I tracked my hourly rate on 4 side hustles. Only one was worth it
Over three years I tried reselling thrifted furniture, freelance graphic design, a small print-on-demand shop, and tutoring. I tracked every hour against every dollar earned, and the results embarrassed me enough that I almost didn't publish them.
Furniture reselling looked profitable on paper — decent margins per item — until I counted the hours spent driving, cleaning, photographing, and messaging buyers who ghosted. Real hourly rate: about $6. The print-on-demand shop, which I was most excited about, made $340 in eighteen months against maybe ninety hours of setup and marketing. Effectively unpaid.
Tutoring, the one I almost didn't try because it felt too ordinary, cleared $34 an hour once I accounted for prep time, with zero inventory, zero shipping, and demand I could scale by simply raising my rate as I got booked further out.
The pattern across all four: hustles involving physical inventory hid their real hours in logistics I never counted until I forced myself to. Hustles selling my own time directly had brutally obvious hourly math from day one, which turned out to be an advantage, not a limitation — I could see clearly, immediately, whether it was worth continuing. I kept the boring one and quit the exciting ones, and my actual income went up.
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The inventory hustles hiding their real hours in logistics matches my own spreadsheet almost exactly.