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Easy Side Hustles This Boujee Mom Does to Make an Extra $9,400+ a Year

Originally published December 17, 2021

So I might not be boujee, but I am a mom. And I’m a mom who always has a sideline going. When I was a pre-schooler I went door to door to sell my old books and toys. I picked apples off my neighbor’s apple tree to sell. I sold our mailman water from the hose. I’ve always had a hustle.

That’s how I discovered BST (Buy Sell Trade) on Facebook. On Facebook, you can find loads of BST groups themed around selling used clothing from popular designers and better brands. Kids’ brands are especially hot. And after my first purchase, I was hooked.

SOMETIMES BUYING USED AIN’T CHEAP

Buy Sell Trade sounds cheap. It’s used clothes, right? Except BST moms are paying $20+ for used joggers from Childhoods And $300+ for used bubble rompers from Kate Quinn (when they only sold for less than $30 brand new). I’ve even found used girls’ dresses selling for $3,000+.

So how does someone get the extra money coming in so they can afford the Buy Sell Trade rockstar lifestyle?

MAMA NEEDS A HUSTLE

BST has turned shopping for anything used or NWOT tags into a leisure-time activity if not bloodsport. And buying used has never been more expensive.

Luckily, my husband and I both work. And I have a number of side hustles going. Many of them are related to kids’ clothing

Here are some great side hustle ideas to make a few extra bucks. These are side hustles that I do to make extra money every year.

A lot of people are amazed at all the angles. I work to bring in extra money and they ask me how I do it. This. Is. How.

Related: 10 Hacks I Use to Get Free Clothes for My Kids.

11 SIDE HUSTLES FOR MOMS (THAT I’VE DONE)

These are 11 great side hustles that are mom-friendly. They’re real side hustles real moms can do – and possibly enjoy.

A lot of articles about creative ways to earn money online make me want to puke. I’m not renting out my home to strangers on Airbnb – that’s where I live with my family. And I’m equally uninterested in mowing lawns, shoveling snow, driving around strangers (even if my kids didn’t trash the car), or selling my crooked crafts on Etsy.

These are all mom side hustles that I’ve personally tried myself. You can do most of them in your bathrobe.

I’m listing 11 of the best sidelines that had in 2021, and how much I made with each of them over the year. Altogether, I made a little over $9,400.

1 | Sell Used Designer Clothes Online – $3,000

I’ve sold my kids’ old clothes in Facebook Buy Sell Trade groups and made over $3,000. I acquire their clothes cheaply (garage sales, Goodwill, Once Upon A Child). And I re-sell them cheaply: for around 60 cents on the dollar of the garment’s original value brand-new. I did a re-sale study and pulled in loads of data. See how much your kids’ old clothes are worth.

If you don’t overspend on clothes you plan to re-sell, this can be a very lucrative side hustle.

This means you’d need to find a lot of name-brand garments for a couple of dollars, or less, at a really cheap thrift store.

2 | Resell Kids’ Used Clothes to Once Upon A Child – $200

I’ve found that Gap, Gymboree, Carter’s, and Cat & Jack don’t always re-sell super well online. On re-sale sites like Mercari or Kidizen, you need to sell these brands in lots for it to be worth it for the buyer. (Why would you pay $5 in shipping for $2 pants?)

And in BST groups, there are times I can’t shed these labels even when I am offering them as free add-ons. (Which is more mortifying than anything. Is my taste that shitty?)

Once Upon A Child will buy these brands. And the consignment chain pays 15-cents on the dollar for whatever they will list the garments for.

I can go in with a brown Target bag full of kids’ clothes and make around $20 to $25 per drop-off. (Items that don’t get purchased, I just bring them in with my next drop-off. But on a different day. Unless it’s stained or really dated, eventually all the clothing gets bought.)

3 | Take Online Surveys from Your Phone – $2,000

I flipping love doing these online surveys so much. I can do them from my phone – or while I have a few minutes downtime before my next Zoom meeting. Most surveys pay around 40-cents to $4, but I have found several that pay $10 or more.

The catch? It’s not a full-time job – not by a long shot. And you have to qualify for and complete the survey in order to get paid. If you earn $2.74 a day with surveys, that’s an extra $2,000 a year.

I especially love doing these surveys from my phone when I’m winding down at the end of the day – and binge-watching Love It or List It on Hulu. There are a lot of legit survey sites, but the ones I primarily use to earn money are Swagbucks and InboxDollars. I usually cash out with PayPal, or with gift cards to Target or Amazon.

4 | Collect All the Free Signup Bonuses – $884

You can get free signup bonuses for trying lots of different products or services. I score most of my free bonuses through Swagbucks because I work there (it’s my day job), which means I know the company and I know they’re legit.

Some of the Best Signup Bonuses I’ve Collected

There are 100’s of other low-paying offers and micro-tasks I completed that pay 2-cents to $2. There were just too many to list. I made about $100 off all the smaller ones.

Here’s a screen grab of one of the cash bonus offers.

What’s the catch on this free money?

That’s a question my brainy financial-planner-wealth-management cousin asked me. Companies want new leads and new customers and will pay for it. They give reward programs a commission for the leads. These reward programs, like Swagbucks, will share a portion with you.

Companies like Varo know what a new customer or lead is worth. They how much they can afford to pay for it. And once they’ve got their “hooks” in, of course they’ll try to upsell you

Say they pay Swagbucks $200. In turn, Swagbucks may give you $120. Varo gets a new customer. Swagbucks get commission. You get paid. Win-win-win.

What else do I need to know about these signup bonuses?

For the really lucrative bank and finance offers, you may need to wait about 30 to 40 days for your account to be credited.

Additionally:

5 | Find Online Writing Gigs – $1,600

This one is pretty self-explanatory. I’ve found freelance writing gigs on Fiverr. It is crowded as hell to get started. There are 1000’s of US based writers who are charging only $10 for a quality article. You have to set your rates super low in order to compete and do a couple dozen assignments for $5 to $15 to build up your profile.

Professional writers with Madison Ave clients might make $5 or more per word. But it’s going to take years to get there – and a lot of charisma and natural talent.

Update: In December 2021 when I first wrote this article, I had made $1,600 that year from freelance writing gigs. It took a lot of non-paying gigs and $5 gigs to get there. But in February 2023, I got let go from my FT day job in content marketing and went FT as a freelance writer.

In my first three months at Henmar Creative, I billed over $50,000. Since then, I haven’t looked back. It’s all about connections. Write a quality article or post, show that it delivers value, and build from there.

Find Freelance Writer Gigs

6 | Use Ibotta, Tada, and Other Receipt Scanning Apps – $200

I use a bunch of different receipt scanning apps where you can get paid for your supermarket purchases. Generally, you’re getting paid for purchasing featured items (specific brand) or any-brand items, like any brand of chips or bread.

Specific-brand items have higher cashback rebates (like $0.50 to $10). Any-brand rebates are usually 2 cents to 20 cents. But it all adds up. You’ve already made the supermarket buys, just scan your receipt. There are dozens of good receipt apps, but only a few I regularly use.

Receipts Apps I Use

7 | Print Coupons – $70

I can get paid 1 cents for every 3 coupons I print, up to 20 cents per day, or $73 a year. I just have to print them. That’s all. Coupon distributors want eyeballs on their coupons. You can’t use the coupons unless you first physically have them in hand.

I print out coupons from Swagbucks, but you can also get paid for printing coupons from InboxDollars or MyPoints.

A sampling of grocery coupons you can get paid to print.

This is what I do when I’m in the office, so I’m using my employer’s ink and paper. Considering I changed the settings to black and white and printed out 4 sheets to 1 page (so the coupons aren’t ginormous), I feel like it’s not a big deal.

8 | Get Paid for Other People Using Your Coupons – $100

So this is tied into #7. I get paid for printing coupons, and then I earn 50 cents each time a coupon is redeemed. I’ve brought coupons to the store (mostly Target) and wound up not using them. But rather than toss them, I decided to leave them on the shelf next to the product for other customers.

I did this as a nice gesture, so I could help other people save money and not waste paper. Turns out, people love redeeming free coupons you leave behind. It’s like found money. It’s for products that they’re literally in the process of buying. And then the coupon is right there.

I don’t bring along extra coupons on most store trips. I forget. But I’ve made a little over $100 this past year for just sharing coupons at Target and Hy-Vee.

9 | Claim Cash on Purchase You’re Already Making – $1,000

This is one of my favorites. I love cash back shopping portals. I’ve made a little over $1,000 this past year in cash back rebates from online shopping I was already doing – at stores like Target, Macy’s, Home Depot, and Best Buy.

Here are a handful of the 10,000+ retailers offering cash back on Rakuten. You can visit the portal and click on the merchant link to get the rebates, or install the extension to your browser and automatically get the cash back.

Retailers like Macy’s and Home Depot want more customers. They pay shopping portals, like Rakuten or Swagbucks, to send them visitors. Loyalty sites like Rakuten will get a commission, and then share a cut of it with you.

Shopping Portals Are Way Better than Just Credit Rewards

USE RAKUTEN AND OTHER CASHBACK SHOPPING PORTALS

In Buy Sell Trade groups, it feels like Rakuten gets all the love. Rakuten is great; I use it and enjoy it. But I also use several other extensions too. In fact, I use 8 total.

Here you can see Rakuten offers 1% cash back, where Tada offers 3% and Swagbucks and Upromise offer 6%. It pays, literally, to have multiple shopping extensions and get the best deal.

They’re all free. Rakuten doesn’t always have the best cashback amount. And there are other shopping portals that feature merchants that Rakuten doesn’t have. I like lots of options. My loyalty goes to the highest bidder, and when there’s a tie I usually go with Upromise.

Here’s my Upromise earnings dashboard. Through Upromise I’ve saved $851.43 for my kids’ college in the past 11 months without changing any habits.

Here’s a dashboard showing my Rakuten earnings. This year, I’ve made $66.51.

Through Swagbucks, you can see I’ve earned $83.60 in cash back rebates this year.

Altogether, I’ve made $1,001.54 with cash back rebates. I buy EVERYTHING online – socks, toilet paper, clothes, and even groceries through services like Shipt and Instacart. Daily buys and larger ones (like getting 12% cash back on a swing set purchase, or 2% back for major kitchen appliances) all add up.

CASHBACK SHOPPING PORTALS TO USE

10 | Opening a 529 College Savings Plan for My Kids – $320

I finally bit the bullet and opened a college savings account. I had procrastinated for ages.

And once I did the research and found out what a 529 plan was, I was locked in analysis paralysis.

Which state 529 plan should I go with? I don’t have to stick with my home state of Minnesota. Maybe the Florida plan is nice? Or Michigan’s? Because funds in any plan can go to college in any state.

But finally I just did it. I opened a Minnesota plan because that’s where we live.

It took 2 minutes. I can always change plans later and transfer funds. The point was I just needed to start saving. I put $25 in each plan for both of my kids and then I got $25 for college for free from Upromise when I linked my 529 plan to the Upromise platform.

In a few minutes, you can get $30 for free for your child’s college savings plan.

HOW I GOT $320 FREE FOR THIS

  1. Upromise gave me $25 for free. It took roughly 8 minutes to link the account to Upromise – here’s a step-by-step guide of how to do it. Get Upromise now, and get an extra $5.29 bonus.
  2. For my kids’ birthdays, I asked the family for college savings plan contributions in lieu of gifts. The family still gave small gifts, but they also contributed cash. This has amounted to $275.
  3. For interest or returns on this $300, the college savings plans have made $20. (Twenty dollars and some odd cents.) That’s like a 6.67% ROI – now compare that to the 0.025% interest you’d get with funds in a savings account. That’s like $0.75 in interest vs the $20 I got with a college savings plan.

11 | Watch Online Videos – $50

While working my 9-5, I watch online video clips on InboxDollars or Swagbucks. Content is peppered with ads, but who cares. I like background noise. And I like tuning in to current events and celebrity news. I probably only make pennies per video set, but that turns into $1 a week roughly or $50 a year.

YouTube and TikTok don’t pay me anything to watch videos. And besides, I still (over)watch TikTok and YouTube too.

Here’s a look at the library of video content you can watch and earn rewards.

While I stick with a couple of reward sites for getting paid to watch videos, there are other ones you can try out to.

OTHER SIDE HUSTLE IDEAS TO MAKE MONEY

There are other remote side hustles you can check out, too, if you’re looking for different ways or more ways to make some extra income.

FINAL THOUGHTS ON THESE 11 SIDE HUSTLES

These are 11 different side hustles that I have going. I explain them to curious friends and family. They generally go from being eager to learn to being overwhelmed. With eyes glazed over. It just seems like a lot.

But surveys, signing up for free offers, watching videos, and claiming cash back are stupid easy. You can do them in your PJs while picking Cheerios out of your hair. And a glass of Pinot in hand. (Or in my case, Folger’s instant coffee in a cracked mug: I like to keep it classy.)

If you’ve got time to sit on a park bench or sit on the couch at night and watch TV, you can string together a few hours to answer surveys and watch videos. You’ll earn a few thousand extra dollars a year or more. You don’t need loads of spare time. Just a little bit of hustle and a lot of hustle juice.

Disclaimer: This post proudly contains my referral links and/or affiliate links, because I’m a mama who loves to hustle. Gotta keep that beer fridge stocked and afford that BST lifestyle. I don’t recommend anything that’s crap.

(Also nothing in this article should be construed as a personal recommendation or endorsement by my employer. My colorful opinions are mine alone.)

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