, not just exported images. On Unjumble, write the handover into a stage so the source files and rights transfer are signed off before the final payment is released.

A full freelance brand identity in Australia typically runs $3,000 to $8,000, against roughly $1,500 to $3,000 for a logo on its own. A simple starter kit can come in lower, and a detailed system with lots of templates and applications can go higher. Price tracks scope: how many elements, how many applications, and how much strategy sits behind it.

Look for a portfolio that shows whole identities, not just logos, ideally a few in your industry. Check they hand over proper vector source files and full ownership, and read their verified reviews on Unjumble. Ask what's included: logo suite, guidelines, templates, and how many revision rounds. A short chat about your business tells you fast whether they get it.

Post a brand identity gig in under five minutes. Describe the work, set your budget and timeframe, and choose whether it's time-based or outcome-based. Local freelancers send a bid with a quote, you compare their profiles, portfolios and verified reviews, then pick the one that fits. Posting is free, so you only pay for the work.

Every gig is split into stages you both agree on up front. You fund each stage before the work starts and it's held securely through Stripe, then released once you sign off. No chasing invoices, and no paying for work that's not done.