The best side hustle for people over 50 is print on demand (POD) — specifically, selling custom-designed apparel through your own Shopify store. Unlike other online businesses, POD requires no inventory, minimal startup costs ($500-1,000), and can be run part-time while working a full-time job. It’s particularly well-suited for people over 50 because it doesn’t require technical expertise, you can start seeing sales within weeks, and the business model is straightforward: find designs that sell, let suppliers handle printing and shipping.
Most “best side hustles for older adults” articles recommend the same tired options: freelance writing, tutoring, or driving for Uber. These all trade time for money — the exact trap you’re trying to escape.
Print on demand is different. Here’s why it works particularly well for people in their 50s and 60s:
No inventory risk. You don’t buy products until customers order them. No garage full of unsold t-shirts. No money tied up in stock.
Low startup cost. Most students start with $500-1,000 for their store setup and initial advertising. Compare that to franchises ($50K+) or Amazon FBA ($10K+ in inventory).
Flexible schedule. Spend 5-10 hours per week testing designs and monitoring ads. Do it early mornings, evenings, or weekends — whatever fits your life.
No tech degree required. If you can use Facebook and follow step-by-step instructions, you can run a POD business. The tools have gotten remarkably simple.
Real asset building. You’re building a store with customers, email lists, and proven designs — something you can eventually sell or pass down.
The business model is simple:
When someone buys a $35 t-shirt, you pay the supplier ~$15 for printing and fulfillment, spend ~$8 on advertising, and keep ~$12 profit. Scale that to 10-20 orders per day and you’re looking at $3,600-7,200/month in profit — often more than enough to replace a corporate salary.
This isn’t theory. At Skup, we work with hundreds of students building POD businesses, many of them over 50 who were skeptical about “online business” when they started.
Frank Lacy hit $10,000 in total sales within his first few months of launching, building a sustainable part-time income while still working his day job:

Thomas Skrodzki had an $1,100 week — proving this works even if you’re not “tech-savvy” or don’t have a marketing background:

What these students have in common: they followed a proven system, stayed consistent, and didn’t try to reinvent the wheel.
Print on demand isn’t a magic money button. Here’s what actually makes it challenging:
Learning curve (2-4 weeks). You need to learn design research, basic Shopify setup, and Facebook ads fundamentals. It’s not hard, but it takes focused effort.
Testing period (4-8 weeks). Most students test 10-20 designs before finding one that sells consistently. This requires patience and a small ad budget ($20-30/day).
Consistency matters. The students who succeed treat this like a real business, putting in 5-10 hours weekly even when results are slow at first.
If you’re looking for overnight riches or passive income with zero effort, this isn’t it. But if you’re willing to learn a skill and put in consistent part-time work, POD can absolutely replace a corporate income within 6-12 months.
These are the other “hot” online business models, but they’re not ideal for people over 50 starting out:
Dropshipping involves selling cheap products from overseas suppliers. Margins are thin (5-15%), shipping times are long (2-4 weeks), and you’re competing on price with everyone else selling the same products. Customer complaints are constant.
Amazon FBA requires $10,000+ in upfront inventory, complex logistics, and you’re at Amazon’s mercy. One algorithm change or policy update can wipe out your business overnight.
Print on demand offers better margins (30-40%), US-based fulfillment (5-7 day shipping), and you’re building your own brand on your own store. You control the customer relationship.
If you’re serious about building a POD side hustle, here’s the path forward:
The Apparel Cloning System teaches this entire process step-by-step, specifically designed for people with no tech background or prior business experience.
Most successful students start with $500-1,000. This covers Shopify subscription ($39/month), a domain (~$15), initial ad testing budget ($300-500), and design tools. You don’t need to buy inventory upfront — suppliers only charge you when customers order.
Absolutely. Tools like AvatarIQ use AI to generate professional designs from text prompts. The more important skill is design research — knowing what types of designs sell — not design creation. Many successful POD sellers have never opened Photoshop.
Students following a proven system typically see their first sale within 2-4 weeks of launching ads. Getting to consistent daily sales usually takes 4-8 weeks of testing different designs and audiences. Replacing a full-time income is realistic within 6-12 months of consistent effort.
People have been saying POD is “saturated” since 2018. Meanwhile, the custom apparel market continues growing 8-10% annually. The key is niche selection and design research — there are always underserved audiences with money to spend. The students who fail are the ones who copy obvious designs in crowded niches.
If you’re over 50 and looking for a legitimate side hustle that can grow into a full income replacement, print on demand is worth serious consideration. It’s not the only option, but it’s one of the few that combines low startup costs, flexible hours, and genuine scale potential.
The students who succeed aren’t the youngest or most tech-savvy — they’re the ones who follow a proven process and stay consistent. If that sounds like you, learn more about how Skup helps people build profitable POD businesses.