Find a local graphic designer in Melbourne

Post a gig in 60 seconds, get bids from graphic designers nearby. You pick the one that fits.

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

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

Showing 5 of 5 freelancers.
ZD

Zach D.

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

Clumsy H.

Just joined
Melbourne, VIC 10+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Website & UI/UX Design +4 more
JM

Justin M.

Just joined
Melbourne, VIC 7+ yrs
Videography & EditingAnimation & Motion GraphicsLogo & Brand Identity +2 more
CD

Carolina Ramirez D.

Melbourne, VIC 6+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Advertising & Marketing Creative +3 more
GA

Gökhan A.

Melbourne, VIC
Logo & Brand IdentityWebsite & UI/UX DesignAdvertising & Marketing Creative +20 more

What's the cost of a graphic designer in Melbourne?

$122/hr
Est. hourly rate $73$212/hr
graphic designer Ave. hourly rate · Updated today
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Graphic designer in Melbourne, questions

Graphic design covers the pieces your business puts in front of people: flyers, brochures, menus, social tiles, signage, vehicle wraps, ads, decks and packaging artwork. A typical gig includes a short brief, a concept or two, an agreed number of revision rounds, then final files. You should get print-ready exports (PDF with bleed and crop marks for anything physical), web-ready versions (PNG, JPG), and the editable source file so the next designer can pick it up.

It does one job clearly. A good flyer makes the offer and the next step obvious at arm's length; a good social tile reads in under a second on a phone. The other half is consistency: same logo placement, same two or three colours, same fonts across every piece, so customers recognise you before they read a word. Pretty but inconsistent loses to plain but consistent.

Small jobs like a flyer, a social set or a single ad usually turn around in 2 to 5 days once the brief and content are in. A brochure, menu or signage with print specs runs 1 to 2 weeks, and a larger campaign set 2 to 3 weeks. The slow part is rarely the design; it's the copy, photos and sign off on your side, so have those ready before the gig starts.

For day-to-day socials, yes, and a designer can even set up branded Canva templates so your DIY posts stay on brand. Where DIY falls over is print and anything high-stakes: print files need correct bleed, resolution and colour setup (CMYK, not screen colours), and a reprint of 5,000 flyers costs more than the design did. Use Canva for the everyday, a freelancer for print, signage, campaigns and the templates themselves.

Five things: what the piece is and its exact size or spec (the printer or platform will tell you), the copy and images you want on it, your logo and brand files, two or three examples you like, and the deadline. If you don't have brand files, say so up front; the designer can work from your website or quote a small brand tidy-up first. A clear brief is the difference between a 3-day job and a 3-week one.

For print: a press-ready PDF with bleed and crop marks. For digital: PNG or JPG at the right dimensions per platform. And always the editable source (Illustrator, InDesign, Figma or Canva, whatever the designer worked in) so you're not locked to one person for every future tweak. Write the file list into the gig as a stage before final payment is signed off.

You should. Make sure the gig states that finished artwork and source files transfer to your business on final payment. The one carve-out is stock images and fonts, which are licensed rather than owned; ask the designer to use assets licensed in your name or to list what the licences cover so you're not caught out reusing them.

Freelance graphic designers in Melbourne typically charge $70 to $120 an hour, with the wider market running roughly $50 to $150. Most small jobs are quoted as a fixed price instead: a flyer or social set sits at the low end of a day's work, a multi-page brochure or campaign set runs to several days. Ask for a fixed quote per deliverable so there are no surprises.

Match the portfolio to the job: print designers and digital designers are often different people, so look for finished work in your format. Check the work still looks sharp on your phone, read their verified reviews on Unjumble for how they handle revisions and deadlines, and confirm the gig includes source files on handover. If you'll need regular pieces, ask whether they offer an ongoing arrangement.

Post a graphic design gig in under five minutes. Describe the work, set your budget and timeframe, and choose whether it is time-based or outcome-based. Local freelancers send a bid with a quote, you compare their profiles, portfolios and 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 is held securely through Stripe, then released once you sign off. No chasing invoices, and no paying for work that is not done.