Best Side Hustles for Musicians (2026)
Discover the best side hustles for musicians that actually make money. From freelancing to online courses, find proven ways to build income on your schedule.
Your Work Already Has Value - Stop Giving It Away
The hardest part about being a musician? Realizing that your art, your designs, your words are worth real money.
You don't need a million followers. You don't need to "make it big." You just need to find the people who will pay for what you create.
Side Hustles That Work for Musicians
⚡ Quick Win - Start This Week
Private Music Lessons
Teach your instrument online or in-person. Charge $30-80/hour depending on your experience and location.
Session Musician Work
Record tracks for other artists remotely. Rates run $100-500 per song depending on instrument and complexity.
Royalty-Free Music Licensing
Upload tracks to Epidemic Sound, AudioJungle, or Pond5. Earn passive royalties when creators use your music.
Sidekick can help you track which tracks perform best and optimize your upload strategy.
YouTube Music Covers
Cover popular songs and monetize through YouTube ads and Patreon. Channels with 50K+ subs make $500-3,000/month.
The Secret Musicians Need to Know
You will undercharge at first. Everyone does. That's fine for client #1 and #2. But after 5 projects, double your rate.
The clients who pay more respect your time more. They're easier to work with. They refer better clients. It's counterintuitive but true.
Getting Your First Paying Client This Month
This weekend: Pick your best 3-5 pieces of work. Post them somewhere (Instagram, Behance, a simple portfolio site). Write one sentence about what you do.
Week 1: Message 10 businesses or people who might need your work. Don't pitch. Just ask if they're working on any projects where they'd need a musician.
Week 2: Follow up with the 2-3 who respond. Send a simple proposal (what you'll deliver, how much, when). Use Sidekick to automate follow-up reminders.
Week 3-4: Deliver the work. Get paid. Get a testimonial. Repeat.
Mistakes That Kill Creative Side Hustles
Waiting to feel "ready." You're ready now. Your portfolio doesn't need to be perfect. Ship what you have.
Charging by the hour. Charge by the project or value. A logo that takes you 3 hours isn't worth $150. It's worth $1,500 if it makes the client look legit.
Saying yes to everyone. Bad clients drain your energy and creativity. It's okay to say no.
What Musicians Can Actually Make
First 90 days: $500-2,500/month (building portfolio, landing first clients)
6 months: $2,000-8,000/month (steady work, referrals kicking in)
12 months: $4,000-15,000+/month (if you raised rates and didn't quit)
Tools You Actually Need
For selling digital products (templates, fonts, designs), Whop is a marketplace with buyers already there.
If you're creating content or courses, Teachable handles the tech so you can focus on teaching.
For newsletters (share your process, build an audience), beehiiv makes monetization easy once you hit 500+ subscribers.
Sidekick automates the boring stuff (scheduling, invoicing, client updates) so you can stay in your creative zone.
Find Your Income Style First
Not every creative should freelance. Some should sell products. Some should build audiences. Take our 2-minute quiz to figure out which path fits you.
Then pick the side hustle above that matches. That's how you avoid burning out in month two.
The Real Talk
Being a musician means you create value out of thin air. That's a superpower. Stop undervaluing it.
You don't need permission. You don't need more training. You need to start charging for your work.
Take the quiz. Pick a hustle. Make your first $100 this week.