How to Calculate If Your Side Project Is Actually Profitable
How to Calculate If Your Side Project Is Actually Profitable
My “profitable” print-on-demand business made $1,200/month. I was thrilled until I did the real math: 60 hours of work monthly meant $20/hour gross. After expenses? $11.67/hour. I could make more at McDonald’s.
Most side projects are hobbies subsidized by your day job. There’s nothing wrong with that—unless you think you’re building a business. Whether you’re considering selling digital products or dividend investing, here’s the framework I use now to calculate true profitability before wasting another year on a money-losing “business.”
Reality Check
What People Count
What They Ignore
Revenue
Their time at market rate
Basic expenses
Opportunity cost
Platform fees
Tool subscriptions
Product costs
Learning time
Shipping
Customer support time
Tax obligations
Platform risk
Market saturation timeline
The truth: 73% of side projects are unprofitable when you include time value.
The True Cost Framework
Here’s the spreadsheet that killed 3 of my side projects. You can build your own using Google Sheets or Microsoft Excel templates:
If negative: You’re losing money
If 0-1x: Barely breaking even
If 1-3x: Marginal, depends on growth
If 3x+: Worth continuing
My calculation:
Net profit: $383
Opportunity cost: $2,000
Monthly loss: -$1,617
Initial investment: $3,000
Profit multiple: -6.5x annually
I was paying $19,404/year to run a “business.”
The Sunk Cost Test
“But I already invested so much!”
Questions to ask:
If starting today, would you begin this project?
Is next month likely better than this month?
Can you 10x results without 10x effort?
Would you advise a friend to start this?
If you answered no to any: Kill it.
The Growth Trajectory Test
Plot your last 6 months:
Revenue growth rate
Profit growth rate
Hours invested
Hourly rate trend
Healthy trajectory:
Revenue growing 15%+ monthly
Profits growing faster than revenue
Hours decreasing or steady
Hourly rate increasing
Death spiral indicators:
Revenue flat or declining
Profits shrinking (competition/costs rising)
Hours increasing to maintain revenue
Hourly rate decreasing
The Projects Worth Pursuing
After analyzing 12 of my side projects:
Winners (Positive ROI)
Email newsletter (finance niche):
Time: 10 hours/month
Revenue: $2,100/month (sponsorships)
Costs: $45/month
Net: $2,055
Hourly rate: $205
Building a high-performing newsletter requires picking the right platform from the start — the Beehiiv vs Substack comparison covers which platform pays creators more at different subscriber levels.
Your side project is probably unprofitable. That’s okay if you know it and choose it anyway. But if you think you’re building a business, do the math:
The one question that matters:
If someone offered you your hourly rate in cash to stop this project forever, would you take it?
If yes, you have your answer.
Most “passive income” isn’t passive. Most “profitable” businesses aren’t profitable. Most side hustles are jobs with worse pay and no benefits.
But some aren’t. Do the math. Find the ones that actually work. Kill everything else.
Your time is worth more than you think. Stop selling it for $4.79/hour.
Based on analyzing 12 personal side projects over 5 years. Killed 8 of them after doing this math. Revenue improved 300% with 75% less time invested. Your results depend on honest calculation.