Discovering YOU Magazine June 2025 Issue | Page 49

BUSINESS CENTS

Gen Alpha Side Hustles:

How Kids are Earning Big Online

Before They Can Even Drive

Article by EVE UPTON-CLARK

earned more than $40,000 last year.

Social media platforms have opened new doors for work, and young people raised online are best equipped to step through them. The most common side hustle is reselling new or vintage clothes, with one in five (20.1%) of Gen Aers and Gen Zers earning income this way. Others bring in money from streaming video games (14.1%) or competing in esports tournaments (13.1%).

About one in 10 (10.5%) are monetizing content by posting on social media or “clipping”—repurposing YouTube videos, podcasts, or livestreams into short, shareable clips with viral potential. Only 9.1% are currently earning through brand sponsorships, though many still dream of becoming full-time creators.

“Social media raised this generation, so making money on the internet is now the norm. When you grow up watching YouTube creators and Twitch streamers living lavish lifestyles, it’s only natural to want to be part of that," Brett Malinowski,

A survey of 2,002 U.S. Gen Alpha and Gen Z individuals (ages 12 to 28) by social commerce platform Whop found that more than half are using the internet not simply for brain rot and catching up with friends, but also for earning cash.

The “iPad kid” generation—the oldest of whom are just 15—are already putting their screen time to good use. Nearly half (47.1%) are actively earning online through digital side hustles like selling vintage clothing, streaming video games, and posting on social media. That’s a 15% increase from last year. When it comes to knowing someone who makes money online, that number jumps to 72.3%.

Instead of relying on pocket money, Gen Alpha members are earning an average of $13.92 per hour from their digital pursuits—nearly double the U.S. federal minimum wage of $7.25. Based on those hourly earnings, they’re pulling in the equivalent of a $28,000 full-time annual salary, all before turning 16. At the high end, 1.7% of Gen Alpha and Gen Z hustlers