65% of people exploring side income want around $500/month — not a full career change. 80% want to start with under $100 in upfront cost. They don't need another list of 100 ideas. They need to know which 2–3 ideas fit their life.
The #1 reason people quit a side hustle isn't lack of effort — it's wrong-fit. A static list can't tell you that dropshipping is a bad call if you have $0 in startup cash, or that rideshare is off the table if you don't own a car. A matching quiz can.
| Feature | SideHustlr Quiz | Fiverr's List |
|---|---|---|
| Personalized to your skills, time & budget | ||
| Output type | Ranked shortlist (3–5 matches) | Unranked list of 30–100 ideas |
| Time to clarity | 3 minutes | Hours of reading & comparing |
| 30-day starter plan included | ||
| Covers non-freelance hustles (gig, rental, content, passive) | Limited | |
| Filters out hustles that don't fit your situation | ||
| Neutral — not promoting one platform's services | ||
| Free | ||
| Good for casual inspiration | Some | |
| Good for taking action this week |
Fiverr's side hustle ideas guide is a well-written blog post — broad, evergreen, and useful for casual inspiration. Most of these articles list 25–100 side hustle ideas in a single page, often grouped by category (online, in-person, passive). It's a great starting point if you've never thought about side income before.
Where it falls short: every reader sees the same list in the same order. There's no logic that hides hustles you can't actually do, no scoring against your weekly time, no penalty for missing prerequisites (car, room, startup cash). It's content, not a tool.
And because Fiverr also sells freelance services, the list naturally over-indexes on hustles you'd run through Fiverr — leaving out gig, rental, content, and passive paths that might be a better fit for you.
The quiz asks 10 short questions covering the factors that actually predict whether a hustle will work for you:
Each hustle in the database is scored with weighted matching plus penalties — for example, rideshare gets a -10 penalty if you don't own a car, and faceless content roles get a +5 boost if you indicated you don't want to be on camera. You can read the full decision framework here.
The result: a ranked shortlist of 3–5 matches, each with realistic earnings ranges and a 30-day starter plan.
Lists are great for casual browsing, for getting a sense of how broad the space is, and for sparking ideas you'd never have considered. If you already know exactly what you want to sell and just need execution tactics, a static guide is fine.
Use both. Start with the quiz to narrow 100 options down to 3 — then read the deep guides (including Fiverr's) on the hustle you choose.
Yes. The 3-minute, 10-question quiz is 100% free and gives you a personalized, ranked list of side hustles plus a 30-day starter plan for your top match. Optional $29 Starter Packs exist for deeper guidance on specific hustles, but you never need to pay to get matched.
Fiverr's list is a static article — the same set of ideas shown to everyone, usually ordered alphabetically or by popularity. The SideHustlr quiz takes your real inputs (skills, hours per week, startup budget, vehicle access, living situation, goals) and outputs a ranked shortlist with mismatch penalties applied, so you see only what actually fits you.
Great — the quiz still helps. You can input that skill and the matcher will rank the specific hustles and platforms (freelance services, content, productized work) that monetize it best given your time and budget, instead of leaving you to guess.
Yes. SideHustlr covers freelance, gig (delivery, rideshare), content (newsletter, YouTube), e-commerce (POD, dropshipping), rental (Airbnb, storage, vehicles), and passive income. Most platform blog lists skew toward services they themselves sell.
The matcher uses 10 weighted signals plus penalty rules (e.g. -10 for vehicle mismatch on rideshare, +5 for faceless content roles when relevant). It's calibrated against the patterns of users who actually earned their first $100–$500, not just clicked through.
Yes. Your situation changes — new skills, more time, a car, a spare room. You can retake the quiz anytime and your prior claimed hustles are preserved.