Summer is almost here! Thank goodness!! For many of us, that means life slows just a little — especially if we're dealing with kids in school and a regular Monday through Friday hustle and bustle.
I can't speak for everyone, but I am certainly looking forward to life slowing down a bit. And (like many of you) I'm already thinking of ways I can turn that time into cash for myself and my family.
If you are finding yourself with a little extra time on your hands this summer and (like me), want to use that time as a way to earn extra, keep reading.
Today, I've come up with a list of ten different ways you could realistically earn some extra money this summer (these are inspired by Redditor suggestions).
1. Clothing Photography for Resellers
One commenter on Reddit put it plainly: they run a large reselling operation and are always looking for people who can photograph clothing items on a per-piece basis. You only need a smartphone and good lighting and natural light from a window works fine to start.
This is a real service gap that most resellers struggle with because photographing inventory is time-consuming and they would rather be sourcing.
To find clients, search your local Facebook groups for resellers or post in groups like “eBay sellers” or “Poshmark sellers” in your area offering your services.
You can charge anywhere from $1 to $3 per item depending on your market and turnaround time. If a reseller has 200 items sitting unlisted because they hate photographing, that is a $200-$400 job for you that could take a day or two.
No portfolio needed to start! Just offer to do a small batch of 10 items for free or at a discount to get your first testimonial (and hopefully repeat customer), then raise your rate.
2. Officiating or Scoring Youth and Amateur Sports
This one surprises people. One Reddit commenter officiates volleyball, basketball, baseball, and softball across the seasons and also scores hockey games with none of it overlapping because each sport has its own season.
This person noted that as long as you know the sport and can communicate well, most recreational leagues will train you.
Pay varies by sport and level but refereeing youth basketball or softball typically pays $25 to $75 per game depending on your area and experience level. Hockey score-keeping tends to pay less but requires almost no physical effort.
The seasonal nature of it means you are never overwhelmed, and it complements almost any other schedule because games are mostly evenings and weekends.
To get started, contact your local parks and recreation department, search for recreational sports leagues in your area on SportsSignup or similar platforms, or look for referee associations in your sport of choice.
USA Volleyball, USA Basketball, and similar governing bodies all have officiating certification programs if you want to go more serious with it.
3. Pet Waste Removal via Nextdoor
This sounds unglamorous and that is exactly why almost nobody is doing it in most neighborhoods. One person in the thread described people in their 60,000-person town charging $10 per week to scoop yards and wheel trash cans to the curb.
At 15 minutes per yard, you could theoretically service 8 to 10 yards in a morning and pocket $80 to $100 a week from a single neighborhood.
Using Nextdoor is why this works. Rather than trying to build a website or compete on Thumbtack, you post directly to neighbors who already know and trust you as a community member. Homeowners, elderly residents, and busy parents are going to be your most likely clients.
You can also bundle this with other yard services like pulling weeds or watering plants while owners travel. Some people doing this full-time have built it into a legitimate landscaping business, but as a summer side gig it requires almost zero startup cost other than gloves and bags.
4. AI Training and Evaluation Work
This one keeps coming up in these communities and the numbers people report are hard to ignore. One Reddit commenter made $8,000 in six months doing AI training work part-time across three platforms.
Another reported earning $513 over a single weekend on DataAnnotation alone, though they noted it takes a week to pay out.
The work involves things like writing prompts, rating AI responses for accuracy and quality, and evaluating search results. It is not mindless work because some tasks do require real analytical thinking. That said, it does not require a tech background for the entry-level work.
The main platforms to look at are DataAnnotation, Outlier, and Alignerr.
Be mindful that getting in can take time. Some people report being on waitlists or not hearing back after applying. So, applying to all three simultaneously is your best bet.
Pay varies widely depending on the task and your background, but people with writing, research, or subject matter expertise tend to unlock higher-paying projects faster.
5. Search Quality Rating (Look for the W-2 Version)
Search quality rating has been around for years and you may have heard of it. What most people do not know is that there are two versions of this work, contractor (1099) and employee (W-2), and the W-2 version comes with significantly more stability, consistent hours, and sometimes benefits.
The work involves reviewing search engine results and rating them for relevance, accuracy, and usefulness. It sounds simple but it does require attention to detail and passing a qualification test before you can start.
The company that hires the most search quality raters is TELUS International, though they go through cycles of hiring. Datavio is another that has had openings recently.
To specifically find W-2 positions, search “search quality rater” or “search engine evaluator” on Indeed or directly on the company sites, and filter by job type to find employee rather than contractor roles. Pay typically ranges from $14 to $18 per hour.
6. Plasma Donation
Two separate people in these Reddit threads brought this up unprompted and both spoke positively about it. One person reported earning around $600 per month from plasma donation, and noted that beyond the income it genuinely helps people because plasma is used to create treatments for rare and chronic diseases.
You can donate plasma twice per week. New donor bonuses at many centers can be substantial, and some centers offer $100 or more for your first few donations. Pay varies by center and location but most regular donors earn between $50 and $100 per week once past the new donor bonus phase.
To find a center near you, BioLife and Grifols are two of the largest national networks. Each one has a center locator on their website.
Keep in mind not everyone qualifies medically, so check the eligibility requirements before making a trip. Sessions take about 45 minutes to an hour once you are a regular donor.
7. Livestreaming While You Work
This is not the “become a gaming streamer” advice you have probably heard before. One Reddit commenter described simply opening her livestream while sitting at her desk doing bookkeeping work, playing music in the background. She has been doing it for three years and says it covers groceries and gas for her family consistently.
The idea is that people watch other people work. Lo-fi work streams have a real audience! Study-with-me streams, work-with-me streams, and ambient desk streams are some popular categories. You do not have to be entertaining at all. You just have to be present and consistent.
Platforms where this works include Twitch, YouTube Live, and the commenter's platform of choice, uChat. Revenue comes from viewer tips and gifts rather than ad revenue, so it takes time to build up your audience, but the barrier to entry is low. You just need a phone or a webcam.
8. Domain Flipping
One commenter brought this up and described it as “very forgiving once you know what to look for.” The basic idea is that you buy domain names you believe have future value, hold them, and sell them to buyers who need them. This is usually going to be businesses, developers, or brand builders.
Good domains are short, memorable, have a .com extension, and ideally contain a word or phrase that a business might want. Domains that have previously had traffic or backlinks are also more valuable.
You can buy domains for as little as $10 to $15 per year through registrars like Namecheap or GoDaddy, and sell them on marketplaces like Afternic, Sedo, or Flippa.
The learning curve is real and you can lose money buying domains that never sell, so start small and read as much as you can before spending anything significant.
The NamePros forum is a decent resource for learning how experienced domain investors think about valuation.
9. UGC — Skip the Platforms and Pitch Directly
User generated content (UGC) is when brands pay everyday people to create short videos or photos showing their products in real-life settings. You have probably seen this content all over Instagram and TikTok without realizing someone got paid to make it.
Most people who try UGC sign up for a platform and wait. One Reddit commenter gave much better advice: film three or four short “fake ad” style videos using products you already own around the house, then pitch those directly to brands via Instagram DM or email along with a simple rate card.
This person mentioned using tools like TweetDeck and Mention to spot brands actively looking for creators, and said she was able to cover her income gap faster than any survey or testing site had for her.
Rates for UGC typically start around $100 to $300 per video for beginners and can go much higher once you have a portfolio. You do not need a large following because brands are paying for the content itself, not your audience.
Billo and Insense are two platforms you could list on, but the direct outreach approach is probably better to start out.
10. Offering Bookkeeping as a Service and Billing Upfront
This one is included because of a small but important detail buried in one of the Reddit threads. Someone mentioned they were looking for side bookkeeping work as an accountant and assumed clients don't pay upfront.
A professional bookkeeper responded bluntly: her clients always pay on the first of the month. Even one-time cleanup jobs pay before the work begins!
If you have any bookkeeping, accounting, or QuickBooks experience, this summer might be a good time to pick up a few small business clients who need catch-up work before the end of the year. Local Facebook business groups and LinkedIn are both good places to find clients directly without competing on Upwork, where it can take weeks to land your first job.
If you do not have experience but want to learn, QuickBooks' own certification program might be of help to you. Certified bookkeepers can charge $30 to $50 per hour or more depending on their market, and the work is largely remote by nature.
So that wraps up our list! I hope something here is of interest to you.
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Good luck!

Anna Thurman is a work at home blogger and mom of two. She has been researching and reviewing remote jobs for over 15 years. Her findings are published weekly here at Real Ways to Earn.