Key points

  • Freelancers routinely share their personal number without considering what happens if a client relationship turns difficult.
  • Separating your business and personal contact details from day one costs almost nothing and provides significant protection.
  • VOIP numbers are a basic option but lack automatic archiving and content filtering.
  • A relay service keeps your real number permanently private, filters hostile content, and builds an archive automatically.
  • Setting up the separation cleanly from the start is far easier than trying to retrofit it when things go wrong.

Freelancers share their personal phone number with clients constantly and almost without thinking. It goes on the invoice, in the email signature, in the project brief. It's the natural thing to do when you're a one-person operation and everything is personal anyway.

The problem usually doesn't become obvious until something goes wrong. A client who disputes an invoice, who feels the work wasn't what they expected, or who simply doesn't take a professional boundary well, now has your personal number. At that point, the options for restoring separation are limited and uncomfortable.

This guide is about setting up a clean, professional separation before you need it — so you never have to face that situation.

Why it matters for freelancers specifically

Employed workers generally have a buffer between them and difficult clients — an employer, a company email system, a front desk. Freelancers don't. When a client relationship turns difficult, it's personal in a way that it isn't in an employment context. And because they have your personal number, they have a direct line to you at any hour.

Keeping a separate business contact point does several things:

  • It creates a professional boundary that is harder for clients to push past
  • It gives you control over when you engage with client communications — you can "switch off" the business contact outside working hours
  • It means a difficult relationship ending doesn't require you to change your personal number or take other disruptive steps
  • It builds a separate archive of client communications, which is useful for tax purposes and for disputes

The common mistake

The most common mistake is thinking "I'll sort it out if there's ever a problem." The issue is that setting up a new number mid-dispute is transparent and awkward. A client who has been messaging you on your personal number for six months and suddenly gets a message from a new number will know exactly what's happening — and it may escalate things rather than resolving them.

Setting up a business contact from day one is different. It's simply how you operate professionally. It requires no explanation and creates no drama.

Your options

Dedicated work email

A business email address (yourname@yourbusiness.com.au or a professional Gmail) is the simplest starting point. It creates a separate channel for business communication and gives you a professional appearance. It doesn't solve the phone number problem, but it's a necessary foundation.

VOIP number

A VOIP number from a service like Hushed or Skype gives you a separate Australian phone number that forwards calls and messages to your real device. You give this number to clients only. Your real number stays private.

The limitations are:

  • Call quality can be inconsistent on mobile data
  • Most consumer VOIP services don't archive messages with metadata
  • There's no content filtering — you receive everything directly
  • Numbers can lapse if not actively maintained

Relay number

A relay service gives you a number that routes through a processing layer before reaching you. This adds functionality beyond simple call forwarding: incoming messages can be filtered (hostile or abusive content withheld before reaching you), and every communication is archived automatically with full metadata.

How FenceChat works for freelancers: FenceChat gives you a dedicated relay number and email address that you use as your business contact. Clients contact you through these details — your personal number and email are never shared. Incoming messages are AI-filtered: hostile or threatening content is withheld before delivery, while normal client communications pass through. Every original is archived, giving you a complete record of client communications that's available for disputes or tax purposes. You can reply through FenceChat, so your personal details are never exposed.

Why VOIP alone isn't enough for many freelancers

For freelancers working on short, transactional engagements, a basic VOIP number may be sufficient. But for those with long-term client relationships — retainers, ongoing projects, repeat clients — the limitations of VOIP show over time.

The absence of message archiving means you have no reliable record if a client later disputes what was agreed or said. The absence of filtering means that if a client relationship turns hostile, you're still receiving every message directly. And the inability to distinguish between urgent and non-urgent messages in a filtered way means you're still on call for whatever the client chooses to send.

Why a relay approach suits ongoing professional relationships

For freelancers with ongoing client relationships, a relay service addresses the key limitations of simpler solutions:

  • Permanent privacy. Your real number is never involved in the communication at the client-facing end. Even if you use the relay for years, your personal number is never at risk.
  • Automatic archive. Every communication is logged. This is useful for dispute resolution, tax records, and building a comprehensive client history without any manual effort.
  • Content filtering. If a relationship turns hostile, you don't have to absorb abusive or threatening messages directly. They're withheld before reaching you, with the original preserved in the archive.
  • Clean handover. If you ever engage a virtual assistant or team member to manage client communications, a relay makes this straightforward — they work with the relay, never with your personal details.

Setting up the separation cleanly from day one

If you're starting fresh:

  1. Set up a business email address before you take on any clients
  2. Set up a business phone number (VOIP or relay) at the same time
  3. Put these details — and only these details — on all invoices, contracts, and communications
  4. Never contact clients from your personal number or personal email
  5. Set up an email signature and contact card with only the business details

If you have existing clients who already have your personal number:

  1. Send them a brief, professional message updating your contact details
  2. Explain it as a business update: "I've moved to a dedicated work contact for all project communications"
  3. Update your invoices, contracts, and email signatures
  4. Be consistent — reply to messages on the old number by redirecting to the new one, and don't engage via your personal number going forward

Resources and support

🇦🇺 Australia 🇺🇸 United States 🇬🇧 United Kingdom
business.gov.auAustralian Government guidance for freelancers and sole traders on setting up and protecting a business
ATO — Sole TradersTax, registration and legal structure guidance for freelancers
eSafety CommissionerProtecting your personal information and managing harassment as a sole trader
ACCCYour rights and protections when dealing with difficult clients
Small Business AdministrationGuidance for freelancers on business structure and protecting personal details
FTC — Privacy GuidanceHow to protect your personal contact information as a freelancer
IRS — Self-EmployedTax and registration requirements for freelancers and sole traders
ABA Lawyer ReferralFind a lawyer for freelance contract and client dispute matters
UK Government — Sole TraderOfficial guidance on setting up as a sole trader and protecting personal details
Federation of Small BusinessesResources for freelancers and sole traders managing client relationships
ICO — Small BusinessData protection and privacy guidance for freelancers handling client data
Citizens AdviceGuidance for self-employed people on dealing with difficult clients

Frequently asked questions

Should freelancers have a separate phone number for clients?

Yes. Having a separate contact point for clients protects your privacy, allows you to set clear work-life boundaries, and means you don't need to change your personal number or create awkward explanations if a client relationship goes wrong. Setting it up before you need it is far easier than doing it in a crisis.

What is the best phone number option for freelancers?

The best option depends on your needs. A VOIP number (Hushed, Skype) works for basic separation. A relay number offers more — AI filtering of hostile content, automatic archiving of all communications, and permanent privacy for your real number. For freelancers who work with clients over extended periods, a relay is typically more robust.

How do I tell existing clients I have a new number?

Send a brief, professional message stating that going forward you can be reached at the new number or email for all project-related communications. You don't need to explain why. Framing it as a business update — "I've moved to a dedicated work contact" — is sufficient.

Can a client find my real phone number if I use a VOIP or relay number?

If you are consistent about using only your business number and never contact them from your personal number, a client should have no way to find your real number. With a relay service, your personal number is never technically involved in the communication flow at the client-facing end.

What if a client texts my personal number after I've given them a business number?

Reply from your business number only, redirecting them: "Please use my business contact for all project communications." Don't engage via your personal number as this confirms it and establishes a precedent. If they continue to contact your personal number despite your request, that is a boundary issue that may need a firmer written statement.