7 Writing Side Hustles That Pay My Rent As A Complete Beginner
The complete roadmap to earning your first paycheck as a beginner writer even if you’ve never written professionally before
I never thought I’d say this, but writing actually pays my rent now.
Trust me, I’m no Shakespeare — just someone who discovered these seven writing jobs that don’t need fancy degrees or years of experience.
By the way, I’m looking for a business partner to help grow my ghostwriting business.
If you’re great at talking to clients and closing deals, this could be a perfect match. You handle sales, I handle the writing.
Interested? Fill out this short form: Form
1. Writing Product Reviews ($20–50 per review)
Remember that time I bought those bright yellow running shoes that looked amazing online but felt like concrete blocks?
Well, now I get paid to write honest product reviews so others don’t make my mistakes.
What you’ll do:
Try products (sometimes they’re free!)
Write about what you liked and didn’t like
Take simple photos of the products
Share your real experience
Where to start:
Trustpilot (lets you build credibility first)
Capterra (for software reviews)
ProductTube (they send you products to review)
Pro tip: Companies love reviews that mention specific details. Instead of “great shoes,” write “These shoes helped me run 2 miles without any blisters.”
2. Writing Social Media Posts ($15–35 per post)
My cat’s Instagram has more followers than mine, but that didn’t stop me from making money writing social media posts for small businesses.
What to write:
Instagram captions
Facebook posts
Twitter/X threads
LinkedIn updates
Best places to find work:
Upwork (search “social media writer”)
Facebook groups for small business owners
Local business networking groups
Rookie mistake I made: Trying to sound too professional. Social media needs a personal touch. Write like you’re talking to a friend.
3. Writing Email Newsletters ($25–75 per email)
You know those emails you get from your favorite stores?
Someone gets paid to write those! And it could be you.
Types of emails needed:
Welcome messages
Sale announcements
Weekly updates
Thank you notes
Where to find clients:
Fiverr (start with small projects)
Indeed.com (search “email copywriter”)
Small business Facebook groups
My secret source: I keep a swipe file of emails that made me click or buy something. Great for inspiration!
4. Writing Blog Posts ($50–200 per post)
“But I’m not an expert!” Neither was I.
You just need to be good at research and explaining things simply.
Popular blog topics:
How-to guides
Product comparisons
Personal experiences
Beginner tips
Places to start:
ProBlogger job board
Contently
Medium Partner Program
True story: My first paid blog post was about house plants. I killed three succulents while researching it, but the client loved the honest advice!
I’ve had the most success on Medium lately — my views grew surprisingly fast using a specific posting strategy.
I made a Medium Growth Checklist of what worked for me if you’re interested in trying the platform.
5. Writing Website Content ($100–300 per page)
Small businesses need words for their websites.
You’d be amazed how many people hate writing their “About” page.
What you’ll write:
Homepage content
About pages
Service descriptions
Contact pages
Finding clients:
Reach out to local businesses
Join Chamber of Commerce meetings
Check website builder forums
My biggest win: A local bakery paid me in both cash and cookies for their website content. Win-win!
6. Writing Product Descriptions ($5–15 per description)
Online stores need someone to make their products sound good.
Even better — you usually get to write lots of them at once.
Types of descriptions:
Clothing items
Home goods
Tech gadgets
Food products
Where to look:
Amazon Seller forums
Etsy seller groups
Shopify job board
Fun fact: I once wrote 100 descriptions for dog toys. My vocabulary for “durable” and “squeaky” grew impressively that week.
7. Writing for Local Publications ($50–300 per article)
Local news websites and magazines often need writers.
The competition is usually lower than national publications too.
What they want:
Local event coverage
Business spotlights
Community news
Restaurant reviews
How to start:
Check your local newspaper’s website
Search for local lifestyle magazines
Contact community newsletters
Real talk: My first article about a local food truck festival got three facts wrong. The editor still hired me again because I met the deadline and captured the fun atmosphere.
Money Talk
Starting pay isn’t huge, but it adds up:
First month: $200–500
Third month: $800–1,500
Sixth month: $2,000–3,000
These numbers are from my experience. Yours might be different, but the point is — start small and grow.
Tips That Actually Work
Keep everything you write. Even rejected pieces can become samples.
Join writing groups on Facebook. The job leads are golden.
Make friends with other writers. They pass on work they’re too busy for.
Use Grammarly’s free version. It catches embarrassing mistakes.
Always ask for feedback. It helps you improve faster.
I spilled coffee on my laptop twice, missed some deadlines, and wrote some truly awful first drafts.
But guess what? My rent gets paid, and I actually enjoy what I do.
Remember: Everyone starts somewhere. Usually somewhere wobbly and uncertain. But if I can do this, you definitely can too.
Want to Grow Without Writing a Word?
I help founders, solopreneurs, and creators turn their ideas into content that drives authority, audience, and revenue — without spending hours writing.
My clients have:
✅ Hit 50K+ views/month on Medium
✅ Grown newsletters to 10K+ subscribers
✅ Attracted leads through high-converting LinkedIn content
You’ll get content that sounds like you — but sharper, clearer, and made to grow.
⏳ I only take 1–2 clients per month.
If you're serious about growth and tired of DIY content... now’s the time.
📩 Just reply to this email or reach out: contact.thehumanproject@gmail.com
Its seems that in no other time can creatives fund our lifestyles doing what we love. Finding that each person has a unique way to prosper. The cost: not knowing, being uncomfortable and trying stuff that hasn't been done before.
Cheers to the grand experiment and the life beyond my dreams!
Great article. I Will apply them in my journey too.