
Why Upwork Sucks - The Honest Freelancer Experience
Upwork is one of the largest freelance marketplaces in the world. Millions of freelancers and clients use it every day. But despite its popularity, many freelancers are frustrated and openly saying “Upwork sucks.” In this article, we’ll break down, in a simple and real way, why so many people complain about Upwork — and whether it’s still worth using.
What People Are Saying Online
If you look at Reddit, Quora, Twitter, and freelancer groups, a lot of common complaints show up again and again:
- “Upwork takes too much money from us.”
- “I buy connections and still never get hired.”
- “Even when I get work, the fees make the project not worth it.”
- “There are too many hidden charges everywhere.”
- “Clients don’t respond after we pay to connect.”
These comments aren’t from one or two people — they are repeated across freelancer communities all over the internet.
Charging for Connections — But No Work
One of the biggest frustrations freelancers talk about is Upwork’s Connects system. Connects are like tickets you pay for just to apply for a job. You buy them up front before you even know if the client will respond.
Here’s the problem many freelancers highlight:
- You spend money on Connects just to apply — even if the client never replies.
- You can apply ten or twenty times and get zero responses — losing money every time.
- Clients might even repost the same job later, forcing you to spend Connects again.
So people end up paying just to hope they get work — not because they earned it.
Fees Eat Your Earnings
Even when you do get a job, the pain isn’t over. Upwork charges fees on every single earned dollar. Here are the typical fee complaints:
- Sliding service fee — Upwork takes a percentage based on your total earnings with a client.
- Connects & membership fees — You pay upfront just to bid.
- Withdrawal fees — You pay again when taking money out.
Freelancers often calculate that up to 30% or more of their earnings disappear to Upwork before they see the money they worked for.
Too Many Platforms & Extra Fees
Upwork has tried to expand with extra tools and services — premium plans, talent badges, enterprise features, and more. But freelancers say:
- These add complexity.
- They push people to pay even more.
- Basic profiles get buried under paid ones.
Instead of a simple platform for work, it feels like a maze of fees and paywalls.
Final Thoughts — Is Upwork Still Worth It?
Despite the complaints, some freelancers do find clients on Upwork. But the reason many say it “sucks” is clear:
- You pay to apply, pay to work, and pay to withdraw.
- You compete with freelancers worldwide.
- Most of your earnings go to fees.
- You can waste money even without getting hired.
For many freelancers, Upwork feels like a pay-to-play marketplace with diminishing returns.
If you’re considering Upwork, go in with realistic expectations — and plan alternatives so you don’t get stuck paying for nothing.


