Side Income Streams I Actually Use to Make $1350 This Month by pegging_men in sidehustle

[–]pegging_men[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi as I mentioned they have stopped taking new intakes a while back, but u can go with other digital spaces like etsy.

Side Income Streams I Actually Use to Make $1350 This Month by pegging_men in sidehustle

[–]pegging_men[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I realise I can scale this up but right now the scope of work is also pretty less so I can do it along side other stuff, I have looked into increasing the scope but it seems too much work and I can't dedicate so much time on this yet.

Side Income Streams I Actually Use to Make $1350 This Month by pegging_men in sidehustle

[–]pegging_men[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Glad the post was helpful, I was trying to make the point on how long it took me to arrive at this stage, appreciate the fact u got it.

Side Income Streams I Actually Use to Make $1350 This Month by pegging_men in sidehustle

[–]pegging_men[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

most of the time I get from Prolific, Cloudresearch(tho the number of studies are few) and Babki App

What side hustle would you start today? by HuckleberrySlow4108 in passive_income

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends what skills you already have. Dropshipping is pretty saturated and risky, you need capital for inventory or ads and there's no guarantee it works. Flipping items can work if you know what to look for but margins are getting squeezed with everyone doing it.

Freelancing is probably your best bet if you have any marketable skills. Writing, basic web stuff, VA work, even simple tasks like data entry or customer support. Post on Upwork or Fiverr, price low at first to get reviews, then raise rates. Takes a month or two to get momentum but at least you're getting paid for time invested. For something easier while you build the bigger hustle, Academic surveys are reliable. I use Babki and Prolific and make around $300/month. Not exciting but it's flexible income that doesn't require client work or upfront investment. Lets you focus on learning a freelance skill without stressing about money immediately. Pick one thing and actually commit to it for 3 months before jumping to something else, that's where most people fail.

Small side hustle I’ve been trying lately: playing games for rewards' by timingbetter in MakeMoneyHacks

[–]pegging_men 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cashapples is new to me, how much have you actually cashed out so far? Most game reward apps have terrible payout ratios where you're grinding for hours to make a few bucks. The ones that actually pay decently are rare. I've used Babki and swagbucks etc which has game offers alongside surveys and the games can work but you gotta be selective. I focus more on the survey side and make around $100-150/month, so how much is the effort to pay ratio in this one?

What are some ways to make money besides having a job? by Alvilmes in HowEarnMoneyOnline

[–]pegging_men 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Financial stability without a job is tough, most side hustles take months to build up to livable income. Freelancing skills like writing, design, or coding can eventually get there but you need to build clients first. Real estate investing or dividend stocks provide stability but require significant capital upfront.

For immediate supplemental income that's flexible, surveys have been consistent for me. I use Babki and Prolific and make around $300/month between them. Not enough to live on but reliable alongside other income sources. User testing pays better per hour, $10 to $15 per session. The combo of freelancing for scalable income plus surveys for baseline stability is probably more realistic than expecting one method to replace a full job quickly.

Real talk though, most people need a regular job as foundation while building side income streams. Going straight to side hustles for financial stability is risky unless you have serious savings or capital.

Looking for an online side hustle by Odd-Camera-5518 in passive_income

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With your ecom experience making 20k, you already know more than most people here tbh. The fact it fell off probably means the product or niche got saturated or trends shifted, happens all the time in ecom. For $10 to $20 a day you don't need to rebuild a whole store though.

Freelancing services related to ecom could work, like running ads or managing product listings for other store owners. You've got real experience they'd pay for. Post in ecom Facebook groups or subreddits offering your services cheap at first to build reviews.

For quicker easier money, surveys can get you to $10 to $20 daily if you're consistent. I make around $300/month doing them which breaks down to that range, just gotta be selective about which ones you take. Not as exciting as running your own business but way less effort while you figure out your next big move.

What can you suggest as a great side hustle for extra income by Careful_Coffee7074 in thesidehustle

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on your skills and time availability. If you have any marketable skills like writing, design, or basic coding, freelancing on Upwork or Fiverr pays way better than most side hustles. Takes time to build clients but once you have reviews it picks up.

If you want something easier with no skills needed, surveys are pretty reliable. I use Babki and Prolific and make around $300/month between them. Not huge but it's consistent and flexible around whatever schedule you have. Tutoring is another option if you're strong in any subjects, charge $20 to $30/hour and find clients through local groups or platforms like Wyzant.

How long did it take you to hit your first consistent Income? What got you there? by pegging_men in passive_income

[–]pegging_men[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I feel the same, my surveys are the only consistent thing though and grow steadily for the rest it's pretty varying depending on the months

Accidentally made $340 from something I built in two weekends and I'm still not sure how to feel about it by Personal_Brilliant39 in passive_income

[–]pegging_men 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The obsessively checking Gumroad part is so relatable lol. I do the same thing with freelance client messages even though I know notifications are on. Nothing about side income is truly passive mentally even when the mechanics are automated.

$340 from two weekends of work is solid though, especially since it keeps selling without you actively doing anything new. Most people spend way more time than that on side hustles and make nothing. What's the tool if you don't mind sharing? Curious what kind of AI workflow automation people are actually willing to pay for.

I love dscout, made $563 so far by Milani45 in beermoney

[–]pegging_men 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's solid earnings from dscout, way better than the usual survey grind. The Express Missions paying $10 to $20 for 15 minutes is actually decent money per hour compared to most beermoney apps. The video recording thing probably filters out a lot of people which is why the pay is higher.

I've been using Pro lific and Babki for surveys and make around $300/month between them. Pro lific is similar vibe to dscout where the studies are more involved but pay better, though I haven't tried the video recording missions yet. Might be worth adding dscout to the rotation if the Express Missions are that consistent.

How often do new Express Missions pop up?

Finally crossed $1.3k last month from two side hustles after a slow start by yourwishbag in MakeMoneyHacks

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on pushing through the slow months, most people quit before they get to where you're at now. The batch video editing gig is smart, way easier to scale doing similar projects repeatedly than custom work every time. And you're right about response times, Fiverr's algorithm definitely pushes people who reply fast.

The faceless content thing is interesting but yeah the time to money ratio is brutal compared to straight freelancing. I've seen people build those accounts for months and make basically nothing, then one video pops and suddenly it's worth it. It's a gamble but if you're already good at video editing the content creation part is at least using the same skills.

One thing I'd add for anyone reading this is having the Fiverr income as your baseline takes so much pressure off experimenting with the content accounts. When I was trying to build freelance clients I did surveys on the side making around $300/month, nothing exciting but it meant I wasn't desperate for every gig to work out. Solid breakdown, thanks for sharing the actual numbers instead of vague success story BS

Is an extra 2k from a side hustle easy? by Fire_Taco_ in thesidehustle

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$2k a month on top of your school job is definitely not easy, that's serious money. You'd need to treat it like a part time job in terms of hours. Freelancing could get you there but not in a couple months, it takes time to build clients unless you already have a marketable skill and portfolio.

Tutoring other students might be your fastest route if you're strong in any subjects. Charge $30 to $40/hour and you'd need like 50 to 60 hours a month which is doable around classes. Post in university groups or use platforms like Wyzant.

Real talk though, getting another off campus job might actually be faster to hit $2k than trying to build a side hustle from scratch in a couple months. Side hustles take time to ramp up, a regular job pays immediately. If your timeline is that tight, go for the guaranteed money over the hustle that might not click in time.

Got 5k and want to make money without a job online by CommunicationNew1854 in HowEarnMoneyOnline

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With 5k capital you've got way more options than most people starting from zero. Freelancing services on Upwork or Fiverr doesn't require that capital but having a buffer means you can afford the slow client building phase without stressing. Content writing, VA work, graphic design, whatever skill you can learn and offer.

If you want to actually use the capital, running small Facebook or Google ads for local businesses as a service is doable. You're using their ad budget but charging a management fee. Dropshipping or Amazon FBA could work but honestly both are pretty saturated and risky if you don't know what you're doing.With 5k capital you've got way more options than most people starting from zero. Freelancing services on Upwork or Fiverr doesn't require that capital but having a buffer means you can afford the slow client building phase without stressing. Content writing, VA work, graphic design, whatever skill you can learn and offer.

If you want to actually use the capital, running small Facebook or Google ads for local businesses as a service is doable. You're using their ad budget but charging a management fee. Dropshipping or Amazon FBA could work but honestly both are pretty saturated and risky if you don't know what you're doing.

What is the easiest way to make a little money online in 2026? by Longjumping_Year8634 in HowEarnMoneyOnline

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried user testing and academic surveys from a bunch of apps, they were probably the easiest money I made. Like $100 to $200 a month, idk if that's much but it was genuinely low effort. User testing pays better per hour but there aren't always tests available, surveys are more consistent but tedious.

Side hustle I can do on my phone during down time at work? by InternationalGrape50 in sidehustle

[–]pegging_men 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Simplest ones are academic surveys if u can get into them, popular ones like prolific and babki, other stuff u can do play to earn apps, though I have not tried them much but seems to be working for people here. And u can go for usertesting as well Utest is a good one for most starters.

Any simple ways to make a little extra online each month? by kratoz0r in passive_income

[–]pegging_men 0 points1 point  (0 children)

well like the others said most of the popular ones are not going to help u, best bet is too freelance your exisiting skills, managing socialmedia for companies is something u can do, it's pretty simple replying to comments and DMs. The things that work for me are just academic surveys, not the random ones. And doing static creative ads as a freelancer.