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What are some suitable remote side hustles for teenagers/high school students?

For teenagers that desire to work from home, what side hustles would you recommend getting into as a high school student?

Things that pay would be great to encourage financial planning before college, however other unpaid opportunities would be great additions to a CV and or resume.


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Tieng’s Answer

Creative and Digital Gigs

If you love design or video, your skills are in high demand. Many small businesses look for help in these areas.

Short-Form Video Editor: Creators and businesses often need to turn long videos into TikToks, Reels, or Shorts. You can use free tools like CapCut or DaVinci Resolve to help them.

Social Media Management: If you're good at using TikTok or Instagram, you can manage social media for local shops. This includes scheduling posts, replying to comments, and creating simple graphics with Canva.

UGC (User-Generated Content) Creator: Brands pay for videos of people using their products. You just need a phone and a nice background, not a big following.

Academic and Professional Services

These jobs use the skills you already practice in school.

Online Peer Tutoring: Sites like Tutorpeers let high schoolers tutor younger students. You can also offer your services to parents in local Facebook groups for subjects like Math, Science, or English.

Data Entry or Transcription: This involves typing information into spreadsheets or turning audio into text. It's simple but requires accuracy and focus.

Micro-tasking: Websites like Swagbucks or Freecash pay for small tasks like surveys, testing apps, or watching videos. The pay is lower, but no experience is needed.

E-Commerce and Reselling

This is perfect if you love finding deals or have a creative hobby.

Depop or eBay Reselling: Buy vintage or brand-name clothes from thrift stores and sell them online for a profit. You'll learn about marketing, photography, and shipping.

Print-on-Demand (POD): Use sites like Redbubble or Printful to upload your designs. They take care of printing and shipping, and you earn a commission.

Digital Products: Create and sell digital planners, study guides, or Twitch overlays on Etsy. Since they're digital, you make them once and sell them over and over.
Thank you comment icon Thank you for responding to my question, this was extremely helpful! You have given me a great list of opportunities, and amazing descriptions and I am greatly excited to put your advice to great use. Farida
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Divyanshu’s Answer

1) Start a YouTube channel for learning content — Paid potential (with guardian)
What you do: Make educational videos (study tips, explainer lessons, Arabic/English learning, etc.).
Skills you build: Public speaking, scripting, video editing, branding, consistency.
Beginner-friendly? Yes—start simple (slides + voiceover).
Time/week: ~3–8 hours (1 video/week is realistic).
Age/legal notes: YouTube allows a parent/guardian to sign up and receive payments for under-18 creators.

2) Volunteer online tutor (Schoolhouse.world) — Unpaid
What you do: Tutor other students in subjects you’re strong in (math, science, English etc.) via monitored sessions.
Skills you build: Teaching, communication, leadership, lesson planning.
Beginner-friendly? Yes—great first “work-like” experience.
Time/week: ~2–5 hours (you choose sessions).
Safety/age notes: Tutors must be 13+ and sessions have safety policies/recording.

3) Translate educational content (Khan Academy Translators) — Unpaid
What you do: Help translate Khan Academy lessons/subtitles/articles into Arabic (or improve existing translations).
Skills you build: Translation, writing quality, attention to detail, subject mastery.
Beginner-friendly? Yes—if you’re fluent and willing to learn the workflow.
Time/week: ~2–6 hours.

4) Citizen science / research helper (Zooniverse) — Unpaid
What you do: Contribute to real research projects by classifying images/data (astronomy, climate, nature, history, etc.).
Skills you build: Scientific thinking, data accuracy, consistency, research exposure.
Beginner-friendly? Yes—many projects have simple tutorials.
Time/week: ~1–4 hours.
Safety/age notes: Zooniverse states there’s no minimum age, but under-16s should be supervised on message boards / account setup.

5) Edit Wikipedia (with strong privacy habits) — Unpaid
What you do: Improve articles: fix Arabic/English phrasing, add citations, create topic summaries, update facts (using reliable sources).
Skills you build: Research, source evaluation, clear writing, digital literacy.
Beginner-friendly? Yes—start with small edits and citations.
Time/week: ~1–3 hours.
Safety/age notes: Wikipedia has guidance emphasizing privacy for younger editors and safe practices (don’t share personal details).

6) Virtual “job simulation” programs (Forage) — Unpaid
What you do: Complete short, self-paced virtual work simulations designed by companies (business, data, software, marketing, etc.).
Skills you build: Practical workplace tasks, career exploration, CV bullet points.
Beginner-friendly? Yes—meant to be entry-level and guided.
Time/week: ~1–3 hours (or do a full program in a weekend).

Safety checklist:
Never share your home address, school, phone number, or exact daily schedule publicly.
If you’re tutoring or interacting live: use recorded/moderated platforms when possible, and keep communication on-platform.
For anything involving money, contracts, or payouts, involve a parent/guardian.
Thank you comment icon Thank you for your response, I am extremely thankful and appreciate it! Your answer is spot on, and I appreciate the opportunities and advice that you have provided, I have found your response extremely insightful. Farida
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S’s Answer

For high school students interested in remote work, the best side hustles are those that build transferable skills, allow flexible hours, and can grow with experience. Ideally, they should balance paid work (to learn financial responsibility) and unpaid or low-paid opportunities that strengthen a future resume.

Here are several strong options:


1. Content Creation & Digital Media (Paid or Portfolio-Based)

Many teenagers already have natural skills in this area.

Examples:

• Writing blog posts, captions, or short articles

• Creating short-form videos (TikTok, Reels, YouTube Shorts)

• Basic graphic design using Canva

• Managing social media pages for small businesses, clubs, or nonprofits

Even small freelance projects help students learn branding, communication, and consistency. Unpaid work for a school club or local organization can still be valuable if it results in a clear portfolio.


2. Virtual Assistant or Online Support Roles

These roles teach professionalism and organization.

Tasks may include:

• Email sorting and scheduling

• Data entry or research

• Managing simple spreadsheets

• Assisting small business owners or content creators

This type of work builds reliability, attention to detail, and communication skills—qualities valued in any future career.

3. Online Tutoring or Academic Support

Students who are strong in certain subjects can tutor peers or younger students remotely.

Options include:

• Homework help

• Language practice

• Test preparation (middle school level, SAT basics, etc.)

This builds leadership, patience, and teaching skills, and looks excellent on college applications.


4. Internships (Paid or Unpaid, Remote)

Remote internships—especially with startups, nonprofits, or community organizations—are extremely valuable.

Areas to explore:

• Marketing or communications

• Research assistance

• Nonprofit operations

• Technology or product support

Even a few hours a week helps students understand how real organizations operate and clarifies future career interests.


5. Freelance Skills Development

Students can begin learning skills that scale over time, such as:

• Basic coding or web design

• Video editing

• Podcast editing

• SEO basics

• AI tools for productivity or content generation

Early exposure builds confidence and long-term earning potential.


6. Unpaid Opportunities That Strengthen a Resume

Not all work needs to be paid to be valuable. Examples include:

• Running a blog, newsletter, or YouTube channel

• Volunteering remotely for nonprofits

• Helping teachers or community leaders with digital projects

• Participating in online research or student ambassador programs

These experiences demonstrate initiative, curiosity, and responsibility.

Final Advice

For teenagers, the goal isn’t just income—it’s learning how to work independently, manage time, communicate professionally, and explore interests. Remote side hustles that encourage these skills can provide a strong foundation for college, internships, and future careers.

Starting small, experimenting, and building gradually is far more important than finding the “perfect” job right away.
Thank you comment icon Thank you very much for your assistance, I greatly appreciate your time and effort! This is exactly what I wanted formatted in bullet points, and lengthy filled with tons of opportunities and ideas. I will definitely be using this list. Farida
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Kerri’s Answer

Don't just look for a 'job'; look to solve a problem. If you find a problem people are willing to pay to fix, you've found a business. Start small, gather feedback, and iterate.


Digital Mentoring & Online Tutoring
Beyond just "helping with homework," find a niche. Are you great at SAT prep, coding, or a specific instrument?

Don’t just trade time for money. Use platforms like Wyzant or Tutor.com to start, but eventually, record "Mini-Masterclasses" you can sell as a digital download so you earn money while you sleep.

Trend-Based E-Commerce (Crafts & Digital Goods)
Find the intersection of "High Demand" and "Low Competition." Look at TikTok or Pinterest trends to see what people are buying.

If physical crafts are too expensive to start, try Digital Downloads (planners, resume templates, or art prints) on Etsy. There is zero shipping cost and you only have to make the product once.

Community-Based Tech Support
If you are the "IT person" for your family, turn that into a local business. Start with basic troubleshooting, software installs, or home Wi-Fi optimization.

Create a simple flyer with a QR code that links to your booking page. Professionalism (even on a small scale) allows you to charge a premium over "the kid next door."
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Vicky’s Answer

Adding on the responses that you’ve already received. Don’t forget to check with your school, the student career center can be a very important tool.
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