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Side Hustles for Seniors

Last updated: May 6, 2026

Bottom line: A side hustle can help some seniors add income, stay active, or use old job skills in a new way. Start small. Check taxes, Social Security rules, safety, and local rules before you spend money or sign up.

Where to start first

If you need money soon, do not start with a costly business idea. Start with low-cost work, local help, and benefit checks. You can also use our senior help tools to compare programs and next steps.

Your situation Best first step Why it helps
You need food, rent, or utility help now Call 2-1-1 and check local benefits first Side hustles take time. Local aid may be faster for urgent needs.
You have job skills from past work Try consulting, tutoring, bookkeeping, writing, or remote admin work You may earn more by using skills you already have.
You want simple local work Try pet sitting, light errands, house sitting, or local tasks These may need less technology and fewer start-up costs.
You have a car Compare delivery, rideshare, and local courier work Check fuel, repairs, and insurance before counting the pay.
You have limited energy or mobility Look at phone work, tutoring, selling online, or virtual assistant tasks These can be done from home and in shorter blocks of time.
You need job training first Ask your local library, American Job Center, or Area Agency on Aging Many communities offer no-cost classes and job-search help.

Contents

If you need emergency help

If you cannot wait for side hustle income, start with local help. Side work may take weeks to set up, and some apps hold your first payment. For local food, rent, utilities, and crisis help, call 2-1-1 or search your local 2-1-1 site.

  • Food: Apply for SNAP through the SNAP state directory. USDA also lists 1-800-221-5689 as the SNAP toll-free information number.
  • SSI: If you are 65 or older, blind, or have a disability and have limited income and resources, start at the SSI application page.
  • Produce coupons: The Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program helps low-income seniors buy fruits, vegetables, honey, and herbs where the program is offered.
  • Utilities: LIHEAP and weatherization help vary by state. USAGov explains how to get energy bill help.
  • Medicare costs: Your state may help pay Medicare Part A or Part B costs through Medicare Savings Programs.
  • Local senior services: The Eldercare Locator connects older adults and families to local aging services at 1-800-677-1116.

For more help with basic bills, see our guides to food programs, housing and rent help, utility bill help, and Medicare Savings Programs.

Why side hustles matter

Many older adults are working longer or looking for extra income. Pew Research Center found that about 19% of Americans age 65 and older were employed in 2023, nearly double the share from 1987, according to its report on older workers. This does not mean every senior should work. It means work is now a real part of retirement for many families.

Money pressure is one reason. The National Council on Aging says more than 27 million households with adults age 60 and older cannot afford basic living needs, based on its analysis of older adult finances. Rent, food, insurance, repairs, and health costs can all rise faster than a fixed income.

Social Security also changes each year. The Social Security Administration says the 2026 cost-of-living adjustment is 2.8%, based on the official 2026 COLA fact sheet. That increase helps, but it may not cover every household’s costs.

A side hustle can help fill a gap, but it is not risk-free. You may have taxes, app fees, gas, supplies, insurance, or slow weeks. The safest plan is to start small and keep good records.

Best side hustles for seniors

The best side hustle is not always the one with the highest advertised pay. The best fit is the one you can do safely, legally, and often enough to make it worth your time.

Consulting and professional services

What it is: You use past job skills to advise a business, nonprofit, or person. This may include bookkeeping, human resources, sales, writing, training, project help, or trade advice.

Why it can work: Many seniors have years of practical knowledge. A small business may need help for a few hours per week but not need a full-time worker.

How to start: Make a one-page list of what you can do, who you have helped before, and what result you can offer. Ask former coworkers, local businesses, churches, and nonprofits before paying for ads.

Possible pay: Rates vary a lot by field. Some consultants charge hourly. Others charge by project. Do not promise results you cannot control.

Reality check: It can take time to get the first client. You may need a simple contract, a business email, and clear limits on what is included.

Online tutoring and teaching

What it is: You teach a subject, language, music skill, test topic, or hobby by video call or in person.

Why it can work: Retired teachers, nurses, accountants, tradespeople, and bilingual adults may have skills people want to learn.

How to start: Choose one subject and one age group. Make a short profile that says what you teach, your experience, your schedule, and what a first lesson covers.

Possible pay: Many tutors charge by the hour. Platforms may set rates or take fees. Private tutoring may pay more, but you must handle scheduling and payment safely.

Reality check: Evening hours may be busiest. You may need a webcam, quiet space, and basic online safety skills.

Pet sitting and dog walking

What it is: You care for pets in your home, visit pets in their home, or walk dogs.

Why it can work: Pet owners often want a calm, reliable person. This work can also add movement and social contact.

How to start: Start with neighbors, friends, and local referrals. If you use an app, read the insurance and emergency rules before your first booking.

Possible pay: Pay depends on your area, pet needs, and whether the job is a walk, drop-in visit, overnight stay, or holiday booking.

Reality check: Some dogs pull hard, bite, or need medicine. Do not accept pets you cannot safely handle.

Rideshare, delivery, and local driving

What it is: You drive people, food, groceries, medicine, or packages.

Why it can work: The schedule can be flexible. Some seniors prefer short local trips or daytime delivery instead of late-night rides.

How to start: Check your car, insurance, fuel cost, phone plan, and local demand. Call your auto insurer before you accept app work.

Possible pay: Gross pay can look better than net pay. Subtract gas, maintenance, tires, parking, tolls, cleaning, and self-employment tax.

Reality check: Driving can be tiring. Bad weather, unfamiliar areas, and night driving can raise risk. Start with short daytime blocks.

Online selling

What it is: You sell used items, vintage goods, crafts, books, tools, clothing, or household items online or locally.

Why it can work: You may already own items you no longer need. That makes it a low-cost way to learn selling.

How to start: Start with five items from your home. Take clear photos, write honest descriptions, and check sold prices before listing.

Possible pay: Some sellers make occasional extra money. Others build a small store. Fees, shipping, returns, and slow sales can reduce profit.

Reality check: Do not buy inventory until you know what sells. Meet local buyers in safe public places when possible.

Home-based services

What it is: You offer a service from home or with your home, such as room rental, meal prep, sewing, repair help, child care, or companionship.

Why it can work: You may already have the space or skill. Some work can be done without commuting.

How to start: Check local rules first. Food, child care, rentals, and home services may need permits, inspections, or insurance.

Possible pay: Pay varies by service and local demand. Home-sharing income also depends on location, safety, cleaning, and local rules.

Reality check: Hosting strangers or clients in your home is a big decision. Think about privacy, insurance, mobility, and safety. Home safety repairs may also matter; our guide to home repair grants explains repair help that may reduce hazards.

Digital work from home

Many seniors can do online work with basic computer skills. Pew’s mobile research shows smartphone use among older adults has grown in recent years through its mobile fact sheet. Still, you do not need to learn every app. Pick one tool at a time.

Virtual assistant work

Common tasks: Email, scheduling, phone calls, forms, data entry, travel plans, research, invoices, and simple customer service.

Best fit: Seniors who are organized, patient, and good with details.

Reality check: Remote work scams are common. A real client should not ask you to pay money to get paid.

Freelance writing and editing

Common tasks: Articles, newsletters, product descriptions, resumes, church bulletins, local business pages, and proofreading.

Best fit: Seniors who write clearly and can meet deadlines.

Reality check: Build a small sample first. Avoid jobs that ask for long unpaid samples.

Phone-based work

Common tasks: Customer support, appointment setting, reminder calls, survey calls, and nonprofit outreach.

Best fit: Seniors with a quiet room, clear voice, and patience.

Reality check: Ask if you are an employee or contractor. Ask how training is paid.

Online learning before online work

Skills such as email, video calls, safe passwords, spreadsheets, and file sharing can open better options. Our guide to free senior education lists learning options, and senior scholarships may help if you want a longer course.

Compare side hustle options

Use this table before you sign up. The pay ranges below are broad estimates. Your real net pay depends on your city, hours, costs, fees, taxes, skill level, and health.

Side hustle Good for Start-up cost Main risk Best first move
Consulting Past career skills Low Hard to find clients Ask former contacts
Tutoring Teaching or subject skill Low to medium Schedule changes Offer one subject
Pet sitting Animal lovers Low Injury or pet emergency Start with referrals
Delivery Drivers wanting flexible hours Medium Car costs Track mileage and fuel
Online selling People with items to sell Low at first Fees, shipping, returns Sell items you own
Virtual assistant Organized computer users Low Scams and low rates Build a simple profile
Home services Handy or home-based workers Varies Permits and liability Check local rules

Popular platform types

Platforms can help you find customers, but they also set rules and may charge fees. Read each platform’s current terms before you join.

Platform type Examples What to check first
Freelance services Upwork, Fiverr Fees, payment timing, client dispute rules
Pet care Rover, Wag Insurance, background checks, pet emergency rules
Online selling eBay, Etsy, Facebook Marketplace Seller fees, returns, shipping, payment holds
Local tasks Taskrabbit, Thumbtack Lead fees, safety, tools, local licensing
Home sharing Airbnb, Vrbo Local laws, taxes, insurance, cleaning costs
Learning and tutoring Wyzant, Preply Platform fees, lesson rules, cancellation terms

Taxes, Social Security, and Medicare

Side hustle income can affect taxes and sometimes benefits. Do not wait until tax season to think about this. The IRS says gig income is taxable, even if it is part-time, temporary, paid in cash, or not reported on a 1099 form.

Tax rules to know

  • Report income: Keep records of all payments, including cash, checks, apps, tips, and platform deposits.
  • Self-employment tax: The IRS says you usually must pay self-employment tax if you have $400 or more in net self-employment earnings. The self-employment tax page explains the Social Security and Medicare part of the tax.
  • Estimated taxes: The 2026 IRS Form 1040-ES instructions say estimated tax may apply if you expect to owe at least $1,000 after withholding and refundable credits. See the 2026 estimated tax instructions.
  • Expenses: Keep receipts for supplies, mileage, platform fees, home office costs, phone costs used for work, and training. Ask a tax professional what you can deduct.

If your income is low, some tax credits or public benefits may still help. Our poverty level calculator can help you compare income to common program guidelines, but official agencies make final decisions.

Social Security earnings limits

If you are under full retirement age for the whole year, Social Security may withhold benefits if your work earnings go above the yearly limit. For 2026, the limit is $24,480, and Social Security withholds $1 for every $2 earned above that amount. In the year you reach full retirement age, a higher limit applies before the month you reach full retirement age. The official earnings test table lists the current amounts.

After full retirement age, Social Security does not reduce retirement benefits because of work earnings. This rule can be confusing, so our guide to the early retirement penalty explains the timing in plain English.

Medicare premium issues

More income can sometimes raise Medicare premiums for higher-income people through income-related monthly adjustment amounts. CMS posts the annual Medicare premium and deductible details in its 2026 Medicare fact sheet. If your income is limited, check Medicare Savings Programs and Extra Help before you assume you must pay the full cost.

Issue What to do Why it matters
Taxes Save part of each payment Contractor taxes are not always withheld.
Social Security Know your full retirement age Earnings limits apply before full retirement age.
Medicare Watch total yearly income Higher income can raise premiums for some people.
Benefits Report changes when required SNAP, SSI, Medicaid, housing aid, and other programs have income rules.
Records Track income and expenses weekly Good records reduce tax mistakes and stress.

Training and local job help

You do not have to figure everything out alone. Free or low-cost help may be close by.

  • SCSEP: The Senior Community Service Employment Program is a work-based training program for low-income, unemployed older adults. It is not a side hustle app, but it can help if you need job training and paid community service experience.
  • Older worker finder: CareerOneStop has an older worker finder for local employment services.
  • Senior Planet: Senior Planet offers classes and programs for older adults, including technology topics.
  • GCFGlobal: GCFGlobal classes cover computer basics, email, Microsoft Office, and everyday tech skills.
  • SCORE: SCORE mentors can help with small business questions.
  • SBA: The Small Business Administration has local business help through district offices and partners.

If basic costs are blocking you from training, review our guide to unclaimed senior benefits. Many programs vary by state, and some people miss help because they never apply.

Safety and scam prevention

Job scams often target people who need fast income. The Federal Trade Commission warns that fake job offers may include fake checks, overpayment tricks, and requests for personal or bank information. Read the FTC guide on job scams before you accept remote work from a stranger.

Red flags

  • A company asks you to pay a fee before you can work.
  • A client sends too much money and asks you to send back the extra.
  • Someone wants gift cards, crypto, wire transfers, or payment apps to fix a job issue.
  • The job promises high pay for very easy work.
  • The person will not use a real business email, contract, or platform system.
  • You are asked for your Social Security number before you know the company is real.

Safety tips by type of work

Work type Main safety step What to avoid
Driving Work in daylight at first Unsafe areas, unsafe weather, or rides that feel wrong
Pet care Meet the pet first Large or aggressive pets you cannot control
Online selling Use safe payment methods Shipping before payment clears
Home services Tell someone your schedule Being alone with a new client without a safety plan
Remote work Verify the company Checks, gift cards, crypto, or equipment-buying scams

If you have been targeted, report it through the FTC’s fraud report site. If a bank account, Social Security number, or Medicare number was shared, call the bank or agency right away.

Special resources

Some seniors need extra support because of disability, veteran status, rural location, discrimination, or limited local services. These groups may help.

Veteran seniors

Veterans may qualify for employment, training, health, or business help. Start with VA employment help if you need veteran-specific services. Veterans who want to start a small business can also ask SCORE or the SBA about mentoring.

Seniors with disabilities

If you receive Social Security disability benefits and want to work, the SSA Ticket to Work program can connect eligible people with employment service providers. Rules can be complex, so ask how work may affect SSI, SSDI, Medicaid, or Medicare before you start.

LGBTQ+ seniors

LGBTQ+ older adults may want job help that is safe and respectful. SAGE offers advocacy and support for LGBTQ+ elders.

Tribal and Native seniors

The National Indian Council on Aging shares resources for American Indian and Alaska Native elders. Local tribal programs may also know about cultural work, training, transportation, and elder services.

Rural seniors

Rural seniors may face fewer local clients, slower internet, or long drives. USDA Rural Development lists rural programs that may help communities with housing, business, utilities, and local development.

If housing is the main problem, a side hustle may not be enough. Review income-based apartments and other local housing options before taking on risky work.

How to start without wasting time

Use a simple plan. Do not spend hundreds of dollars on courses, equipment, ads, or inventory before you test the idea.

  1. Pick one goal: Decide if you need $100 a month, $500 a month, social contact, or a future part-time job.
  2. Pick one idea: Choose something that fits your body, schedule, skills, and transportation.
  3. Check rules: Ask about taxes, licenses, insurance, and benefit reporting.
  4. Test for 30 days: Try a small version. Track hours, income, and costs.
  5. Review net pay: Subtract fees, supplies, gas, and taxes. Keep only what is worth your time.
  6. Build slowly: Add more hours or a second option only after the first one works.

Information checklist

  • Government photo ID
  • Social Security number or tax ID for tax forms
  • Bank account for deposits
  • Email address you check often
  • Smartphone or computer, if needed
  • Proof of car insurance, if driving
  • Business license or permit, if local law requires it
  • Notebook or spreadsheet for income and expenses
  • Contact person for safety check-ins

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Counting gross pay as take-home pay
  • Ignoring taxes until April
  • Taking unsafe clients because you need fast cash
  • Buying inventory before you know what sells
  • Using personal money apps with strangers without safeguards
  • Forgetting to report income to programs that require updates
  • Working so many hours that health gets worse

If a side hustle is not enough, do a full benefits check. Our benefit finder guide can help you think through common aid categories without assuming you will qualify.

Backup options when side work is not enough

Extra income is only one tool. You may also need lower bills, benefits, or safer housing. Check senior income guidelines when programs ask for income limits. Homeowners may also review property tax relief. If high energy bills are the problem, energy efficiency help may reduce costs over time. If medical costs are part of the issue, our guide to Medicaid for seniors may help you understand another path.

Charities may also help with short-term needs, supplies, transportation, or local referrals. See our guide to charities helping seniors before you borrow money or take unsafe work.

Phone scripts you can use

Use these short scripts when you call for help. Write down the date, the name of the person you spoke with, and the next step.

Calling 2-1-1 for urgent help

Script: Hello, I am a senior and I need help with basic bills while I look for safe extra income. Can you tell me what food, rent, utility, transportation, or local senior programs are open in my ZIP code?

Calling an insurance agent before driving work

Script: I am thinking about delivery or rideshare work. Does my current auto policy cover that? If not, what coverage would I need, and what would it cost?

Calling an Area Agency on Aging

Script: I am looking for safe part-time work, job training, or computer classes for older adults. Do you have programs, referrals, or benefits counselors who can help me?

Calling Social Security

Script: I receive Social Security and may start part-time self-employment. I want to understand whether I must report earnings and whether the earnings test applies to me. What should I do before I start?

Resumen en espanol

Un trabajo extra puede ayudar a algunas personas mayores, pero no debe poner en riesgo su salud, sus beneficios, su carro, su vivienda o su seguridad. Empiece con una opcion pequena y de bajo costo.

Si necesita ayuda urgente con comida, renta, luz, gas, Medicare u otros gastos basicos, llame al 2-1-1 o a su agencia local para personas mayores antes de esperar ingresos de una aplicacion. Tambien puede revisar programas de comida, vivienda, servicios publicos y Medicare.

Antes de aceptar trabajo por aplicacion, pregunte por impuestos, seguro, gastos, reglas locales y pagos. El ingreso de trabajo independiente puede ser tributable. Si recibe Seguro Social antes de la edad plena de jubilacion, pregunte si el limite de ingresos le afecta.

Tenga cuidado con estafas. No pague dinero para conseguir trabajo. No mande tarjetas de regalo, criptomonedas ni dinero a un supuesto empleador. Si algo se siente mal, pare y pida ayuda.

FAQ

What is the safest side hustle for seniors?

The safest choice depends on your health, skills, location, and comfort level. Low-cost options like tutoring, pet visits, local errands, phone work, and selling items you already own may be safer than jobs that need a lot of driving, lifting, or start-up money.

Can I do side work while on Social Security?

Yes, many people do. If you are under full retirement age, the Social Security earnings test may reduce benefits when work earnings go above the yearly limit. After full retirement age, Social Security retirement benefits are not reduced because of work earnings.

Do I have to pay taxes on gig work?

Usually, yes. The IRS says gig income is taxable even if it is part-time, temporary, paid in cash, or not reported on a 1099 form. Keep records and ask a tax professional if you are unsure.

How much money can seniors make from side hustles?

It varies. Some seniors make a small amount now and then. Others build steady monthly income. Net income is what matters after fees, taxes, gas, supplies, insurance, and other costs.

Should I pay for training before starting?

Be careful. Many free or low-cost classes are available through libraries, Senior Planet, American Job Centers, SCORE, and local nonprofits. Do not pay for a course that promises fast income.

Can side hustle income affect SNAP, SSI, Medicaid, or housing help?

It can. Many programs have income and reporting rules. Ask the agency that handles your benefit before you start earning, and report changes when required.

What should I do if a job offer feels like a scam?

Stop contact, do not send money, and do not share personal information. Report the offer to the FTC and the platform where you found it. Call your bank right away if you shared account details.

Resources

These resources can help you check rules, find training, and avoid scams.

Official benefit and job resources

  • Social Security for retirement, SSI, Medicare, and work reporting.
  • IRS gig taxes for recordkeeping, estimated taxes, and filing.
  • DOL older workers for SCSEP and job training.
  • Eldercare Locator for local aging services.
  • BenefitsCheckUp for a benefits screening tool from NCOA.

Training and business help

  • Senior Planet for older adult technology classes.
  • SCORE for free business mentoring.
  • Small Business Administration for small business tools and local help.
  • GCFGlobal for free computer lessons.

Safety and consumer protection

About this guide

We check this guide against official government, local agency, and trusted nonprofit sources. GrantsForSeniors.org is independent and is not a government agency.

Program rules, funding, and eligibility can change. Always confirm details with the official program before you apply.

See something wrong or outdated? Email info@grantsforseniors.org.

Editorial note: This guide is produced based on our Editorial Standards using official and other high-trust sources. It is regularly updated and monitored, but it is not affiliated with any government agency and is not a substitute for official agency guidance. Individual eligibility outcomes and income results cannot be guaranteed.

Verification: Last verified May 6, 2026. Next review September 6, 2026.

Corrections: Please note that despite our careful verification process, errors may still occur. Email info@grantsforseniors.org with corrections and we will respond within 72 hours.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal, financial, medical, tax, disability-rights, immigration, or government-agency advice. Program rules, platform policies, pay, fees, and availability can change. Readers should confirm current details directly with the official program, platform, or agency before acting.

About the Authors

Analic Mata-Murray
Analic Mata-Murray

Managing Editor

Analic Mata-Murray holds a Communications degree with a focus on Journalism and Advertising from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. With over 11 years of experience as a volunteer translator for The Salvation Army, she has helped Spanish-speaking communities access critical resources and navigate poverty alleviation programs.

As Managing Editor at Grants for Seniors, Analic oversees all content to ensure accuracy and accessibility. Her bilingual expertise allows her to create and review content in both English and Spanish, specializing in community resources, housing assistance, and emergency aid programs.

Yolanda Taylor
Yolanda Taylor, BA Psychology

Senior Healthcare Editor

Yolanda Taylor is a Senior Healthcare Editor with over six years of clinical experience as a medical assistant in diverse healthcare settings, including OB/GYN, family medicine, and specialty clinics. She is currently pursuing her Bachelor's degree in Psychology at California State University, Sacramento.

At Grants for Seniors, Yolanda oversees healthcare-related content, ensuring medical accuracy and accessibility. Her clinical background allows her to translate complex medical terminology into clear guidance for seniors navigating Medicare, Medicaid, and dental care options. She is bilingual in Spanish and English and holds Lay Counselor certification and CPR/BLS certification.