Indeed

Job Seeker: The site aggregates job listings from thousands of websites, including job boards, staffing firms, associations, and company career pages.

Monster

Job Seeker: Monster caters to job seekers from all experience levels and work styles (freelance, temp, part-time, full-time, etc.) and its job search tools are free to use. You need to create an account using your email address in order to apply to any job listing on Monster, but doing so takes less than 30 seconds.

Designhill

Job Seeker: This freelance website offers a transparent price upfront so clients can anticipate how much the finished design can cost. It’s a pretty useful feature as there is so many design work with different prices.

CommissionCrowd

Job Seeker: Built as a platform by salespeople and for salespeople to find freelance gigs (that tend to be paid via mostly commission-only compensation), this free jobs site is a no-brainer if you’re interested in putting your selling skills to work in your free time. The best part? You won’t pay any fees at all to CommissionCrowd for using the platform—only client companies are charged for getting matched with freelancers.

DesignCrowd

Job Seeker: DesignCrowd covers lots of design disciplines and has jobs from all over the world. It’s a comprehensive freelance marketplace with a wide variety of job listings. Clients can court multiple designers, allowing them to find just the right fit. Like many freelance sites, they offer crowdsourcing to do their work. If that’s your thing, you should definitely check out DesignCrowd.

We Work Remotely

Job Seeker: We Work Remotely boasts that they get around 2.5 million users a month. That’s huge. They have a multitude of job postings with many design-related offerings. We Work Remotely may feel a bit less personal than more design-centric websites, but the volume of job postings makes up for this.

Smashing Magazine

Job Seeker: This is another great job board, and it’s a great resource for both developers and designers to utilize. It comes with the time cost of sorting through the postings yourself, but it’s easy to find freelancing jobs with the time commitment you want.

FlexJobs

Job Seeker: FlexJobs doesn’t only provide a platform for freelance work, but it also encourages everyone to try this career path. Furthermore, the freelance website collects jobs from around the world

Freelance Writing

Job Seeker: This source of writing jobs is excellent for freelancers all over the map, from brand spanking new to very experienced. It’s easy to filter for the type of job you want and the experience you have, and it’s totally free.

Simply Hired

Job Seeker: One of the best things about Simply Hired is that you can browse freelance jobs in your nearby location. Additionally, there is a list of top salaries and a tool to estimate your fee. This is helpful to benchmark for a specific work you want to do. You’ll also be able to create a resume from the website and learn many things from their blog.

TaskRabbit

Job Seeker: Not all freelancing jobs are digital. TaskRabbit is a freelance website that focuses on house work. Be it furniture assembling, moving and packing, plumbing, or anything else – you can find it on TaskRabbit.

Blogging Pro

Job Seeker: Despite the name, you can find everything from tasks like helping people start blogging to editing to general copywriting jobs here—they aggregate all the best writing jobs they can find to make them easy to find and search through on their site.

Webflow Experts

Job Seeker: There are many businesses out there looking to hire freelancers and agencies that offer services related to Webflow. If you have any skills in design, development, site migration, or marketing, Webflow Experts might be worth taking a look at.