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Side Hustle Guide UK — Earn Extra Income Around Your Job

Discover the best side hustles in the UK for 2025. From freelancing to online selling, how much you can earn, tax rules, and how to get started alongside your day job.

A side hustle — earning income outside your main job — has become increasingly common in the UK, with millions supplementing their salary through freelance work, online selling, and other ventures. Whether you want to build an emergency fund, pay off debt, or grow a future business, here is how to get started.

Side Hustle Ideas by Earning Potential

High-Earning Side Hustles (£20–£100+/hour)

Side Hustle Typical Earnings Getting Started
Freelance consulting (in your profession) £30–£100+/hour Use LinkedIn and freelance platforms
Web design/development £25–£75/hour Portfolio and Upwork/Fiverr
Tutoring (academic or music) £20–£60/hour Tutorful, Superprof, word of mouth
Bookkeeping £20–£40/hour AAT qualification helpful
Photography £100–£500/session Build a portfolio, local marketing
Content writing/copywriting £20–£60/hour ProBlogger, LinkedIn, cold outreach

Mid-Earning Side Hustles (£10–£25/hour)

Side Hustle Typical Earnings Getting Started
Delivery driving (Deliveroo, Just Eat) £10–£15/hour Sign up via app
Dog walking/pet sitting £10–£15/hour Rover, BorrowMyDoggy
Selling on eBay/Etsy Variable Source products, create listings
Virtual assistant £12–£25/hour Freelance platforms
Cleaning services £12–£20/hour Hassle, local advertising
Task-based work (TaskRabbit) £15–£25/hour Sign up, set your rates

Lower-Earning but Accessible

Side Hustle Typical Earnings Notes
Online surveys (Prolific, Swagbucks) £3–£8/hour Low effort, low return
Cashback sites and apps £100–£500/year Passive but slow
Matched betting Variable Tax-free but requires learning
Renting out a room (SpareRoom) Up to £625/month tax-free Rent-a-room relief
Renting your parking space £50–£200/month JustPark, YourParkingSpace

Tax Rules for Side Hustles

The £1,000 Trading Allowance

HMRC gives you a £1,000 trading allowance each tax year. If your total side hustle income is under £1,000:

  • No tax to pay
  • No need to register for Self Assessment
  • No need to report the income

Above £1,000

You must:

  1. Register for Self Assessment by 5 October after the tax year
  2. File a tax return by 31 January
  3. Pay income tax and Class 4 NI on profits

You can either:

  • Deduct the £1,000 trading allowance (simpler), or
  • Deduct actual business expenses (if higher than £1,000)

Tax Rates on Side Hustle Income

Your side hustle profit is added to your employment income. If your job pays £35,000 and your side hustle profit is £5,000, the £5,000 is taxed at your marginal rate — likely 20% income tax plus 6% Class 4 NI = 26% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270.

National Insurance

If your side hustle profit exceeds £12,570 (2025/26), you pay Class 4 NI at 6% (up to £50,270) and Class 2 NI — these are paid through Self Assessment.

Getting Started: A Step-by-Step Plan

1. Choose Your Side Hustle

Consider your skills, time availability, and earning goals:

  • Have 2-3 hours after work? Freelancing or online tutoring
  • Flexible weekends? Pet sitting, photography, or market trading
  • Passive income? Renting a room or parking space

2. Start Small

Test your idea before investing heavily. Most side hustles require minimal upfront cost — your time is the main investment.

3. Set Boundaries

Protect your main job and personal wellbeing:

  • Set specific hours for side work
  • Do not let it affect your day job performance
  • Take time off when you need it

4. Track Your Income and Expenses

From day one, keep records of:

  • All income received
  • All business expenses
  • Invoices and receipts

This makes tax time simple and ensures you claim everything you are entitled to.

5. Open a Separate Bank Account

Keep side hustle money separate from personal finances. A basic current account is fine — you do not need a business bank account unless you are trading under a business name.

Scaling Up: From Side Hustle to Self-Employment

If your side hustle grows, you may reach a point where it could replace or supplement your day job:

Milestone Action
Consistent £500+/month Track profitability, build an emergency fund
Income approaching day job Consider going part-time
Income exceeding day job Evaluate full self-employment
Turnover approaching £90,000 Consider VAT registration

See our sole trader guide and registering as self-employed guide for the next steps.