A side hustle is a way to earn extra income outside of your full-time job — gig work, freelancing, selling products, content creation, or contract work. In 2026, about 27% of U.S. adults have one, with Gen Z leading at 34% (Bankrate, 2025). The number of side hustlers was down from a peak of 36% in 2024, but those who stick with it are making it count. The average earner earns roughly $885 a month, though the median is closer to $200.
That wide gap between average and median is the framing of the opportunity: casual gig work produces modest income, while skilled freelancing, creator-economy work, and AI-assisted services can pull in more. This guide lists 25 real side hustle ideas for 2026, with realistic earning ranges for each, grouped into 5 categories: gig work and delivery, services and skilled trades, AI-powered side hustles (a fast-growing 2026 category), rental and asset-sharing, and creator economy and content. We’ve also added a section on how to start, and on what to do with the money once it’s coming in.
Start by picking an idea that fits your existing skills, available time, and income goals. Then check platform requirements, set up basic income tracking for taxes, and begin small. Most successful side hustlers start with 5 to 10 hours a week and scale from there. Here’s the full five-step framework:
Below, 25 ideas grouped by category. We’ve included a realistic earning range for each: honest numbers, not clickbait. Earnings vary based on hours, location, and experience, and most ideas take a few months to hit consistent income.
1. Ridesharing (Uber, Lyft)
Drive passengers in your own car on a flexible schedule. Uber and Lyft require drivers to be at least 21 with a clean driving record and a qualifying vehicle. Earnings: $15–$25/hour before expenses like gas and vehicle wear. Peak hours (weekend nights, morning rush, airport runs) pay meaningfully more.
2. Food and grocery delivery (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Instacart)
Deliver food or groceries using your car, bike, or scooter. Lower barrier to entry than ridesharing: Instacart and DoorDash accept drivers from age 18 with any qualifying vehicle. Earnings: $12–$18/hour after tips and expenses. Busiest during lunch, dinner, and weekends.
3. TaskRabbit
Pick up local odd jobs: furniture assembly, mounting a TV, helping someone move. Furniture assembly is the most in-demand task and pays some of the highest rates on the platform. Earnings: $25–$65/hour depending on task type and metro area. Especially popular in cities with large IKEA shopper populations.
4. Amazon Flex
Deliver Amazon packages in blocks of 3–6 hours using your own vehicle. Blocks are scheduled through the app. Earnings: $18–$25/hour before vehicle expenses. Competitive to secure blocks in dense metros.
5. Freelance writing
Write blog posts, articles, newsletters, and marketing copy for businesses. Rates vary widely based on niche and experience; B2B and technical niches pay best. Earnings: $0.05–$1+ per word; experienced freelancers charge $50–$150+/hour. Start on Upwork or Contently; move off-platform once you have clients.
6. Graphic design
Design logos, social media graphics, presentations, and templates. Canva and Adobe Express lower the entry barrier significantly compared to years past. Earnings: $40–$75/hour on Upwork; $25–$100+ per small project on Fiverr.
7. Virtual assistant work
Help small businesses with email, scheduling, customer support, travel booking, and admin. Flexible hours and remote by default. Popular with parents and anyone wanting predictable remote work. Earnings: $15–$50/hour depending on complexity. Belay and Time etc. are common entry points.
8. Online tutoring
Tutor K-12 or college students in your subject area. Especially popular among teachers, nurses, and graduate students looking for flexible supplemental income. Earnings: $20–$60/hour via Wyzant, Tutor.com, or Chegg Tutors. SAT/ACT prep tutors often charge more.
9. Teach English online (Preply, Cambly, italki)
Teach English to international students via video chat. A bachelor’s degree and TEFL certification help but aren’t always required. (VIPKID, the older China-focused platform, largely exited that market in 2021; Preply and Cambly are the main current options.) Earnings: $10–$25/hour based on experience and platform.
10. Pet sitting and dog walking (Rover, Wag)
Watch pets in your home, at the owner’s home, or take dogs on scheduled walks. One of the highest-rated side hustles for work-life satisfaction, and a great fit for college students and anyone with flexible daytime hours. Earnings: $15–$40/walk; $30–$80/night for overnight pet sitting.
11. Babysitting and childcare (Care.com, Sittercity)
Provide occasional or regular childcare for local families. CPR certification helps you command higher rates. Earnings: $15–$25/hour depending on metro area, number of kids, and experience.
12. House cleaning (Handy, local clients)
Clean residential or commercial spaces. Independent clients generally pay more than platforms but require more hustle to find. Earnings: $25–$50/hour through Handy; $30–$75/hour with direct clients.
13. Personal fitness training
Train clients in-person at local gyms, parks, or homes, or online via video. Certification (NASM, ACE, or similar) required at most gyms. Earnings: $30–$100+/session. Online training scales well once you’ve built a reputation.
94% of gig workers report using AI tools to support their work (Zety), and search interest in AI side hustles rose roughly 28% year-over-year in 2026. Being specific about which tools you use (and disclosing AI use to clients when appropriate) matters.
14. AI-assisted content creation for small businesses
Use ChatGPT or Claude for drafting and editing, Canva or Adobe Express for design, and your own judgment for quality control. Small businesses need ongoing social posts, blog content, and email newsletters but rarely have dedicated marketing staff. Earnings: $200–$1,500 per month per client on retainer; $50–$500 per one-off project.
15. Faceless YouTube or TikTok content
Build a niche channel using AI-generated voiceovers (ElevenLabs, Murf), AI video tools (CapCut AI, InVideo), and stock footage. Common niches: finance explainers, history, science shorts, relaxation content. It could take 3–9 months to reach monetization eligibility. Earnings: $3–$5 per 1,000 views once monetized; top niches can exceed $10 RPM. Revenue compounds slowly.
16. Prompt engineering and custom GPT building
Build custom GPTs, workflow prompts, or AI-driven automations for small businesses that want to use AI but don’t know where to start. PromptBase is a marketplace for standalone prompts; custom projects usually come from direct outreach or Upwork. Earnings: $50–$500 per custom GPT or prompt library; $75–$150/hour for consulting engagements.
17. Rent your car (Turo, Getaround)
List your car on a peer-to-peer car rental platform. Turo hosts earn a reported average of $10,516 per year per car (Turo, based on top-performing hosts; your results will vary). Earnings: $300–$1,500+/month per car depending on market, vehicle type, and how often it’s rented.
18. Rent your backyard or pool (Swimply, SniffSpot)
Swimply lets you rent your pool by the hour; SniffSpot lets you rent your yard to dog owners who need a secure, private space to let their dog run. Earnings: Swimply hosts average $60–$75/hour; SniffSpot hosts typically earn $4–$12/hour (higher in dense urban areas).
19. Rent out storage space (Neighbor.com)
Monetize an unused garage, basement, or shed by renting it to locals who need storage. Lower effort than most rental side hustles; monthly rather than hourly income. Earnings: $50–$300/month depending on space size and location.
20. Host on Airbnb or Vrbo
Rent a spare room or whole unit short-term. Check your city’s short-term-rental rules before listing; many metros now require permits or have outright restrictions. Earnings: Varies enormously: $500–$3,000+/month depending on location, season, and setup.
21. Rent your parking spot (SpotHero, Spacer)
If you live near a stadium, downtown, airport, or high-demand area, your parking spot can earn income when you’re not using it. Earnings: $100–$400+/month in high-demand locations.
22. Sell digital products on Etsy
Printables, templates, planners, wedding stationery, and digital art consistently sell on Etsy. Make once, sell repeatedly. Etsy charges 6.5% transaction fees plus listing fees. Earnings: $50–$2,000+/month once the shop is established; first sales can take weeks.
23. Print-on-demand (Printful, Printify via Shopify)
Design t-shirts, mugs, posters, and other products; the platform prints and ships each order. No inventory, but margins are thin and marketing is essential. Earnings: $3–$15 profit per item; scalable if you can drive traffic through social media or paid ads.
24. Start a newsletter (Substack, Beehiiv)
Publish a paid newsletter to a niche audience. This is the 2026 update on traditional blogging, which is harder to monetize than it used to be; newsletters directly capture subscriber revenue. It could take 6–12 months of consistent publishing to build meaningful subscriber income. Earnings: $5–$10/month per paid subscriber; a niche with 500 paid subscribers at $8/month earns $4,000/month.
25. Creator platforms (Patreon, Ko-fi, Foap)
Monetize existing creative work (photography, writing, art, music) through fan-support platforms. Patreon and Ko-fi take memberships and tips; Foap pays for stock photos (around $5 per sale). Earnings: Wide range. Patreon creators at scale can earn $1,000+/month; Foap is more modest but additive.
For more remote-friendly options, see our guide on how to make money online.
The single highest-leverage move with side hustle income is to not spend it. About 28% of side hustlers already save some of their earnings (Bankrate); the rest largely spends it on discretionary purchases. If you’re going to put in the hours, route the money to something that compounds. A simple framework:
Build an emergency fund first. A good rule of thumb is building 3-6 months of expenses so you can handle any unexpected emergencies. For more, see our guide on building an emergency fund.
Pay down high-interest debt. Credit cards at 20%+ APR will outpace any investment return. Clear this before meaningful investing.
Invest the rest. See our breakdown of saving vs. investing for when each fits. For long-term goals, investing captures compound interest over time.
This is also what Acorns is built for. Four features fit side hustle income specifically:
Acorns Invest and Later can hold your side hustle income and put it to work in the background while you focus on earning more.
Auto-invest your side hustle income with Acorns.
The typical side hustler earns between $200 and $1,200 per month, with the wide range reflecting the split between casual gig work and skilled freelancing. Bankrate’s 2025 survey puts the average at $885/month and the median at $200/month; LendingTree’s survey puts the average at $1,215 and the median at $400. The gap between average and median means a smaller group of higher earners pulls the average up: casual gig work usually lands below the average, while skilled freelancing, AI-assisted services, and creator work can significantly exceed it.
Start by picking an idea that matches your existing skills, available time, and income goals. Then check platform requirements (some gig apps require a car, insurance, or background check), set up basic income and expense tracking for taxes, and start small. Most successful side hustlers begin with five to ten hours a week and scale once they know what’s sustainable. Reinvesting early earnings into savings or investments, rather than spending them, is what turns a side hustle from extra pocket money into real financial progress.
Yes. Any income from a side hustle is taxable. You’ll owe federal (and often state) income tax plus self-employment tax of 15.3% for Social Security and Medicare. If you expect to owe more than $1,000 in taxes on your side income, the IRS generally requires quarterly estimated tax payments. Platforms will send you a 1099-NEC if they paid you $600 or more during the year; report the income on Schedule C of your personal tax return. Track expenses throughout the year, since many are deductible.
For most side hustlers just starting out, an LLC isn’t necessary. You can operate as a sole proprietor and report income on Schedule C of your personal tax return. An LLC becomes worth considering once your side hustle grows enough that liability protection, separate business banking, or tax flexibility matters more than the $50–$500 state filing cost and ongoing paperwork. For activities with higher liability exposure (home services, childcare, anything involving other people’s property), an LLC may be worth setting up earlier. Consult a tax professional or the Small Business Administration for guidance specific to your situation.
Food and grocery delivery apps are a fine starting point but rarely a great long-term side hustle. Typical earnings after expenses (gas, vehicle wear, insurance, tax) run $12–$18/hour: below most skilled freelancing. They’re best for flexibility, low startup barrier, and immediate cash flow, not for maximizing hourly rate. Most side hustlers who stick with delivery work use it as a bridge to skill-based work with higher ceilings.
The single highest-leverage move with side hustle income is to not spend it — route it straight to savings and investing before it disappears into everyday spending. Only 28% of side hustlers currently save their earnings (Bankrate, 2025). For most people, the smart default is: build an emergency fund first, pay down any high-interest debt, and auto-invest the rest so the side income compounds into long-term wealth. Automating the split (through a tool like Acorns Smart Deposit) removes the willpower problem entirely.
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Earnings figures cited throughout this article (including average and median monthly side hustle income, hourly rates, platform-specific earnings, and all 25 ideas’ earnings ranges) are drawn from third-party sources current as of early 2026 and represent typical or average outcomes only. Individual results vary significantly based on skills, location, hours worked, market demand, seasonality, platform changes, and other factors. Platform names, rate structures, and availability are subject to change; verify current terms directly with any platform before signing up. Acorns has no affiliate or partnership relationship with the third-party platforms named in this article unless otherwise stated.
Data sources include: Bankrate 2025 Side Hustle Survey (bankrate.com/loans/small-business/side-hustles-survey/), LendingTree 2025 Side Hustle Income Survey, The Penny Hoarder’s February 2026 Side Hustle Statistics survey (thepennyhoarder.com/make-money/side-hustle-statistics/), and Zety gig economy research. Different surveys use different methodologies and sample criteria, which is why reported averages and medians vary across sources.
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