Mother part-time jobs for today : for beginners aimed at mothers seeking flexibility create additional revenue
Let me tell you, motherhood is literally insane. But you know what's even crazier? Trying to make some extra cash while juggling tiny humans who think sleep is optional.
This whole thing started for me about three years ago when I realized that my impulse buys were becoming problematic. It was time to get cash that was actually mine.
The Virtual Assistant Life
Right so, I kicked things off was jumping into virtual assistance. And not gonna lie? It was perfect. It let me hustle while the kids slept, and all I needed was my trusty MacBook and a prayer.
Initially I was doing easy things like email sorting, doing social media scheduling, and basic admin work. Pretty straightforward. My rate was about $20/hour, which felt cheap but when you don't know what you're doing yet, you gotta begin at the bottom.
Honestly the most hilarious thing? Picture this: me on a video meeting looking like a real businesswoman from the waist up—full professional mode—while sporting pants I'd owned since 2015. Main character energy.
The Etsy Shop Adventure
After a year, I thought I'd test out the selling on Etsy. All my mom friends seemed to sell stuff on Etsy, so I was like "why not start one too?"
I created crafting PDF planners and wall art. Here's why printables are amazing? One and done creation, and it can keep selling indefinitely. For real, I've gotten orders at midnight when I'm unconscious.
The first time someone bought something? I literally screamed. My husband thought something was wrong. Nope—I was just, doing a happy dance for my first five bucks. No shame in my game.
The Content Creation Grind
Eventually I started creating content online. This hustle is a marathon not a sprint, trust me on this.
I began a parenting blog where I documented my parenting journey—the good, the bad, and the ugly. Keeping it real. Just honest stories about surviving tantrums in Target.
Building traffic was slow. The first few months, I was essentially talking to myself. But I persisted, and slowly but surely, things started clicking.
Currently? I generate revenue through promoting products, collaborations, and advertisements on my site. Last month I made over $2,000 from my blog income. Crazy, right?
The Social Media Management Game
As I mastered my own content, small companies started inquiring if I could run their social media.
And honestly? Many companies don't understand social media. They recognize they need to be there, but they can't keep up.
Enter: me. I handle social media for three local businesses—various small businesses. I develop content, plan their posting schedule, interact with their audience, and monitor performance.
I charge between five hundred to a thousand dollars per month per client, depending on the complexity. Best part? I do this work from my phone while sitting in the carpool line.
Writing for Money
If you can write, content writing is where it's at. I don't mean becoming Shakespeare—I'm talking about business content.
Websites and businesses need content constantly. I've created content about everything from literally everything under the sun. Being an expert isn't required, you just need to know how to find information.
On average make between fifty and two hundred per article, depending on what's involved. On good months I'll write a dozen articles and earn one to two thousand extra.
The funny thing is: Back in school I barely passed English class. Currently I'm earning a living writing. Talk about character development.
Virtual Tutoring
When COVID hit, virtual tutoring became huge. I was a teacher before kids, so this was kind of a natural fit.
I started working with various tutoring services. You choose when you work, which is non-negotiable when you have kids with unpredictable schedules.
I focus on basic subjects. You can make from fifteen to thirty bucks per hour depending on the platform.
The awkward part? Every now and then my kids will burst into the room mid-session. I've had to educate someone's child while mine had a meltdown. The parents on the other end are totally cool about it because they're parents too.
The Reselling Game
Alright, this hustle started by accident. During a massive cleanout my kids' closet and posted some items on various apps.
Stuff sold out within hours. I suddenly understood: people will buy anything.
At this point I frequent anywhere with deals, hunting for quality items. I'll find something for a few dollars and make serious profit.
It's definitely work? Not gonna lie. It's a whole process. But it's oddly satisfying about spotting valuable items at a yard sale and earning from it.
Plus: my kids think I'm cool when I bring home interesting finds. Recently I discovered a rare action figure that my son freaked out about. Flipped it for forty-five bucks. Mom win.
The Honest Reality
Real talk moment: side hustles take work. It's called hustling because you're hustling.
Certain days when I'm exhausted, wondering why I'm doing this. I wake up early hustling before the chaos starts, then doing all the mom stuff, then working again after 8pm hits.
But this is what's real? This income is mine. No permission needed to buy the fancy coffee. I'm contributing to our financial goals. I'm teaching my children that moms can do anything.
Tips if You're Starting Out
If you want to start a mom hustle, here's my advice:
Don't go all in immediately. Avoid trying to start five businesses. Focus on one and become proficient before taking on more.
Use the time you have. If naptime is your only free time, that's totally valid. A couple of productive hours is a great beginning.
Stop comparing to other moms. Those people with massive success? She's been grinding forever and has support. Do your thing.
Learn and grow, but carefully. Free information exists. Don't spend $5,000 on a coaching program until you've tried things out.
Do similar tasks together. This changed everything. Dedicate certain times for certain work. Monday might be creation day. Wednesday could be handling business stuff.
Dealing with Mom Guilt
I have to be real with you—I struggle with guilt. There are times when I'm on my laptop and they want to play, and I feel terrible.
But I think about that I'm showing them how to hustle. I'm demonstrating to my children that motherhood doesn't mean giving up your identity.
And honestly? Financial independence has made me a better mom. I'm more fulfilled, which makes me more patient.
The Numbers
My actual income? Typically, total from all sources, I bring in between three and five grand. Some months are better, it fluctuates.
Is this getting-rich money? Nope. But I've used it for so many things we needed that would've caused financial strain. And it's building my skills and knowledge that could evolve into something huge.
In Conclusion
Listen, hustling as a mom takes work. There's no such thing as a secret sauce. Many days I'm flying by the seat of my pants, fueled by espresso and stubbornness, and praying it all works out.
But I don't regret it. Each dollar I earn is validation of my effort. It's evidence that I'm not just someone's mother.
If you're thinking about beginning your hustle journey? Take the leap. Begin before you're ready. Future you will appreciate it.
And remember: You're not merely making it through—you're hustling. Despite the fact that there's likely Goldfish crackers in your workspace.
No cap. This mom hustle life is where it's at, chaos and all.
From Rock Bottom to Creator Success: My Journey as a Single Mom
Here's the truth—becoming a single mom wasn't on my vision board. Nor was making money from my phone. But here I am, three years into this wild journey, earning income by posting videos while raising two kids basically solo. And honestly? It's been the most terrifying, empowering, and unexpected blessing of my life.
Rock Bottom: When Everything Imploded
It was a few years ago when my relationship fell apart. I remember sitting in my mostly empty place (he took what he wanted, I kept what mattered), wide awake at 2am while my kids were passed out. I had barely $850 in my account, two humans depending on me, and a job that barely covered rent. The anxiety was crushing, y'all.
I was on TikTok to numb the pain—because that's self-care at 2am, right? when everything is chaos, right?—when I found this solo parent sharing how she became debt-free through making videos. I remember thinking, "That's either a scam or she's incredibly lucky."
But when you're desperate, you try anything. Maybe both. Probably both.
I got the TikTok studio app the next morning. My first video? Completely unpolished, sharing how I'd just spent my last $12 on a frozen nuggets and juice boxes for my kids' lunches. I hit post and panicked. Who wants to watch my mess?
Plot twist, way more people than I expected.
That video got nearly 50,000 views. Nearly fifty thousand people watched me get emotional over processed meat. The comments section became this incredible community—women in similar situations, other people struggling, all saying "same." That was my turning point. People didn't want filtered content. They wanted honest.
My Brand Evolution: The Real Mom Life Brand
The truth is about content creation: you need a niche. And my niche? It found me. I became the mom who tells the truth.
I started creating content about the stuff nobody talks about. Like how I didn't change pants for days because I couldn't handle laundry. Or when I let them eat Lucky Charms for dinner multiple nights and called it "creative meal planning." Or that moment when my kid asked about the divorce, and I had to explain adult stuff to a kid who thinks the tooth fairy is real.
My content was rough. My lighting was awful. I filmed on a ancient iPhone. But it was unfiltered, and turns out, that's what hit.
Two months later, I hit 10,000 followers. Three months later, fifty thousand. By month six, I'd crossed 100K. Each milestone felt surreal. People who wanted to listen to me. Me—a barely surviving single mom who had to learn everything from scratch months before.
The Actual Schedule: Content Creation Meets Real Life
Let me show you of my typical day, because creating content solo is totally different from those aesthetic "day in the life" videos you see.
5:30am: My alarm sounds. I do absolutely not want to wake up, but this is my sacred content creation time. I make coffee that I'll microwave repeatedly, and I start recording. Sometimes it's a GRWM talking about financial reality. Sometimes it's me meal prepping while venting about dealing with my ex. The lighting is whatever I can get.
7:00am: Kids get up. Content creation stops. Now I'm in survival mode—pouring cereal, finding the missing shoe (why is it always one shoe), prepping food, referee duties. The chaos is overwhelming.
8:30am: School drop-off. I'm that mom filming at red lights when stopped. Not my proudest moment, but I gotta post.
9:00am-2:00pm: This is my productive time. Kids are at school. I'm cutting clips, responding to comments, ideating, pitching brands, analyzing metrics. They believe content creation is just posting videos. Nope. It's a full business.
I usually batch-create content on certain days. That means filming 10-15 videos in one go. I'll change shirts between videos so it appears to be different times. Advice: Keep wardrobe options close for easy transitions. My neighbors must think I'm insane, recording myself alone in the backyard.
3:00pm: Getting the kids. Parent time. But here's the thing—many times my viral videos come from real life. Just last week, my daughter had a massive breakdown in Target because I refused to get a expensive toy. I made content in the Target parking lot after about dealing with meltdowns as a single mom. It got 2.3M views.
Evening: Dinner, homework, bath time, bedtime routines. I'm usually too exhausted to create content, but I'll schedule uploads, respond to DMs, or plan tomorrow's content. Some nights, after the kids are asleep, I'll work late because a deadline is coming.
The truth? Balance is a myth. It's just controlled chaos with some victories.
Income Breakdown: How I Generate Income
Look, let's discuss money because this is what you're wondering. Can you make a living as a online creator? Yes. Is it straightforward? Hell no.
My first month, I made zilch. Second month? Also nothing. Month three, I got my first sponsored post—a hundred and fifty bucks to share a food subscription. I cried real tears. That hundred fifty dollars paid for groceries.
Fast forward, years later, here's how I monetize:
Brand Partnerships: This is my main revenue. I work with brands that fit my niche—budget-friendly products, mom products, kids' stuff. I bill anywhere from five hundred to five thousand dollars per partnership, depending on what they need. This past month, I did four collabs and made $8K.
Platform Payments: The TikTok fund pays not much—two to four hundred per month for tons of views. YouTube ad revenue is better. I make about $1,500/month from YouTube, but that took two years to build up.
Link Sharing: I promote products to products I actually use—everything from my beloved coffee maker to the bunk beds in their room. If someone purchases through my link, I get a kickback. This brings in about $800-1,200 monthly.
Online Products: I created a money management guide and a cooking guide. They're $15 each, and I sell fifty to a hundred per month. That's another $1-1.5K.
One-on-One Coaching: People wanting to start pay me to guide them. I offer consulting calls for $200 hourly. I do about five to ten each month.
Overall monthly earnings: Generally, I'm making $10-15K per month now. It varies, some are lower. It's up and down, which is nerve-wracking when you're solo. But it's triple what I made at my 9-5, and I'm present.
The Hard Parts Nobody Talks About
Content creation sounds glamorous until you're crying in your car because a video flopped, or reading cruel messages from keyboard warriors.
The haters are brutal. I've been told I'm a terrible parent, told I'm a bad influence, accused of lying about being a divorced parent. Someone once commented, "No wonder he left." That one hurt so bad.
The algorithm is unpredictable. One week you're getting insane views. The next, you're struggling for views. Your income varies wildly. You're constantly creating, 24/7, afraid to pause, you'll lose relevance.
The mom guilt is intense times a thousand. Every upload, I wonder: Am I oversharing? Are my kids safe? Will they regret this when they're teenagers? I have non-negotiables—no faces of my kids without permission, keeping their stories private, no embarrassing content. But the line is not always clear.
The exhaustion is real. Sometimes when I can't create. When I'm depleted, over it, and at my limit. But life doesn't stop. So I do it anyway.
The Wins
But here's what's real—despite the hard parts, this journey has blessed me with things I never expected.
Financial freedom for once in my life. I'm not a helpful resource wealthy, but I cleared $18K. I have an emergency fund. We took a family trip last summer—Disney World, which was a dream not long ago. I don't stress about my account anymore.
Flexibility that's priceless. When my child had a fever last month, I didn't have to ask permission or worry about money. I handled business at urgent care. When there's a class party, I'm there. I'm present in my kids' lives in ways I couldn't be with a normal job.
Connection that saved me. The creator friends I've met, especially other moms, have become real friends. We support each other, help each other, encourage each other. My followers have become this family. They celebrate my wins, encourage me through rough patches, and validate me.
My own identity. For the first time since having kids, I have an identity. I'm more than an ex or just a mom. I'm a business owner. A businesswoman. A person who hustled.
My Best Tips
If you're a single mother thinking about this, here's my advice:
Start before you're ready. Your first videos will suck. Mine did. Everyone starts there. You improve over time, not by waiting.
Be yourself. People can sense inauthenticity. Share your honest life—the unfiltered truth. That's the magic.
Keep them safe. Set boundaries early. Have standards. Their privacy is everything. I protect their names, protect their faces, and respect their dignity.
Diversify income streams. Spread it out or one way to earn. The algorithm is unreliable. More streams = less stress.
Film multiple videos. When you have free time, create multiple pieces. Future you will thank yourself when you're unable to film.
Build community. Reply to comments. Reply to messages. Connect authentically. Your community is crucial.
Monitor what works. Time is money. If something is time-intensive and gets 200 views while something else takes minutes and goes viral, shift focus.
Self-care matters. You need to fill your cup. Unplug. Guard your energy. Your sanity matters more than views.
Stay patient. This isn't a get-rich-quick scheme. It took me months to make meaningful money. The first year, I made $15K total. The second year, eighty grand. Year 3, I'm on track for six figures. It's a long game.
Stay connected to your purpose. On difficult days—and there will be many—remember why you're doing this. For me, it's financial freedom, flexibility with my kids, and validating that I'm capable of more than I thought possible.
The Reality Check
Here's the deal, I'm telling the truth. Being a single mom creator is challenging. So damn hard. You're managing a business while being the sole caretaker of kids who need everything.
Some days I second-guess this. Days when the negativity affect me. Days when I'm exhausted and stressed and asking myself if I should get a regular job with stability.
But then my daughter tells me she's happy I'm here. Or I look at my savings. Or I get a DM from a follower saying my content changed her life. And I understand the impact.
What's Next
Not long ago, I was lost and broke how to survive. Today, I'm a professional creator making more than I imagined in my 9-5, and I'm available when they need me.
My goals going forward? Reach 500K by this year. Launch a podcast for single parents. Maybe write a book. Expand this business that gives me freedom, flexibility, and financial stability.
This path gave me a second chance when I needed it most. It gave me a way to provide for my family, be present in their lives, and accomplish something incredible. It's not the path I expected, but it's exactly where I needed to be.
To all the single moms on the fence: Hell yes you can. It won't be easy. You'll want to quit some days. But you're managing the toughest gig—doing this alone. You're tougher than you realize.
Jump in messy. Be consistent. Protect your peace. And always remember, you're beyond survival mode—you're building an empire.
BRB, I need to go record a video about another last-minute project and nobody told me until now. Because that's the content creator single mom life—turning chaos into content, one post at a time.
For real. Being a single mom creator? It's the best decision. Even though there's definitely crumbs everywhere. Living the dream, one messy video at a time.