Just because you live in a small bedroom, doesn’t mean you need to skimp on style. Here are 7 small bedroom ideas to liven up your space.
When living in an apartment, you might be a little short on space. However, you do not need to be short on style! While you can’t magically expand the parameters of your bedroom, you can add some pizzazz with these seven small bedroom ideas.
If you’re craving some feng-shui and want to update your tiny room with a new decorating style, here are several ideas that will be sure to optimize your space and make you feel like you’re in your own personal haven.
7 small bedroom ideas to freshen up your space
Regardless of your decorating budget, you can utilize any or all of these small bedroom ideas to jazz up your space. Let’s get started with the transformation!
1. Paint a wall
Color is one of the best ways to liven up any space, regardless of size. On one side of the color wheel, you could go with neutrals, like white or beige, to create a blank slate. The fresh white walls can add a clean look and brighten up the space. It also leaves room for you to add a statement piece of art that really stands out.
On the other side of the color wheel, you could go bold and paint one wall a signature color that will add a splash of color. If you choose to go with a color, choose it wisely. Sometimes, dark colors on all four walls could make the space appear smaller. You can find a paint finder tool to choose the right color for your room.
2. Hang some art or a decorative mirror
A picture is worth a thousand words, right? If you’re looking for small bedroom ideas to spice up your space, consider going art shopping and finding the perfect piece of art to add to one wall. You could buy a large statement piece or purchase several prints and make a photo collage. The idea here is to use art to make a statement in your small space.
Another thing to consider is adding a mirror to a wall. This could be a wall mirror or a standing mirror, but make it big! The mirror can help amplify the space and make it seem larger than it is.
3. Get some greenery
You don’t need a green thumb to add some greenery to your bedroom. Go to your local nursery and find a cactus, succulent or even a small tree to bring home to your room. You’ll want to consider things like how much light your room gets and how often you need to water the plant, but there is a plant for almost any situation. Greenery adds life, literally, to your space and that can make your small bedroom feel like a retreat.
4. Become creative with storage
One of the biggest problems with small spaces is the lack of storage options. Don’t fret, though! You can and must get creative when living in a small space. First, make use of the available storage you do have. Add boxes or bins to any shelf to reduce visual clutter. Next, consider propping up your bed to add more under-the-bed storage to hide and store items. You can also add furniture — like a dresser, bookshelf or desk — to decorate and organize.
Remember, clutter makes any space look smaller. So, you need to be organized and get in touch with your inner Marie Kondo to make your small bedroom appear larger.
5. Upgrade to multi-purpose furniture
Make your furniture multi-task! If you have the budget to buy some new furniture, invest in multi-functional furniture. For example, can your shelves double as a desk? Or can you buy a bed frame with built-in storage? Multi-purpose furniture is cool and it helps save on space, which is key to upgrading a small bedroom.
6. Add some height
It might sound counter-intuitive to add large furniture to a small room, but sometimes, larger furniture in a small space actually makes the room seem bigger. For example, we mentioned adding a mirror to your room earlier. Why not make that mirror tall and large to add some height and dimension to the space? Or, consider adding a piece of ladder furniture that adds height and doubles as storage?
7. Make use of tight spaces
The seventh small bedroom idea for decorating is to think of tight, small spaces in innovative ways. For example, do you have an extra closet in your room? Consider taking down the closet doors and converting that space to a mini office complete with a desk and chair. Do you have tall ceilings? Add a high shelf and use that for boxes and bins.
General tips for small bedroom living
Living in a small space can be frustrating if you aren’t organized. But, you can make it work and live in a fabulous small bedroom by following these three tips.
Stay clean and organized
Clutter is distracting and stressful and makes any place, regardless of size, seem smaller. If you live in a small apartment or have a small bedroom, make it part of your daily or weekly routine to clean and organize regularly. By keeping an orderly space, you’ll have a cleaner house and head.
Live minimally
Less is more, right? One thing to consider is the “one in, one out rule.” For example, if you purchase new clothes or a new piece of furniture, donate something old instead. This makes it so that you aren’t adding more stuff to your space but remain with the same amount of items, creating less clutter.
Add light and fresh air
Dark spaces can seem dreary, so make sure to turn on lights, add lamps or open window shades to bring in light. Likewise, prop open a window or add a fan to avoid a stuffy, cramped feeling in your bedroom.
Create your dream small bedroom
By incorporating one (or seven!) of these small bedroom ideas, you’ll create the cozy room of your dreams. Friendly reminder to check with your landlord and lease, though, before making any permanent alterations to your apartment. Once you get the green light, grab your paintbrush and paint away!
Still looking for that dream apartment to decorate? Start here.
Have you ever heard somebody’s job title and wondered what it is they even do all day? Some jobs just seem useless, either to outside observers, or even to the people hired to work them. Some jobs are crucial to the organization; others are average, and some jobs may be just an accessory or unnecessary. Here are 17 jobs people hesitate to admit they find completely useless. Is your job here? Continue reading and let us know in the comments!
1. Sorting Files
One person shared, “My very first job. I’m a toxicologist and was hired by a very big private laboratory. My main job was to sort and redirect case files depending on the time at which the results came out. THE DOCUMENTS WERE SENT TO ME IN EXCEL. I was getting paid to just click sort by date descendingly.”
Another user replied, “I had to do something similar to this when I was doing summer help at a steel factory. They paid me $14 an hour to sit there for eight hours and just move files to different folders and rename them. Sometimes I would pull weeds and paint walls, but that was about it.”
Sorting Files
Another added, “Working for a big company, one of the top 20 in the world, I am realising how bad people are with basic computer tasks… like really bad!”
2. Teachers who Don’t Teach
“My math teacher who tells me to log in to Pearson and then disappears,” one person stated.
“I dropped a university class this term because the week 3 assignment said to ‘look up how to do this on Google, Stackexchange, or ChatGPT.’ I’m not paying 1400 dollars to be taught by an AI chat bot, [lol],” another one shared.
“As a teacher myself, trust me, these are the kinds of colleagues we can’t stand,” one Redditor added.
3. Management Consultant
One person stated, “Mine. I’m a management consultant and while I have quite a bit of industry knowledge and experience, my clients either have the same knowledge or they aren’t willing to accept change. Often times my firm gets paid a lot of money to make very little difference strategically and/or operationally. Where we do add value is in implementing enterprise-wide software solutions. Why do I stay? The money is pretty good given the futility.”
“I heard from an acquaintance of mine who is a management consultant that most of the time people just want to hear their ideas out of someone else’s mouth and will pay you to do it so that their peers will be more amenable to the idea,” another user replied.
One commenter added, “Nothing like a bunch of 20 somethings telling a bunch of C-Suit executives how to run a business.”
4. Pet Psychic
One user said, “Our Golden Retriever was getting joint therapy (shoulder injury, worked with a vet, dog did swimming three days a week in a heated pool where he could exercise without putting weight on the joint, also did some exercises, is now fine. The place also did laser therapy and acupuncture for dogs.) Someone said something about ‘Hudson’ which is our dog’s name only they were talking to another dog. ‘Oh,’ they said, ‘That’s the dog psychic’s dog.’ Apparently you could find out what your dog was thinking. I know what my dog is thinking. Most of the time he either wants what I’m eating or he wants me to throw the ball.”
Another Redditor replied, “My cousin is a ‘pet psychic.’ She’s got quite the following on IG, a fancy website, and even a podcast. She claims to receive telepathic messages from your furry friends. She can even talk to reptiles and horses now! And she’s not horsing around, apparently each species requires a specific training. I’m not sure if she’s delusional or just scamming people, but either way, she’s making a lot of $$$.”
5. Elevator Attendant
One person shared, “I’m so old I remember when they had these in department stores. Whilst shopping with my grandma one day we got in an elevator and the attendant asked if we wanted the second floor. My grandma replies, ‘Why yes, how did you know?’ He says, ‘Ma’am, there’s only two floors, and we’re currently on the first one.’”
“They’re from an era of manually operated elevators. You used to have to close the doors manually then use a lever to control the elevator and stop it just right at the floor you wanted. It was tricky and very dangerous if you got it wrong, so you had an elevator operator whose job it was to run the elevator,” the second one replied.
6. Telemarketers
“Telemarketers, I don’t know a single person who has actually purchased something from a telemarketer. Maybe it’s something the older generation does but everyone hates them and immediately hangs up on them around me,” one person stated.
“I worked as a telemarketer for State Farm when I got out of high school, and in 8 months I had one person actually let me give her a quote. It was my aunt,” another Redditor replied.
One commenter added, “I remember when I was 12 I told this random telemarketer to get a life because at that point we were getting like 5-10 calls a day. She called me back and cussed me out. To this day, I think it’s so funny.”
7. Sign Spinners
Sign spinners, or sign twirlers, are people who hold a sign and stand on the street to get attention and possibly a customer for the business that hired them.
“The job only exists because the businesses want to put a sign there, but it’s cheaper or the only legal option to hire a person to hold the sign and stand there,” one person shared.
“That was my job for one summer in college. I got to hang out outside and listen to music all day. But I always thought it was weird that they were paying some guy $15/hr to do the job of a stick and a piece of duct tape,” another commenter replied.
One Redditor added, “I had a job like that except I didn’t even have to hold the sign. They said I could just lean it against the front of the store and stand next to it.”
8. Paparazzi
Everybody knows what the paparazzi jobs are doing—stalking people, taking pictures of them, and making money.
“You know why paparazzi make a ton of money and keep doing what they are doing? Because people keep buying their photos to put in magazines that people keep buying. Stop buying the magazines and watching the shows that feature their photos, and the paparazzi will go away. Easy peasy,” one person said.
Another commenter replied, “Scum of the earth.”
One user added, “They’re just filling a demand. I blame and judge those that consume the media they produce.”
9. Bathroom Attendants
One person said, “I don’t need somebody in there pulling paper towels out of the dispenser just to hand it to me and compel me to tip them.” The second one replied, “I never saw this until I was visiting Ireland a few years back, and man, was it annoying. It’s bad enough there’s a guy standing at the sinks watching you have a leak, but then he wants a euro or two for handing you a towel to dry your hands.”
Another commenter said, “They’re essentially bathroom security guards. They prevent people from doing drugs and having sex in the bathroom.”
10. Patent Trolls
One user said, “People that apply for Patents. And then just hold onto them forever with no intent of making the thing. And then when somebody does make the thing, ho-boy, you owe me money because I own the rights to that thing! It’s one of those weird ‘Do nothing and hope to eventually get a big payout’ jobs, like Domain Squatters.”
Another commenter stated, “There should be a law that makes the patent public domain if the owner doesn’t actually use it. It would probably accelerate the progress of humanity by a big factor.”
11. Shop Security
One person said, “Shop security—in most cases, they can’t legally do anything but just watch.”
Another user replied, “Depends on the type of security they invest in. Security guards who stand at the door all day in a uniform—yes you’re right, in most cases, they’re used as a deterrent. However, store detectives go undercover and try to blend in with other customers (in their own clothes, browsing stock and carrying a basket/trolley) so that they go unnoticed. Those people are allowed to tackle shoplifters and actually do something about it.”
One commenter said, “Security is used primarily for insurance and tax reasons. You have to show that your actively trying to prevent and deter theft and accidents.”
12. Car Dealerships
“Just let me buy a car from the factory. Your job is to get me to pay as much as possible. So useless and so annoying,” one person said.
“It’s an ancient law that mandated dealerships so you’d have a guaranteed mechanic to work on it. Obsolete since auto shops are a thing,” another user replied.
“Car salespeople, realtors, stock brokers. They are pure middlemen who produce nothing for society other than putting cash in their own pocket,” another added.
13. Health Insurance Operators
One person said, “While it’s a billion-dollar industry, health insurance. Literally, they exist to prevent you from cashing out on what you paid into. They have little to no medical knowledge, make everything more expensive, and exist solely as a useless middleman to make themselves rich.”
Another person shared, “Exactly. They just refused to cover my medication that they suggested several years ago to replace another medication that they did not want to cover at the time. This time they didn’t even offer a replacement, just refused to cover my meds without any explanation. It’s an absurd world where the insurance company makes decisions on my healthcare instead of my doctor.”
14. Homeopath
“I’ll do you one better, a few weeks I saw an ad for a homeopathic veterinary doctor. I feel bad for the animals unfortunate enough to find themselves as patients,” one person shared.
“Ugh. Literally the only possible benefit homeopathy could have due to the placebo effect. Pets ain’t even benefiting from that,” the second replied.
15. Reiki Healer
One person stated, “I knew a lady, very nice and caring, but off the wall hippie, who would charge people to hold her hand over them and transmit ‘healing energy.’ She also offered long-distance reiki where she promised to send you healing energy from her couch and would even set appointments to do just that.”
Another user added, “The funny thing is anyone can just open a Reiki clinic and call themselves an expert/shaman. If you go to school for it you’re just another victim of the grift.”
16. Middle Management
“Most middle management positions. Their job is literally to take things from above and send them below, and to have someone to shift blame to.” one person expressed.
“Don’t forget all the useless meetings that they organize. I bet redundant managers everywhere were really sweating for their jobs when everyone was WFH,” another one added.
Another commenter said, “You clearly have no idea what management does. Or worked on a team that was poorly managed.”
17. Hedge Fund Managers
One Reddit user said, “They produce no goods or services that actually make the world a better place. They are gamblers and leeches on society.”
Another user replied, “I’m convinced that half the time, even the news articles about stocks are [intentionally] misleading in order to get uninformed people to bet against the winning play.”
Original Reddit Thread here.
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Imagine the freedom to never worry about money. Some dopes think that means having so much of the green stuff that you could never spend it all. But bad money management has put many a Richie Rich in the poor house. No, I’m talking about the kind of freedom that comes from being in control of your dough. I’m talking about a budget.
I know budgets aren’t romantic. And for all those people who feel they’re entitled to buy whatever they want, whenever they want it, a budget can seem like kryptonite. But you can choose to continue to see a budget as a major pain in the butt, or you can choose to see it as a useful tool that helps you spend your money on the things that are most important to you.
By Any Other Name… Once upon a time to try and get away from the stigma the word “budget” carried, I took to calling them “spending plans.” But you know what? It wasn’t the word people hated — it was the discipline, the work, the focus required to pre-determine how much you were going to spend, and then spend no more.
Regardless of whether you call it a spending plan or a budget, the point of the exercise is to decide how you’ll spend your money. Having a plan gives you the freedom to enjoy yourself because you don’t have to worry about how you’ll pay the bill when it comes in. You’ll know, right from the start, whether you can afford the purchase you’re contemplating or not. And if you really, really want it, you can decide what you’re prepared to give up to get it, whatever it may be.
Note: This sort of decision-making is what conscious spending is all about. Your regular expenses are mapped by a budget. When something unusual comes up, you can make the decision: Do I pull money from the grocery or gas or garden budget? Or do I wait to save for the new thing?
Have you ever made a large cash withdrawal from a banking machine only to wonder a few days later where all the money went? Think for a moment: Where did the last $100 you spent go? Stop for a minute and write it down. Chances are you can account for most of it, but there may be five, ten, or twenty dollars missing from your list.
Why You Should Track Your Spending What does it cost you to live each month? Some people under-estimate their expenses because they forget the things that don’t occur every month.
Did you include your gym costs even though you pay them once a year?
How about your house or car insurance?
Did you include the cost of your haircuts, your contact lenses, or your vacation?
Do you pay someone to shovel your snow, clean your windows and carpets or do your taxes?
What about your vet bills, the flowers for your garden or patio, your best-friend’s birthday present?
Some people under-estimate their expenses because they actually don’t know how much they’re spending on things like take-out, clothes, and coffee. Over and over when I show folks how much money they’re spending on the non-essentials of life, they’re gob-smacked. Well, the only way to make a budget that will work is to know what you have been spending so you get some sense of what you’re going to have to change.
One of the best ways to gain a perspective on your spending habits is to keep a log of everything you spend, each time you do a transaction. The idea is to figure out where you’re spending all those dimes that seem to go missing each month. It’s also about learning more about yourself and where your place your priorities. This isn’t about shame, blame, or deprivation. You don’t have to change anything you don’t want to change. But you should at least know. With a spending log, you’ll have a clear picture of what you’re getting for your money.
When you do all your money management in your head, it’s very easy to forget things — sometimes important things — that will have an impact on your overall financial life. You’re always guessing how much you have left. And you shouldn’t really be surprised when your account is overdrawn. After all, if you don’t know how much you have, how can you know how much you can spend?
If you don’t believe you can find the time to maintain your budget — collecting receipts, entering details onto your budget, adding it all up and balancing it out — think about the time you have to spend solving the problems that arise from not taking care of the details. And think about all the money you waste on overdraft fees, interest costs, and ATM transactions. You’ll have to decide whether you’d rather live life peacefully, or continue waking to the specter of financial worry rattling his chains at the foot of your bed.
Editor’s note: TPG’s Erica Silverstein accepted a free trip from Oceania Cruises to attend the unveiling of Vista. The opinions expressed below are entirely hers and weren’t subject to review by the line.
“Is this a luxury cruise ship?” That was the question on everyone’s lips during the maiden sailing of Oceania Cruises’ Vista, the first new Allura-class vessel to debut for the upscale cruise brand.
We gawked at the beautifully designed public spaces, with their detail-oriented accents, eye-catching light fixtures and highly textured materials. (Yes, I petted the walls of the elevators and stroked every chair.) We luxuriated in enormous standard cabin bathrooms and sumptuous Tranquility Beds. We dined on exquisite freshly made pasta, perfectly cooked fish and decadent desserts. We ordered smoked, bubbled, herbed and ice-balled cocktails at the ship’s craft cocktail bar and took photos of each creative concoction.
Vista is clearly a ship for travelers who love to explore new destinations, prioritize fine dining and premium beverages and immerse themselves in chic surroundings. However, in the cruise space, this ship is clearly in the upscale category and not true luxury.
Then again, when you’re curled up on a circular day bed, drink in hand, on a resort-style pool deck in the Mediterranean, Vista might just provide all the luxury you need.
Overview of Vista
Vista debuted in May 2023, the first new ship for Oceania Cruises in a decade and the flagship of the line’s new Allura class. It carries 1,200 passengers in cabins and suites that all have either a true balcony or a French veranda (meaning you can open doors to the fresh air but can’t step outside).
The ship’s target demographic is well-off, mature couples who are looking for destination-focused itineraries on a ship with elevated dining. For a small, 67,000-ton ship, Vista wows with eight restaurants, plus a bakery and private dining rooms for wine-paired meals. It also stands out for its expanded Culinary Center, for cooking classes and demos, and Artist Loft, where passengers can get crafty under the tutelage of resident artists.
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Fans of the line will appreciate that Vista is modeled from sister ships Marina and Riviera, and the layout is strikingly similar.
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Vista is not an all-inclusive ship, but it’s more inclusive than lines such as Celebrity Cruises or Holland America. Its fares cover all dining (except for private, wine-paired dinners), fitness classes, nonalcoholic beverages and in-port shuttles. Its booking promotions may offer additional inclusions, like free Wi-Fi, airfare, excursions, beverage package or shipboard credit.
What I loved about Vista
Dining choice
Some people love to return again and again to their favorite restaurants; others prefer to try a new venue every time. I fall into the latter category, so I loved that I could eat at a different restaurant each night of my cruise on Vista.
I could get dolled up and go to a steakhouse or Italian restaurant, or I could play it casual and eat on the buffet’s outdoor terrace or at the pizzeria. I could enjoy a multi-course sit-down lunch or take my pick of eight burgers at the grill. Vista also had plenty of options for between-meal grazing – a quiche from the Bakery, a scone at Horizons’ afternoon tea, or a cookie from the Concierge Lounge.
Not only did Vista’s large selection of eateries keep my meals interesting, but there wasn’t a bad option in the bunch. Sure, sometimes I didn’t order the right dish, but I enjoyed every meal I ate on board.
Design
Vista will wow you with its gorgeous looks from the moment you step on board. The atrium gives a knockout first impression with its stunning floor-to-ceiling sculpture with a changing light display.
The bold center archway of the Grand Dining Room will immediately catch your eye, as will the ceiling design of the intimate Privee dining room. Each specialty restaurant has been designed with care, from the brick oven-inspired ceilings of Ember to the pagoda-style floor lamps in Red Ginger.
The noteworthy Grand Lounge sports geometric chandeliers and glass shelves of vases and glass sculptures, while the faux wood paneling on the pool deck sets it apart from any cruise ship Lido you’ve ever seen. The glam settings make you feel like you’re a movie star and add to the decadent feeling of being on vacation.
Cocktails and mixology program
The new mixology program on Vista is one of its standout features. I happily ordered cocktail after craft cocktail at the Founders Bar in the name of research, trying drinks with smoke bubbles on top, frozen fruit balls in their center and unique ingredients (like tea) in their centers. The concept turns your standard pre-dinner drink into a playful and exciting event. It also makes a ship carrying mainly retirees feel hip and trendy.
Vista also carries a line of nonalcoholic “liquors” to make zero-proof cocktails that taste like the real deal, as well as nonalcoholic beer. It’s a fabulous option for sober cruisers or travelers who need to rest their livers after a lively evening. Unfortunately, not all bars carry nonalcoholic cocktails. On my cruise, I found them on the menu at the new Aquamar restaurant and Horizons observation lounge.
What I didn’t love about Vista
Nightlife
I failed to find anything serious to critique about Vista, so what I didn’t love about the ship is more about my personality than any real failing of the cruise line.
Evenings on Vista do not offer a variety of pursuits. You can go to a bar, with or without music. You can try your luck at the casino. You can attend the one show each evening, but only if your dinner time allows for it. That’s pretty much it.
My cruise did not offer karaoke night, evening trivia and games, or a pool deck party. I missed the two special-guest acts, a pianist and a guitarist, and the song-and-dance performances by the onboard cast failed to impress. The ship didn’t offer any secondary shows at night — no comedians or musical acts you came to listen to and not talk over.
To be fair, small-ship upscale cruising isn’t about nightlife, and most travelers on Oceania are perfectly content with a long dinner, an evening dancing or drinking in Horizons and an early bedtime. The library does have some board games you can borrow, so consider that as an alternative activity.
Service
One should never judge a ship’s service based on its first sailings when the crew is still getting used to each other and the layout and procedures of a new ship. I mention service solely to answer the question of why Vista isn’t considered a luxury ship.
In terms of hardware, Vista is one fine ship, which rivals the vessels belonging to luxury lines like Silversea Cruises and Seabourn, even nipping at the heels of over-the-top sister line Regent Seven Seas Cruises. It’s in the “software,” so to speak, where the line relegates itself to the upscale sector. And that’s fine.
In addition to not offering truly all-inclusive fares, Vista doesn’t offer the personal, often fawning service you find on true luxury lines. I barely met my room steward. No one offered to carry my plate at the buffet. The chefs weren’t offering to make me dishes off-menu, and on occasion, I had to work to flag down a waiter to bring me a drink. Personally, I’m fine with this level of service, but it does not put Vista in competition with ultra-luxury ships.
The few service issues will improve over time. But Vista, by nature, will never offer the crew-to-guest ratio or over-the-top service levels you’d expect to find on a more expensive cruise line.
Vista cabins and suites
Vista has only eight major cabin and suite types, making cabin selection a relatively straightforward process. Its three main non-suite cabin types – French Veranda, Veranda and Concierge Level staterooms – have identical interior layouts, so you’re really only choosing between perks and exterior space.
New and noteworthy on Vista are Oceania’s first dedicated solo cabins, 270-square-foot balcony cabins with a twin bed, smaller bathroom and slightly narrower design than a regular veranda room. They’re Concierge Level rooms, so solo travelers get extra benefits, such as access to the Concierge Lounge and Aquamar Spa Terrace.
My cabin was a regular Concierge Level room with a private veranda. At 291 square feet, it was the same size as a Veranda room, but with a slightly nicer interior design. (French Veranda rooms are identical to Veranda rooms in design, but where the Veranda cabins have a private balcony, French Veranda rooms have floor-to-ceiling glass doors that open to a railing; you can get fresh air but you can’t step out.)
I was very happy in my Concierge Level room on Vista. Oceania’s Tranquility Beds are some of the best in the business, and I loved falling asleep between a snuggly duvet and 1,000-thread-count sheets. Even better, the bed is flanked by three-drawer nightstands, 100V plugs and USB ports and reading lights.
Storage is decent with a two-door closet, two deep drawers in the desk, two coat hooks on the wall and a few additional shelves. It was the perfect amount of space for me, but I could see how a couple might fight over the drawer space.
The room had a mostly forgettable love seat, other than it looked nice and pulled out into an extra bed. The oval marble table was a perfect size for room service breakfast.
The highlight of the room, in my opinion, was the spacious, marble-tiled bathroom. Here, there was storage in spades: two glass shelves in the large shower, one large drawer and shelf space in the vanity and a corner unit with four deep drawers and three shelves in a mirrored cabinet. The shower had a rain head and a wand on an adjustable mount. The large no-fog mirror lit up at the touch of a button, perfect for putting on makeup.
I also appreciated the comfortable, padded balcony furniture. Standard balconies on Vista come with two upright chairs and a round drinks table, but the cushions made the seating comfier than the mesh-and-metal versions you find on many big-ship cruise lines.
Other thoughtful touches in the room include an electronic thermometer and do not disturb sign touchpad, quiet-close drawers, wooden hangers and carafes of Vero water, plus reusable water bottles to take on tour (to reduce single-use plastic water bottles). The mini fridge was stocked with soft drinks, though my cabin attendant didn’t seem to notice that I was drinking exclusively club soda. You’ll also find the requisite safe and hair dryer (neither of which I used), an umbrella and a shoehorn.
Concierge Level rooms come with extra perks, most of which are useful but not necessary. You get access to the lovely Aquamar Spa Terrace, with its hot tubs, day beds and thalassotherapy pool. You also get access to the Concierge Lounge on Deck 9; I don’t know why you’d want to watch TV in this windowless lounge, but I appreciated the 24/7 drinks and snacks and access to a concierge.
Other amenities include a welcome bottle of Champagne, pashmina-style cashmere lap blankets for use in your cabin and a tote bag. Perks include priority embarkation, lunch and dinner room service from the Grand Dining Room menu (I totally missed this one), priority specialty restaurant reservations, and complimentary laundry (up to three bags), pressing (on embarkation day) and shoeshine service.
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Penthouse Suite on Vista. ERICA SILVERSTEIN/THE POINTS GUY
For those with an urge to splurge, Oceania has four additional suite categories, each with butler service and access to an Executive Lounge. The Penthouse Suites are simply an expanded version of the balcony rooms, with additional closet and seating areas. The Oceania Suites have a full living and dining room, a separate guest or TV room, large balcony, guest bathroom and marble-clad master bath and dressing area. They are mostly found on Deck 12, but two on Deck 11 aft have wraparound corner balconies.
The eight Vista Suites, which I didn’t see, are even bigger than the Oceania Suites and located at the front of the ship, so they have extra-long wraparound balconies. The three Owner’s Suites span the entire aft width of the ship, with two balconies, and are designed by Ralph Lauren Home. A light-filled grand foyer opens onto the living, dining and bar area on one side and the enormous master bedroom with king-sized bed, walk-in closet and generous bathroom with soaking tub and ocean-view shower.
Vista restaurants and bars
Oceania prides itself on being a foodie cruise line, and Vista carries on the line’s tradition with six major dining venues included in the cruise fare, over-the-top extra-fee wine-paired private dinners and a new mixology program that goes above and beyond what its competitors are offering.
It’s hard not to nitpick a line that brags it has “the finest cuisine at sea” (and has even trademarked that tagline). Each meal may not be the best you’ve ever had on a cruise ship, but each meal you have will be solid, with plenty of choice of both where to dine and what to select from the menu. Vista is certainly a ship foodies will appreciate.
Restaurants
I made a point to try every restaurant on board during my weeklong cruise, and it actually took some scheduling to make it happen. It’s a good thing most of Vista’s sailings are 10 days or longer, so you have ample time to sample all the dining venues and even make repeat visits to your favorites.
You are allowed to make at least one advance reservation for each of Vista’s four specialty restaurants — possibly more depending on the length of the cruise and the type of cabin or suite you book. Once on board, you can ask if there’s walk-in availability for additional meals.
The Grand Dining Room is perhaps the most gorgeous main restaurant I’ve ever seen on a cruise ship. The design, with white archways in the center of the room, is also functional; it separates the giant venue into nooks, so it doesn’t have that hotel ballroom feel.
At breakfast, you can order everything from grilled lamb chops and broiled kippers to omelets, pancakes and lighter fare, such as yogurt parfaits. The highlight of the lunch menu is the “Taste of the World” sampler platter themed around a different country each day.
The dinner menu makes three suggestions for themed meals: selections from Jacques Pepin’s namesake French restaurant on Vista’s sister ships, global cuisine and Aquamar Vitality cuisine (ie lighter dishes). Don’t miss the creative Humphry Slocombe ice cream for dessert, with flavors like Elvis the Fat Years and Harvey Milk & Honey Graham.
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Terrace Cafe on Oceania’s Vista. ERICA SILVERSTEIN/THE POINTS GUY
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The Terrace Café is Vista’s buffet venue with indoor and outdoor seating. The stunning wall mosaics set the tone for the sophisticated spread you can sample here. Think daily sushi, an array of fine cheeses, made-to-order omelets, pasta and steaks and premium ice cream (including one Humphry Slocombe flavor at lunch and dinner). The vegetarian options weren’t always the best at the Terrace Café, though it often had gluten-free pasta.
On either side of the Terrace Café are several new and returning casual dining venues that should not be overlooked.
Waves Grill has always been one of my favorite grill venues at sea. Midday, it serves sandwiches, hot dogs, grilled entrees (mahi mahi, cajun chicken) and a huge selection of burgers, including Wagyu, veggie and salmon, in addition to the classic cheeseburger.
In the morning, it offers a downsized breakfast buffet with made-to-order omelets. At night, it transforms into a pizzeria with Italian-style pizza, a burrata menu (do not miss the burrata and tartufo dish) and a sinful Nutella pizza dessert. Pro tip: You can place an order at Waves and ask for your dish to be delivered to your table at the Terrace Café, so you don’t have to choose between the options.
Past Oceania cruisers might wonder where Waves’ famous smoothies and power bowls got to. The answer is Vista’s new “healthy” dining venue, Aquamar, set up on the opposite side of the Terrace Café from the Waves Grill.
In the morning, don’t miss Aquamar’s selection of avocado toast or its freshly made juices, unusual lattes and smoothies. (You haven’t lived until you’ve spiked your morning OJ with turmeric and cayenne pepper.) Energy bowls, banana pancakes and omelets round out the breakfast menu.
The lunch menu at Aquamar is vast. You can order poke-style bowls or compose your own, do a breakfast repeat with omelets and avocado toast, or order sandwiches from around the world, including tuna tacos, falafel pita, a Mexican chicken wrap or an Impossible burger. Wash it all down with a nonalcoholic cocktail that will have you convinced you’re drinking the real thing.
All the previously mentioned restaurants allow you to dine at will, but Vista has four reservations-required dinner spots that are the stars of the show. Three return from sister ships Marina and Riviera, while one is new, replacing French restaurant Jacques.
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Ember restaurant on Oceania’s Vista. ERICA SILVERSTEIN/THE POINTS GUY
The new entrant to Oceania’s food scene is Ember, serving inventive American fare. Though the venue is one of Vista’s signature restaurants, it has a more casual vibe than the others, and meals here don’t take quite as long. Consensus on my sailing is the standout dishes are the spinach and artichoke dip, lobster mac and cheese (with an actual hunk of lobster-in-the-shell on top) and the triple chocolate brownie sundae.
On the opposite end of the spectrum is Polo Grill, Vista’s fanciest restaurant, where dinners can take hours. It’s a classic steakhouse in a dimly lit setting with an enormous menu where protein is the star.
While it was perhaps not my favorite dining venue on board, the salmon I ordered was cooked perfectly, so moist and tender that I raved about it for the rest of the cruise. Folks at my table ordered everything from filet mignon to a whole Maine lobster, and everyone was satisfied with their choices.
Also, you may be understandably tempted to order the Polo Quartet of four desserts to finish your meal. I will save you the trouble by telling you the key lime pie is hands down the best of the bunch, and you should order the full-size version and skip the tasting plate.
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Polo Grill on Oceania’s Vista. ERICA SILVERSTEIN/THE POINTS GUY
Toscana is Oceania’s long-standing Italian restaurant, but on Vista, it’s newly enhanced with dishes created by the ship’s godmother, Italian food star Giada De Laurentiis. If you enjoy veal, this is your spot; nearly half of the secondi menu consists of veal dishes (you can also order lamb and roast suckling pig here). I tried Giada’s branzino and wasn’t wowed.
Whatever you order, make sure to order at least one pasta dish with Toscana’s incredible ship-made pasta. You can’t go wrong with Giada’s lemon spaghetti or the pesto gnocchi. If you need to skip dessert at one specialty restaurant, this is where I’d pass … unless you are a die-hard tiramisu fan.
The final specialty restaurant is Red Ginger, a pan-Asian dining experience. Perhaps it’s because I love Asian food, but I have a hard time choosing what to eat at Red Ginger because everything looks so good. You could make a meal on appetizers alone.
To start, try the sushi, duck and watermelon salad or summer rolls. For your main, consider the miso-glazed sea bass, lobster pad thai, bulgogi ribeye steak or red curry chicken. You might think dessert is a non-starter, but the caramel tapioca was tasty, and the soft ice cream with Japanese togarashi is a fun mix of sweet and spicy.
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Red Ginger on Oceania’s Vista. ERICA SILVERSTEIN/THE POINTS GUY
Vista also offers multiple options for intimate or private wine-pairing lunches and dinners on board. They include a wine-pairing lunch at Ember and wine-themed dinners in private dining rooms attached to Toscana and Polo Grill. Hidden between those two restaurants is Privee, another intimate dining room where two special dinners are held: Odyssey (described as a “gustatory journey for the senses”) and the Dom Perignon Experience that pairs special Champagnes with equally special dishes.
But the food options don’t end with the restaurants. The Bakery by Baristas was a popular spot for daily beignets, quiches and pastries. Afternoon tea in Horizons is an Oceania specialty, with your choice of Twinings tea, scones with jam and clotted cream, tea sandwiches and cakes and petits fours all wheeled around in glass carts by formally dressed waiters.
Bars
Vista’s bars are hopping before and after dinner because there’s not much else to do on board at night.
The Martini Bar is the most happening lounge, located near the Grand Dining Room, several specialty restaurants and the casino. A pianist performs here on and off throughout the evening. You can find all your standard mixed drinks here, as well as a special martini menu. At peak times, you might not be able to find a seat.
On the other side of the casino is the Founders Bar, a new concept for Oceania, dedicated to creative craft cocktails. If you like your drinks topped with smoke bubbles, frozen balls of fruit or sprigs of herb or dried fruit slices, this is your spot. Seating is limited, but you can request your drink be delivered around the corner to the Grand Lounge, a stunning scenery area where a classical string quartet plays in the evening.
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Founder Bars on Oceania’s Vista. ERICA SILVERSTEIN/THE POINTS GUY
Be careful — it’s so fun trying out all the crazy concoctions that you might bust your drink budget if you haven’t upgraded to the premium beverage package.
Horizons is the observation lounge at the top of the ship, looking forward. We heard rave reviews of the live band here and some choice words about the resident DJ, but if you want to watch the sunset or get your groove on after deck, Horizons is the bar for you.
Baristas is the coffee bar by day and aperitif bar by night. Get your daytime caffeine fix with Illy espresso, macchiatos, cremas and more, including coffees spiked with booze. After 6 p.m., you’ll find an Italian-influenced list of aperitifs and digestifs (amaretto, Campari, limoncello), as well as wines and cocktails (such as an Aperol spritz or negroni).
The pool bar serves all the daiquiris and coladas you can drink while lounging on Vista’s gorgeous, resort-style pool deck. You can also order drinks at any of the restaurants. Aquamar has a lovely menu of nonalcoholic cocktails, fresh juices, lattes and smoothies.
Vista is also introducing new immersive cocktail experiences for the cruise line, which unfortunately had not yet debuted on my sailing. These will include a customizable Bubbly Bar in Baristas, a Bloody Mary Bar at lunch in the Terrace Café, a Macallan whisky and chocolate pairing, and cocktail-making seminars pairing Brugal 1888 rum with ice cream or tea.
Vista activities and shows
An Oceania cruise is a destination-focused trip, so onboard activities are kept to a minimum. You’ll find trivia contests, spa seminars, casino tournaments and technology classes at the LYNC Digital Center, such as travel photography and photo editing for social media.
Where Oceania excels in onboard activities are with cooking classes and demos in the Culinary Center and art classes at the Artist Loft. Oceania brings on real chefs and working artists to lead the workshops. Sign up as soon as you get on board because these popular classes fill up quickly.
I tried a “drip technique” painting class where we decorated glass plates, and it was a far cry from the watercolor or needlepoint classes you might find on other ships. The two-part class explored a unique technique, and even though I’m not experienced in crafting and my plate looked pretty bad after the first class, the artist knew what he was doing, and my final product was surprisingly good. It’s also a fun way to socialize with other passengers and the artists in residence.
Vista’s culinary center is three times larger than the versions found on sister ships Marina and Riviera. In addition to the test kitchen with 24 individual cooking stations, a second room can be arranged for lectures or even dinners. Classes are themed, often related to the ship’s destination, and yes, you can eat what you cook. They do cost extra; fees start at $79.
On a warm, sunny day, Oceania’s gorgeous resort-style pool deck is the place to be with padded loungers and day beds, a main pool with a wading area around it and a couple of hot tubs. Sporty types should head to the ship’s topmost half decks for an outdoor running track, shuffleboard, croquet/bocce, pickleball, mini-golf and a golf-driving cage.
The Aquamar Spa on Deck 15 offers a barber shop, salon, fitness center with aerobics studio and sauna and steam rooms in the men’s and women’s locker rooms. Concierge Level and suite guests receive complimentary access to the Aquamar Spa Terrace at the front of the ship, with two hot tubs and a thalassotherapy pool.
If it’s cool and rainy, consider decamping to the nook- and book-filled library, where you can borrow games, settle in with your laptop or peruse guidebooks. Baristas is right around the corner. The ship also has the requisite shops selling fine jewelry and logo items.
In the evenings, you can find a singer-pianist in Martinis, a string quartet in the Grand Lounge and a band followed by a DJ in Horizons. I heard great things about Vista’s Music Station Band, but somehow I was always eating dinner when they were performing.
Each night, there’s a show in the Vista Lounge, either a guest performer or a typical cruise ship song and dance show by the onboard performers. One of the new shows on Vista was choreographed by Britt Stewart, a professional dancer who’s worked with “Dancing with the Stars.”
Vista itineraries and pricing
Vista will spend its summers in the Mediterranean and winters in the Caribbean. In fall 2023, the ship will also visit Canada and New England and transit the Panama Canal twice. Cruises range in length from seven to 90 days, but most are one to three weeks in length.
Cruise-only prices start from $1,799 for a French Veranda cabin or $2,049 for the lowest-category balcony room on a seven-night Caribbean cruise. Alternatively, you can choose Oceania’s more inclusive and expensive OLife fares; these start from $2,599 for the French Veranda cabin or $2,849 for a regular balcony room.
The current OLife promotion runs through June 30 and includes round-trip airfare and transfers, plus your choice of four shore excursions, a beverage package or $400 onboard credit per cabin. Starting in July, the line will offer a set of included perks, without the need to choose, but the actual inclusions may change during promotional periods.
What to know before you go
Required documents
The travel documents you need for your Vista cruise are determined by your itinerary and homeports. For most cruises, you will need a passport that is valid for six months after your trip ends. For round-trip sailings out of U.S. homeports, a birth certificate and government photo ID will suffice. It’s up to each passenger to determine if any of the ports of call require additional visas.
When you finish checking in online for your cruise, Oceania will email you a boarding pass that you should print out and bring with you to the terminal.
Gratuities
Crew gratuities are added to your onboard bill and amount to $18 per person, per day, in Concierge-class rooms and below, or $23 per person, per day, in upper-level suites. Gratuities can be prepaid. You are always welcome to tip above the auto-gratuity for exceptional service. All tour guides should be tipped in cash at the end of a tour.
A 20% gratuity is added to onboard bar and spa bills.
Wi-Fi
Vista is one of the first Oceania cruise ships to use Starlink high-speed internet. I can attest to the speed of Oceania’s premium plan after attending a 90-minute Zoom meeting with only the slightest of lag.
Every cabin comes with one free Wi-Fi login (for one device at a time), or you can pay to add additional devices or for the premium plan that accommodates music and video streaming.
Carry-on drinks policy
Passengers can bring up to six bottles of wine per cabin for consumption in their room. If you wish to drink your own wine in a restaurant or public area of the ship, you will need to pay a $25 per bottle corkage fee.
Smoking policy
Vista offers designated areas on the Deck 12 pool deck (forward, starboard corner) and in the smoking lounge on Deck 14 forward, outside Horizons. The latter is a gorgeous space with forest-green walls, but it is entirely indoors. This policy applies to e-cigarettes, pipes and cigars, in addition to regular cigarettes.
Smoking is forbidden everywhere else on board, including in cabins and on private balconies. Passengers who are caught in violation of the smoking policy will be disembarked at the next port of call and may also be required to pay additional fees to cover costs for cleaning or replacing damaged furniture or decking.
Laundry
Vista has complimentary self-service launderettes on decks 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. Each is outfitted with a detergent dispenser, washers and dryers, an ironing board and a seating area with a TV if you choose to wait for your load to finish. You can walk away while your load runs, but set a timer because folks will remove your clothes if you don’t pick them up in a timely fashion.
Alternatively, you can pay to send out your clothes to have them washed and/or pressed.
Electrical outlets
Vista’s cabins and suites offer electrical outlets and USB ports on both sides of the bed and by the desk. You’ll find both U.S. 110V and European 220V outlets. Americans may want to bring an adapter for charging devices in public rooms where the outlets are all European-style.
Currency
The onboard currency is the U.S. dollar. The reception desk can change dollars for the local currency.
Drinking age
You must be 21+ to drink alcohol onboard all Oceania cruises. When the ship is in international waters, young adults ages 18 to 20 may purchase and drink beer or wine (as well as the House Select beverage package).
Dress code
Oceania does not have a complicated dress code with specific attire required on certain evenings. Instead, the line suggests “elegant casual resort wear” for evenings and requests that guests do not wear casual jeans, shorts, T-shirts, baseball caps, casual sandals or sneakers in the restaurants after 6 p.m.
For casual dining, choose the Pizzeria or Terrace Café for your evening meal. Shorts and baseball caps are allowed; athletic wear is not.
Elegant casual resort wear translates into date-night dresses (but not full-on cocktail attire), skirts and blouses or dressy pants and tops for women, and collared shirts and slacks for men. Jackets and ties are not required.
During the day, casual attire is fine, but please don’t wear swimwear, bathrobes or pajamas in public areas. You’ll need footwear if you leave the pool deck.
Bottom line
Vista is an elegant mid-size cruise ship that’s the perfect home base for travelers who appreciate dining variety, enjoy interesting cocktails and fine wines and wish to explore the Mediterranean and the Caribbean.
Cabins and suites are thoughtfully designed, though, for longer voyages, you might need to take advantage of onboard launderettes as cabin storage might be tight.
Vista offers a high-end experience on a beautifully designed ship, but you’ll have a choice in how you spend your vacation budget rather than paying upfront for all-inclusive fares.
Save more, spend smarter, and make your money go further
We don’t want to get all mushy or anything, but you’re one-of-a-kind! And that means you have unique wants and needs.
There are a lot of mobile apps out there focusing on personalization, and some do a better job than others.
We pulled together seven of our favorites – each one will help you customize a different facet of your daily life.
Here they are!
Sworkit can help you get fit, regardless of how much time you have or where you are.
After downloading the app, you can choose what type of training you’re after (strength, cardio, yoga), your workout (full body, core, lower body) and the amount of time you have (anywhere from 5 to 60 minutes).
That’s it! Sworkit will curate a set of exercises just for you.
Available in: iTunes, Google Play, Amazon Apps
The latest version of BrightNest takes home customization to a new level with the Interactive Home Quiz.
The app serves up a series of simple “yes or no” questions about your home and delivers a personalized tip based on each response.
BrightNest also allows you to create custom to-dos and set recurring reminders, so whether you want to reorganize your tool shed twice a year or clean your fish tank once a week, BrightNest will help you get it done.
Available in: iTunes
Mint helps you understand exactly where your money is going.
Once securely synced with your bank accounts, Mint creates a customized budget based on personal spending.
Then, the app gives you the freedom to choose your own budget limits.
Whether you need to adjust your spending to include a new hobby (hello, new pottery wheel) or simply track your meals out, Mint makes it easy.
Available in: iTunes, Google Play, Amazon Apps, Windows Store
The mySkin app demystifies skincare by creating a personalized routine based on your skin.
When you sign up for mySkin, you’re prompted to answer questions about your skin type (dry or oily), skin color, hair color and past skin problems (like acne, blackheads or scars).
The app then serves up a skincare routine that’s right for you and recommends products.
Available in: iTunes, Windows Store
When you sign up for Ness, they’ll prompt you to select the types of foods you like and the types you hate.
After that, Ness will serve up restaurant recommendations, and allow you to rate places you’ve already tried.
Every time you rate a place you’ve eaten (it’s kind of like Netflix for restaurants), their recommendations for you will improve.
Available in:iTunes
Do you have trouble remembering people’s names?
What about doing quick math in your head or switching between different tasks?
Lumosity can help you get better at each of these things (or all three!).
When you create an account, Lumosity prompts you to select the different aspects of your brain that you’d like to train.
Then, they send you a customized workout routine every day. You can set training reminders at a time that works for you.
Available in: iTunes
Love to shop but hate the mall?
Keep personalizes the shopping experience by bringing styles you’ll actually wear into one app.
To customize your experience, choose brands, stores and looks that fit your personal style.
Then, under the MyFeed tab, you’ll see curated shoes, bags, clothes and home items for sale.
When you scroll over an item you like, you can “Buy” or “Keep,” making sure you never miss a deal.
Available in: iTunes, Google Play
BrightNest is a free site that provides tools and tips to homeowners to help them save money, get organized and keep their homes in great shape. Sign up for a free BrightNest account today!
Save more, spend smarter, and make your money go further
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The holidays are about six months away. Why wait until the last minute to shop? Answer: You shouldn’t. And you won’t have to if you have a decently stocked gift closet. Some people I know keep their eyes open starting on Dec. 26 and are finished by mid-summer.
It’s more than just the December holidays, though. A small selection of “evergreen” gifts (non-perishable, non-trendy) means you’re prepared for any birthday, anniversary or new baby that comes along.
Building your gift closet doesn’t have to cost much. I always trot out the example of the puzzle depicting the Sistine Chapel ceiling, the perfect gift for a jigsaw-loving relative. Still shrink-wrapped when I found it on half-price day at a thrift shop, it set me back a whopping 35 cents.
If you wait until the last minute, you’re likely to spend more. On the afternoon of the baby shower, you might be tempted to stop at the first store you see and grab the item that’s closest to the door. Compare that with, say, the 89-cent newborn outfit that I bought at a post-holiday clearance sale.
(It wasn’t junk, either, but made by Carter’s. And it was cute as hell. I made the girl-noise when I saw it.)
Incidentally, it doesn’t really have to be a closet. I keep my stash in a cedar chest that I bought for $15 at a garage sale. Not only are my gifts cheap, they’re guaranteed moth-free! Here are some ways to build an evergreen gift stash without breaking the bank.
Clearance tables. Both post-holiday and everyday “last chance” sales can yield amazing finds. In late December the department stores want to get rid of unsold hat-and-scarf sets, gloves, slippers and “executive” gifts (e.g., day minders or business card holders) — and all of these can be held until next year’s Christmas or this year’s Father’s Day. Classic toys (stuffed animals, puzzles, books) can be had for a song if you’re patient enough to wait until Target or Walgreens really wants to get rid of them. (I’ve seen discounts as deep as 90%.) Remember that clearance sales happen in a lot of places: hardware stores, craft shops, drugstores, souvenir stands, supermarkets, office-supply stores.
Tip: If you see a gift set (foodies, spa items) wrapped in a Christmas-y way, break it down and repackage the elements for a January birthday or for Valentine’s Day.
Deal sites. Dealnews, Eversave, My Bargain Buddy and other money-saving sites can be dangerous if you’re a compulsive buyer. Pick your spots, though, and you might see a lovely package of fancy teas that would be perfect for your sister, or a swell set of socket wrenches that would be perfect for your other sister. You’ll spend relatively little to get them, especially if you get site credits for having referred other members.
Social commerce sites. Whether you’re buying a gift item or a discounted gift certificate you can use to buy a gift yourself, Groupon et al. can really stretch your buying dollars. Recently I saw a $20 Old Navy gift certificate for only $10, which could translate into shorts, tank tops or other items (especially if you wait for clearance sales). You could also give the certificate itself, if it has a decently distant expiration date — a massage or a spa day would be a great gift for a babysitter, housecleaner or teacher. And a middle-school-aged niece or nephew might love to get $20 worth of buying power at Old Navy.
Thrift shops. It’s amazing what you can find in the secondhand store — and as noted above, some of it has never been opened. Extra frugal points if your finds are “tag color of the day” specials or found during half-off sales.
Note: GRS readers discussed at great length whether it’s okay to give thrift-store gifts. If this really makes you uncomfortable, don’t do it. But here’s my advice: Get over yourself. Nobody has to know where you bought the present unless you choose to tell them.
Yard sales. We’re heading into the prime garage-sale season. I’ve found beautiful books, stationery and card sets, candles, book-and-toy combos, journals and other items — all new or seemingly unused — that became birthday or Christmas gifts. None of them cost more than $1.
Tip: Toward the end of the day, go back to the yard sale — they might be ready to haggle.
Rummage sales. The ones held indoors are even better than garage sales, because you’re not sweating in 95-degree heat while you shop.
Social media giveaways/contests. Companies will do anything to get noticed — including hand out free clothes, books, sporting equipment, jewelry, TVs, computers or big bundles of cash. (Believe it or not, I once saw a contest whose prize was a year’s worth of health insurance.) To find such contests, try using Twitter hash-tag searches (“#giveaway” or “#freebie”) or checking a Facebook app called “Wildfire.” Or do it the easy way: Find yourself a good freebie blogger and watch for the giveaways you really want.
Tip: Free software such as Roboform will fill in contact info automatically, making your entries more efficient. Also: Google “second-chance drawing” — contest junkies, aka “sweepers,” know that the odds are much better than in the initial drawing.
Take online surveys. You have to be choosy, since some companies ask for a lot and give back relatively little. But some people make a decent little side income answering questions. Depending on the site, you can redeem points for physical prizes, gift cards or even cash. I’ve had a lot of luck with Clear Voice Surveys and Valued Opinions, through which I’ve obtained dozens of Amazon gift cards in the past few years. (These days I don’t keep them, though; I give them away on my website.)
Rewards programs. Got a credit card that gives points? Cash some in for gift cards you can use to shop or that you can give outright. Or join a rewards program like Swagbucks or MyPoints, which let you earn gift cards, prepaid debit cards and other items. I’m particularly fond of Swagbucks, myself; right now I’m squirreling away Amazon gift cards until Black Friday. I’ve also given Christmas gifts obtained through My Coke Rewards: magazine subscriptions, a NASCAR hat, a set of barbecue tools, T-shirts, movie tickets.
Tip: Ask family or friends to save My Coke Reward points for you. Check the recycle bins at work, or outside your apartment house, too.
Gift swaps. Got a gift you don’t want? So do a lot of people. Invite family and friends to bring over items, then trade to your hearts’ content. Try not to be sad, though, if someone brings a package of teas or socket-wrench set that look awfully familiar.
Here on Making Sense of Cents, I talk a lot about different ways to make money on the side and the many great side hustle ideas. I do this because I truly believe that making money on the side can change a person’s life.
After all, learning about different ways to make money on the side changed my life.
My main side hustle a few years ago mainly consisted of me blogging here on Making Sense of Cents. Then, it quickly grew, my income matched and then exceeded my day job income, and I actually made the decision to leave my day job in order to pursue my side hustle full-time.
As you can probably tell, starting a side hustle significantly improved my life and it’s something I will ALWAYS be extremely happy about. My side hustle income allowed me to pay off my debt quickly, leave the job I disliked, start working towards my passion, and travel extensively.
Taking part in the many different ways to make money on the side can allow you to:
Pay off your debt;
Save for things such as a vacation;
Stop living paycheck to paycheck;
Reach retirement sooner;
Not feel as stuck at your job;
Become more diversified.
Many others believe in the amazing power of side hustle income as well. I recently interviewed many side hustlers, freelancers, business owners, and more about the different ways they’ve made money on the side and compiled them into one extremely informative blog post to help all of you. Plus, they share their tips on how to manage side jobs better so that you can make money on the side while not going crazy.
Below are over 40 different side hustle ideas and tips from the experts. There are many different ways to make money on the side and I’m sure you’ll find one below.
Related articles on side hustle ideas:
Here are over 40 ways to make money on the side:
Start a blog.
Blogging is how I make a living and just a few years ago I never thought it would be possible. I now make a great living online, I travel full-time, and I enjoy the work I do.
I made over $300,000 last year by blogging and will make more than that in 2016 (I’m hoping to double my income this year).
There are many ways to make money on the side and one of the top ways I recommend is to start a blog. You can create your own blog here with my easy-to-use tutorial. You can start your blog for as low as $3.49 per month plus you get a free domain if you sign-up through my tutorial.
Become a Brand Ambassador.
“A side hustle that I absolutely love is being a Brand Ambassador. A Brand Ambassador quite simply shares talking points and usually free swag with the public in order to build brand awareness. Brand Ambassadors typically work on the weekends at different events so the trick is to manage family time if you have a family. For more information on how to become a brand ambassador check out the following post: How To Become a Brand Ambassador.” – Michelle Jackson
“Love meeting new people? Many cities have active brand ambassador Facebook groups that are constantly looking for product demonstrators, trade show spokespeople, tour managers, and more! And brand ambassadors can expect to earn $15-20 per hour.” – Kate Dore
Related: Become A Brand Ambassador And Make Extra Money
Write a book.
“Self-publish a book on Amazon that focuses on a topic at the intersection of 3 things: 1. your passion; 2. your expertise; 3. a need in the marketplace How much a person could make would be based on how much they want to charge for the book, but I would say you could make anywhere from $50 – $300 / month, depending on your book content / audience.” – John Lee Dumas
“Anyone can be a self-published author now and it is one of my favorite side hustles. Whether you want to share tips on how to do something or want to write a fictional story, any topic can be published. How much you make depends a lot on how much competition there is for the same type of book. I make between $300 and $500 a month for a crowdfunding book I wrote last year while my investing books make between $100 and $250 a month. The best thing is that, once published, they will keep making money year after year.” – Joseph Hogue
“Publish a book. It is easier than it used to be. You can self publish or if you have a platform such as a blog with associated social media you can pitch to publishers and generate interest there. Publishing a book increases credibility and leads to other opportunities such as speaking, course, freelance writing, judging, presenting awards, launching events and a lot of media exposure. Depending on how you do, what niche it is, how well you market it you can make anywhere from nothing right through to millions. Personally, getting asked to publish a book back in 2010 changed everything and was a pivotal turning point for me. Quite a few friends of mine earn a few hundred thousand a year from their books and associated content, others a couple of million. Most authors only make a few thousand if they are lucky though. It is all in how you market and how much of a following/community or tribe you have.” – Kylie Travers
Become a virtual assistant.
There are many ways to make money on the side online, and one of them is by becoming a virtual assistant.
“My favorite way for someone to make extra money from home (and what I would personally do if I needed extra money FAST is to be a virtual assistant. Specifically, I would be a VA to bloggers. There are so many ways to do this, including assistant with social media, creating images, writing content, etc. There are lots of Facebook groups set up specifically for people to sell content to bloggers. Really your income is only limited to the time you want to invest in it. Some VAs charge per hour and some charge per project/post. With a few hours per day, I’d say you could easily make $50-$100 extra per day.” – Lena Gott
“I’ve made most of my money by working as a VA and blog manager for busy blog owners. I fit my side hustle in alongside my full-time job by reminding myself that I was making a temporary sacrifice of sleep and free time in order to build my business to the point I could quit my job. I now make over $5,000/month online with my business.” – Kayla Sloan
A virtual assistant helps a business run more smoothly. You can be contracted for one project (such as collecting data for research) or it can be a continuing job such as replying to e-mails and comments. Virtual assistant work can range widely. There are many, many tasks that people hire virtual assistants for.
Related: How To Become a Virtual Assistant and What Does a Virtual Assistant Do?
Become a coach.
“Coaching is a great way to make side income. It needs practically no monetary investment… just time. Just be mindful of what you charge per hour, as almost everyone starts way smaller than they really should. When pricing your coaching services, if in doubt, double it!” – Chris Ducker – ChrisDucker.com
“One on One coaching is a really simple and fast way to start earning income fast for yourself. While people who’ve been doing this for a while will typically earn around $300, $500 an hour, someone just getting started could expect to earn $50 a $100 an hour. The benefit with this side business is that you can earn more per hour starting out which means you won’t have to work as much to earn as much. Also, consider offering package deals, this will allow you to sell at a higher price point and this gives a definite start and end date to things.” – Chris Holdheide
Sell on eBay or Craigslist.
“I go through twice each year and pick up items I’m not using to sell on craigslist or ebay. I make about $3-400 each time I do it. That’s an extra $800 for something cool!” – Lauren Bowling
“One of my favorite ways to make extra money is to go around my house and find one thing to sell on Craigslist every week (particularly on Fridays right before the weekend when everyone loves to get rid of their money ;)). It not only helps you de-clutter and get rid of stuff that’s no longer important to you, but also make some good side money that you can then bank towards something you do care about! I made over $1,200 doing this last year and it helped fund a Roth IRA. Give it a shot!” – J. Money, BudgetsAreSexy.com / RockstarFinance.com
“One way that a person can make side income is by selling items on eBay. The amount of money varies. It depends on how many items you are selling and also the type of items. I’ve had months where I’ve made $300 (part-time), but I’ve also had months where I’ve only made $50.” – Jason Butler
Whether you have old clothes you want to sell, a car, electronics, or something else, eBay or Craigslist can be a great way to sell many different types of items.
Related: How To Sell On Ebay
Edit for others.
“One way a person can make a side income is to provide edits to authors. The amount they can make depends on the type of edits they provide and the number of projects they take on. I primarily take on larger projects that involve either developmental edits or line edits (or both!) but short story projects can also be a good way to work on brief projects while making a side hustle and break up the monotony of projects that are the same length. How much a person can make can also vary based on how they charge; for example, I charge per word in order to provide a better estimate, but some people charge per page. ” – Megan Harris
Get paid to search online.
Did you know that you can take paid online surveys to make extra money?
Swagbucks is just like using Google to do your online searches, except you get rewarded points called SB for the things you do through their website. You can also earn points by taking surveys, watching videos, and shopping. Then, when you have enough points called SB, you can redeem them for cash, gift cards, and more. You’ll receive a free $5 bonus just for signing up through my link!
InboxDollars is another online rewards website I recommend. You can earn cash by taking surveys, playing games, shopping online, searching the web, redeeming grocery coupons, and more. Also, by signing up through my link, you will receive $5 for free just for signing up!
Another one you may be interested in related to this one is Nielsen Digital Voice. Digital Voice is a part of Nielsen, which I’m sure you’ve heard of. All you have to do is surf the web and you may be able to start earning money.
Become a proofreader for court reporters.
In 2014, Caitlin made slightly over $43,000 by being a freelance proofreader, while also going on several fun vacations. If you are looking for a way to make money on the side, this may be something you want to look into.
“Court reporters use digital stenography machines in combination with computer-aided transcription software to write verbatim records of various legal proceedings. They report depositions, trials, hearings, arbitrations, case management conferences, compulsory medical examinations, examinations under oath, and pretty much any other type of legal proceeding. Because of the sensitive nature of legal proceedings, it’s imperative that as many errors as possible be eliminated from transcripts — an especially major error could ruin an entire trial! A fresh set of eyes will 99% of the time catch more errors than the same eyes who saw the text from start to finish, too. An excellent proofreader is a huge asset to a court reporter — especially a court reporter who wants to make more money.” – Caitlin Pyle – Make Money Proofreading By Becoming A Freelance Proofreader
Answer surveys.
You can get paid to answer surveys and to test products all from the comfort of your home. Due to this, I think it’s one of the easy ways to make money on the side as you don’t need any experience, skill, inventory, or anything like that.
Survey companies I recommend include VIP Voice, American Consumer Opinion, Survey Junkie, Clear Voice Surveys, Pinecone Research, Opinion Outpost, Survey Spot, Prize Rebel, and Harris Poll Online. They’re free to join and free to use! It’s best to sign up for as many as you can as that way you can receive the most surveys and make the most money.
Clean homes.
“One great way for a person to start making some side hustle income is to clean houses. It’s a chore that’s always in demand (I personally hate having to clean), and it’s pretty easy to get into. You can make anywhere from $100 a job and up, all depending on the time and level of cleaning you do.” – Glen Craig
Find a part-time job.
There are many, many part-time jobs out there that may be able to work along with your schedule at your full-time job. You can find a job on sites such as Snagajob, Craigslist (yes, I’ve found a legitimate job through there before), Monster, and so on.
Start an e-commerce store.
“A great way to make a side income is with an e-commerce store. Unlike a blog or an info site which does not actually sell anything, an online store allows you to quickly scale and generate revenue immediately after launch. My wife and I made over 100K in profit in our first year with our shop.” – Steve Chou
Drive a taxi or become an Uber driver.
“Drive a taxi at night. I’m reliably told that on Friday and Saturday a taxi driver who owns his/her car can make up to $300 per night. Nothing to be sniffed at! But what you decide to do as ‘side hustle’ depends on what you like to do and what you are really good at. If you like dogs, start a dog walking/sitting hustle.” – Maria Nedeva
“I’m always looking for new ways to make a few bucks so that I can then share the results with my readers. I wanted to test out Uber so that I could see if it was worth it. I drove part-time (weekends and evenings). The first week of driving generated me $651.60. Since the article went live, many of my readers have started driving on the side. You won’t get rich, but the extra money adds up. The other positive is that you save money by not going out. This side hustle will help you pay off debt and save up for your major goals. Good luck on the road and cheers to your new friendships that you’re going to create.” – Martin Dasko
Related: How To Become An Uber Driver
Write online.
“Freelance writing is an excellent side hustle because you can commit your time “per article,” and work at any time of the day or night. Most people can expect to make $50 per article and up. However, a lot of people – including myself – make considerably more as a professional freelancer.” – Holly Johnson
Test websites.
“One cool way to earn money on the side is by testing websites. There are a number of sites out there, but UserTesting.com is the best. You get paid $10 for testing websites and apps and following their instructions. It’s simple, easy, and you can earn about $30/hour with this. The work is not guaranteed, but it’s a great way to maximize any of your downtime with earning extra cash.” – Grayson Bell
Prepare taxes.
“One great side hustle most people can easily learn is preparing taxes. If you start your own tax preparation firm, your potential is unlimited. However, if you’re just learning, try getting a part time job at a place like Liberty Tax or H&R Block or a local CPA firm. At the big brands, like Liberty Tax or H&R block, you can probably expect to make between $10 to $15 per hour depending on your location and experience. This job is generally only seasonal, so it allows you to have summers and the holidays off from your side hustle.” – Lance Cothern
Become a photographer.
“Photography! Most people only think to hire a photographer for big events like weddings and baby announcements because photographers are expensive. Charge $100-$200 for an hour package at a local park, and in one weekend by booking your friends and family, you can easily make $2k with just family portraits. With the popularity of photo cards from sites like Shutterfly, you can be a saving grace for families on a budget and you’d be surprised at how many folks you know who would hire a photographer in budget!” – Shannyn Allan
Create a website.
“I’ve created several simple websites about apps and websites that I like and use. I write about how the apps work, pros/cons, other similar apps, etc. Some of the apps or websites give me credits or money when I get new users to sign up or use their service. I’ve made about $4,500 over the last three years, and I haven’t spent more than a few hours working on the sites during the last two years. I’d say overall I only put in 20-30 hours.” – Louis DeNicola at Saveful.com
Become an online tutor.
Online tutoring has become an open market place for the gig economy. This is a great option to make money on the side, or even convert it to full-time. Studypool provides a great platform for tutors to simply answer student’s question and get paid (no video chat required). You can earn up to $500/week tutoring part time or potentially up to $60,000 a year tutoring.
Take part in research studies.
“If you live in a city, or near a university or teaching hospital, you can make money participating in research studies that need human subjects. Just go to craigslist, click on “volunteers”, and type in “research”. There are a wide variety of studies out there: some are medical (if you’re generally healthy, you can often be a control subject), and some are more about psychology or other related disciplines. You can make anywhere from $10-$20 for a short, one-time study to hundreds or even thousands of dollars for longer, more involved studies. Another benefit is that you get to learn about the research that’s being done, which is often fascinating.” – Sarah from The Yachtless
Make money online.
“The best way that I know how to make side income is online. Specifically, by freelance writing and blogging. The amount of make you can make online is unlimited. If you’re just starting, maybe you’ll make $500/month. But over time, you can increase your earnings to $5,000/month and before long even more than that. I don’t know another side gig where the income growth potential is so high.” – Natalie Bacon
Film weddings.
“One way that my wife and I made $5,000 in the past year on side income has been filming weddings. A year and a half ago we had no video experience. Once we bought a camera and posting videos, we’ve had friends and friends of friends start asking us to film their weddings. Most everything we learned about video came from asking other film peeps to show us the ropes or looking up “how-to” videos on Youtube. Since weddings are typically on the weekends, they really are an ideal side hustle. They don’t get in the way of our typical work week at all and they pay high margin. Once you have some film experience under your belt, you can charge $3-5k per wedding film, easily. If you’re interested in getting started filming weddings, I would recommend tagging along with an experienced shooter. From my experience, they are always looking for good help if you’ve got an eye for good shots and can work well under a little stress (there will be brides after all). This past fall we apprenticed and was well worth the long weekend shoots. We learned so much about shooting good wedding film and made a good amount of money in the process.” – Heath Padgett
Create a product to sell.
“I’m biased, but I think creating an online product and selling it is one of the best side hustles a person can do. But people shouldn’t be scared for the term “product”. A product can be anything – an idea or content, a course, a widget, a downloadable printout, anything! And there are so many different avenues to sell today: create a blog, start an Etsy shop, sell on eBay or Amazon. The great thing about the Internet is that there is somebody out there that is looking for something and everything. If you’re a teacher, sell your classroom notes. If you’re an engineer, share your though processes. Anything can be turned into content, and anything can be packaged and sold.” – Robert Farrington
“The ways to make a side income are really endless. I’ve encountered so many ways entrepreneurs are able to make a side income. Although blogging has been the most lucrative way for me to make a side income, my favorite way is creating courses. Creating a piece of content showcasing your expertise in a specific are and people paying you for it is a great and rewarding feeling.” – Jeff Rose
Manage databases, apps, and more.
“Managing, designing or configuring cloud-based apps- ranging from social media and content management systems (like WordPress) to databases. I learned to administer salesforce.com databases for nonprofits and last year made $6,000-$15,000/month pretty consistently working from home. (The going rate for these services is $50-$200/hour) What helped me was going through a self-study course on the platform, getting a couple of certifications, doing some spec work, then going out and asking clients if they needed my services. I call it “Learn, Slay It, Sell It.” Find out about growing trends, get up to speed then see if people will pay you to do it. If you become enough of an expert at it, they will! The nice thing is that it doesn’t have to be anything you studied in school, just something you studied on your own and mastered enough to be marketable.” – Aja McClanahan
Build websites.
“One way to make side income is to build websites for people and for businesses. The first website I ever built I charged $1200. Even if you dont know programming, it is easy to learn by watching free tutorials on Youtube. I think it would be very realistic to make $2,000 – $3,000 on the side building websites.” – Deacon Hayes
Become an alcohol demonstrator.
“Back in college, I made extra money on side side pouring alcohol samples for people in grocery stores. It was easy and paid well, considering how I don’t even know how to open a wine bottle (If I wasn’t using a product in a bottle that had a twist top, I asked someone else to help open it). The job paid $20 to $25 per hour and I could choose when I’d like to work and what job opportunities I’d like to accept. If you like to talk to people and prefer a laid back and good paying side job, being an alcohol demonstrator is definitely worth looking into.” – Chonce at My Debt Epiphany
Become a consultant.
“Become a consultant in your spare time doing some of the same work you might do in your full time gig. This works best with white collar office type roles where you can do your work at home at your computer. Just make sure you don’t compete with your current employer.” – Jim Wang
Tips from the experts on ways to make money on the side.
Along with the many different ways to make money on the side above, I also asked experts for their top tips when it comes to managing a side hustle.
“One of the best ways to think about how to make extra money is to identify what people are already paying for. I, for example, recently hired someone to manage my Pinterest account. That’s a great hustle you can master through a course or ebook, then execute from anywhere on your own time. Make someone else’s overwhelm your opportunity.” – Stefanie O’Connell
“Set boundaries. If you don’t you will get pulled in every direction and your health, personal life, finances, everything will suffer. Set boundaries for times you will work on your side hustle, what you are willing to do and stick to it. Don’t let checking social media creep into time you are watching your kids play sport or time you were going to work out. No money makes up for lost relationships or lost health. ” – Kylie Travers
“To accommodate a side hustle that makes a serious second income one ought to re-organise their life. I’d say that keeping a time/task diary helps. For a week write down all you do and how long you do it for. Analyse it and decide to stop doing anything that is: a) not productive; and/or b) doesn’t give you a lot of pleasure. You’d carve up a lot of time. You can also start looking for activities that you can combine to save time; e.g. running and commuting to work.”- Maria Nedeva
“My favorite (and least-favorite at the same time) way to manage everything (four kids & four blogs) is to work when our kids go to sleep. I will do some things during the day, but nothing that will require my attention for more than just a few minutes. My husband and I work from home, on our blogs, so we spend around 4 or more hours every night working side by side on them. We also try to squeeze in two hours during the preschool hours. This allows us to spend our time with our kids during the day and work together at night. While we might be a little more tired than usual right now (haha!) we figure that we can make up this time when our kids are older and in school. 😉 It is all about balance and finding time when we can. We can’t give 100% of ourselves to everything at the exact same time, so setting aside time for family and time for working is what works best for us – so we can give 100% to our family during the day and then 100% to our blogs in the evenings.” – Becky Mansfield
“My best tip for finding time to make extra money on the side is to give up watching tv. I used to watch one or two shows each evening, and now I spend that time working on my blog. I also stay up a little later than usual some evenings to get work done so I can spend my days with my kids. I’ve found that if you make it a priority, you will find time.” – Lena Gott
“You can make extra income in many ways – the only real limit is the limit you put on yourself. If you’re technically inclined, you can monetize that in your “off” hours. If you’re knowledgable about a certain topic you can freelance write in that area. Even if you have no skills, which I don’t believe, you can do something as simple as work around your neighborhood to walking/sitting for dogs while people are away from home. The opportunities really are endless to make extra income, you just need to want it and think outside the box.” – John Schmoll
“As someone who works full time and runs a blog on the side, I am a master at time management and planning. The best advice I have to managing both a job and a side hustle is to prioritize. If your job is number one and your side hustle is number two, then you may have to say no to anything that interferes with these two priorities (e.g. events with friends or family). Personally, prioritizing my goals and creating a plan to achieve them, have been the two most important factors to succeeding with a job and a side hustle.” – Natalie Bacon
“Organization of your time. I work a 9-5 job, I come home and walk my dog, then cook dinner. As you can imagine that doesn’t leave a ton of time for your side hustle. It means organizing your time for your side hustle. After I finish eating dinner, I budget an hour to my side hustle. Now that doesn’t seem like a lot, but if you do it every weekday that adds up to 5 hours you spent on your side hustle. You might have missed “Making a Murderer” but you added $100 to your pocket.” – Even Steven Money
“Because I was writing for my full-time job and also freelance writing/blogging as a side hustle, the last thing I wanted to do after an 8-hour day was come home and grind out more copy. Because of this, I leaned heavily on my weekends and my evenings became sacred. Every Sunday evening from 4-8 I’d work on my blog or any projects I had in the pipeline. Writing on Sunday evenings became so routine I find myself doing it now even though I work for myself full time and can write whenever I want! So that’s my advice: pick out a chunk of time that’s just for you and keep the date with yourself religiously. No one ever likes to hear it, but the truth of the matter is that it takes sacrificing in other areas of your life to truly side hustle and make it worth your time.” – Lauren Bowling
“Top tip: manage your time smarter. Managing your time has everything to do with FOCUS. Tasks will expand to the time you allot them, so schedule the things that are important to you, and stick to that schedule. It’s not about finding more time, it’s about leveraging the same 24 hours we all have in a day, and focusing on ONE goal at a time for your side income will help you accomplish that goal. Better yet, The Freedom Journal will guide you through setting and accomplishing your #1 goal in 100 days, so my top tip would be to grab The Freedom Journal and start taking action! :)” – John Lee Dumas
“The best way to find more time for side hustles is to eliminate things you thoughtlessly do that add no value. Consider how often you look at the same news feed updates on Facebook over and over again. If you just check Facebook once per day, you’ll get the same info and save a bunch of time.” – Lance Cothern
“My top tip for managing a side hustle is to be very organized. Every week, I have a “planning night” where I put actionable items on my calendar and then I follow through with them. I also use Trello to manage projects and outline what “steps” they are in and keep checklists in Trello so I make sure I don’t miss anything. A person can find more time for side income pretty easily – devote half an hour over lunch, or take time away from your favorite TV show to look for ideas, and then do them!” – Megan Harris
“The number one thing you can do to manage your life and your side hustle is to simply schedule time for it and have your family hold you accountable to it. You can make time for anything you set your mind to. You somehow manage to watch your favorite show each week, make dinner as a family, etc. Well, if making extra money is important, you’ll find the time. Maybe it’s before work or after the kids are asleep? There’s always time. The trick is, set a designated time, ask your spouse and tell your kids that this is what the time is for, and then use that time to make things happen!” – Robert Farrington
“Managing a side hustle is like any other aspect of your life. If you want to succeed at it, you need to prioritize it. So, allot the time, work through the time, make your side income and then get back to the other aspects of your life.” – Chris Ducker – ChrisDucker.com
“I’d suggest starting small with just a few hours a week. It’s easy to look at your free time outside of your job and think you can easily add 20+ hours of work per week. This can easily lead to burnout, and which might kill any motivation you had for side gigs.” – Jeffrey Trull
“One of the best things you can do for your goals is to wake up an hour early and *only* spend time working on what’s truly important to you. Sure you can watch less TV at night or hustle on your lunch breaks, but I find a single hour in the morning when everyone else is sleeping to be much more productive. And then you’ve started the day off with a major accomplishment no matter what else happens the rest of the day! It’s a beautiful thing!” – J. Money, BudgetsAreSexy.com / RockstarFinance.com
“Find something you enjoy doing that you don’t normally get to do otherwise. Turning it into a side hustle will offer incentive to make time for it. For instance, if you love pets and aren’t currently a pet owner, you can sign up with Rover and dogsit, or maybe work as a dog walker. That way you’re killing two birds with one stone.” – Jackie Lam
“The best way to make time for a side hustle is to learn to manage your time better. If you’re watching three hours of television each night, for example, you may need to give that up to work on your side hustle instead. If you’re still too busy, consider getting up at 5:00 or 6:00 a.m. I did that for over a year before I was able to quit my 9-5 job to pursue my side hustle full-time.” – Holly Johnson
“You need to make time for your side hustle. I would work on it during lunch, at morning before I went to work. Sometimes I would do it when on nights and weekends. I think most people could find 1 – 3 hours per day to work on a side gig.” – Deacon Hayes
“First, make a weekly calendar of all the events in your life. On that same calendar, enter in the blocks of time you plan on working on your side hustle. Treat those times like anything else that is important on your calendar. If you schedule time from 8-9pmon Wednesday and you forgot your favorite show is on, no excuses! Commit to these times and don’t let anything interfere that isn’t a family emergency.” – Jeff Rose
“My top tip for managing a side hustle is work at a scheduled pace. Set aside a certain number of hours every week and make sure that you make consistent progress. To find more time, I’ve replaced television and YouTube surfing for more productive activities.” – Steve Chou
“I used to struggle with finding extra time outside of my work and family life. The one tip I recommend is use your down-time more effectively. Instead of watching an hour of TV, take that hour and work on a side hustle. If you’re a night owl, use that when everyone else is asleep to create a business or develop a product. We don’t use all time effectively, but just taking chunks here and there and building a side hustle can change your life.” – Grayson Bell
“Choose your side hustle wisely. Choose to market your skills and talents instead of just looking at it from a financial standpoint. Earning a lot of extra money sounds nice, but if you don’t enjoy what you are doing, you will start to dread it quickly and it will take up more of your time. I’m able to work quickly and efficiently on side projects I enjoy so I can make the most of my time. I also try to cut out mindless tasks that take up time like binge watching television or browsing aimlessly through social media.” – Chonce
“The opportunities to earn extra money are endless. But your time and energy are finite. Prioritize a health diet, exercise, socializing, and relaxation. You will be rewarded with extra energy for a side hustle on top of your day job.” – Kate Dore
“You don’t have to make it a part-time job. Make it a hobby first and don’t stress out about getting it done immediately. Find five hours a week to work on the book. Spend a couple of months learning everything you can about the subject or developing the characters/idea. Books can be as short as 40 or 50 pages or as long as you want to write them.” – Joseph Hogue
“If you really see a future in what you are doing, invest in your “side-hustle” by creating systems and ways to duplicate yourself i.e. subcontracting work when possible. Since we are a debt free family, our “personal burn rate” was low enough where I didn’t have to pocket all the business revenue. I eventually began to subcontract workers to fulfill client requests. It was a huge time saver for me and kept it a part-time gig for me that was relatively stress-free.” – Aja McClanahan
“Choose a side hustle that you also get some sort of personal benefit out of, in addition to the extra cash. For example, you might choose a side hustle that helps you get more exercise, or that gives you the chance to earn a new skill, or that allows you to meet new people, or just something you find really interesting. You’ll be more likely to stick with it if there are multiple benefits.” – Sarah Noelle
“You need to make it a priority. The best way to make it a priority is to understand why you need this extra income – pay off debt? Save more for retirement? That goal will drive you. Then make sure you list all the non-essential tasks you do and rank them, your side hustle will be above some tasks… make sure you hustle before you do those tasks.” – Jim Wang
Hope you enjoyed this expert roundup on different ways to make money on the side. Do you want to make side hustle income? Why or why not?
INSIDE: Need help knowing how to budget? This step-by-step guide will help you create a budget that actually works. Includes free printable budget spreadsheet template!
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When you’re trying to pay off credit card debt or save money, you’ll hear it time and again: “You need a budget.” But if you’ve never created a budget, the mere thought may make you want to run and hide. Making a spending plan that works is not hard, however, if you have someone to help you.
If you’re ready, I can help. Below you’ll find step-by-step instructions to follow to create your budget, whether you’re a beginner or have budgeted in the past.
You can use a pen and paper with our printable form or software for online budgeting.
Improving your money management skills doesn’t just mean spending less. It also means learning about your spending habits and making changes.
A few tweaks may help you pay off your debt and reach long term goals, such as saving for retirement.
MY BUDGET JOURNEY
I know it can be terrifying to really look at how you spend your money. Trust me, I’ve been in your shoes. But I’ve learned that the things that were the most challenging in my life have led to the biggest rewards.
Declaring bankruptcy was a low point for me. But it also taught me many valuable lessons about personal finance. Most importantly, I learned why I must have a budget.
My husband and I used to have a “bare bones budget.” Except it wasn’t, really. Rather, it was a piece of paper where I’d write down who I had to pay every month, so I didn’t forget.
When we began our journey to become debt-free, we had to look at all aspects of our finances. One thing we did was sit down together to create a budget.
Seeing our expenses and income in writing for the first time still sticks with me. I remember being in tears. It was shocking to see that we had not been in better control of our money.
Creating a budget made us acknowledge where we were, and we realized that we didn’t like what we saw. It instantly provided us with a goal: We wanted to make positive changes and get out of debt. It took time, but we did achieve our goal (and that was one of the best moments of my life).
I am going to be blunt here. Creating your first budget and managing your money with it will bring significant challenges your way.
But I can guarantee that it will be worth it in the end. Just wait until you can finally control where your money goes instead of the other way around. It is liberating.
Before we begin, you can download our free budget form by clicking on the pink box below.
If you want something more high-tech, I recommend You Need A Budget (YNAB) or EveryDollar. These are apps I’ve tested and reviewed. Both work very well, so I’m confident recommending them to you.
WHAT IS A BUDGET?
A budget is a plan that lists your estimated income and expenses for a specific period of time. Most people use a monthly budget period. Budgets are helpful for everyone, no matter what your financial situation is.
Tracking your spending in the past helps you predict your future cash flow so you can start saving more.
WHAT SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN A BUDGET?
It’s important to include every dollar you earn and spend when making a budget. Tracking your income is easy, but your budget should also include spending categories. Some you need to remember to use include:
Your list may include more categories or fewer. Our budget template includes categories that will cover just about anyone.
Read more: The categories you need to include in your budget
HOW TO CREATE YOUR BUDGET
Now that you have your categories, it’s time to start filling in the numbers. Follow these instructions to prepare your budget.
Step 1: Gather Necessary Papers
Before you begin, be sure you have all the things you’ll need. These include (but are not limited to):
Bank statements, including debit card payments
Pay stubs
Credit card statements
Utility bills
Monthly bills from various stores
Personal/vehicle loan information
Step 2: Calculate Your Income
Next, look at your pay stub(s). Your budget should reflect your monthly income. If your paychecks come more frequently than once a month, some simple calculations are necessary to come up with an accurate monthly income.
Here are some formulas to help you:
If you’re paid biweekly (i.e., every other Friday), add four pay stubs and divide by two to get your average monthly income.
For monthly pay, you can use the income you see if the amount listed for each pay period is the same. Otherwise, add three or four months’ worth of income and divide by the same number of months.
If you’re paid weekly, take the total of four income periods.
When you’re paid hourly or on commission (i.e., your income fluctuates), add your last four months of salary and divide by four to reach an average. If your income varies frequently, you’ll need to adjust your budget more often than someone with a regular income. You may also want to follow our tips for creating a budget with irregular income.
Step 3: Determine Fixed Expenses
You must make certain payments, such as your mortgage or rent, insurance premiums and car payments, on a regular basis. These recurring expenses are usually a fixed amount.
If your bill varies slightly each month (for instance, if your utilities aren’t on a budget billing system), take the past three months’ worth of statements and average them to get your estimated payment.
You can use a spending form to figure out the exact amounts to include in your budget. For example, say your October gas bill is $45.79, your November bill is $52.95, and your December bill is $49.22.
Add those three numbers and divide by three to reach your average (in this case, $49.32). I recommend you look at the months when your utility bills are the highest. For instance, you may use more gas or oil in the winter, so use those months as the basis for your budget.
One of the most important rules of personal finance is to pay yourself first. Do this by adding categories for saving. You need to save for a rainy day as well as for long term goals, such as college or retirement.
You can set up automatic transfers each month from your checking account to a savings account for your emergency fund (aim to build up at least three months’ worth of living expenses). If you have a retirement plan at work, such as a 401(k), your money is automatically withdrawn from each paycheck before you get it.
Step 4: Calculate Discretionary Expenses
Your discretionary expenses include those that vary more, such as food, gasoline and clothes. Treat them the same way you treated the gas bills described in step 3. Make sure you take the average of three months’ spending to get the figures to add to your budget.
Be sure to include occasional expenses, such as car repairs and maintenance. The goal is to pay these bills with your regular income instead of running up credit card bills.
Step 5: Fill in the Numbers
Transfer the figures you’ve calculated above to the appropriate spots on the budget form or spreadsheet. Put your monthly income at the top, followed by the amounts for each expense category.
The categories listed on our form are a guide for tracking your spending. You can add categories that aren’t included or ignore the categories you don’t need.
Add all your income and all your expenses. Then subtract your expenses from your income. The result should be zero. If it’s not, then figure out the changes you need to make.
If your total is a negative number: You’re spending more than you earn. Reduce your spending until the total reaches zero.
If your total is a positive number: You haven’t spent everything you make. Either increase your debt payments or your savings.
FINE-TUNE YOUR BUDGET
After you complete your budget for the first time, you may feel discouraged. As mentioned above, it happened to us. But once we started to rework the numbers, I began to feel better. I began to feel like I could live with a budget. It was tough, but nothing in life worth having is easy!
To balance your budget, first look at your fixed expenses. One I always like to mention is cable. We found out we were paying way too much and found a way to cut the expense in half. (As much as we would like to cut the cord entirely, we’re not yet there.)
Perhaps you could do the same and sign up for a lower-cost cable plan to free up some income. There are many other ways to reduce your monthly expenses, such as reshopping your insurance or refinancing your mortgage.
Once you’ve cut back your fixed expenses, it’s time to look at your discretionary spending. Perhaps you’re eating out a bit too much, so your budget takes a hit. You may even be overspending on shoes. These are areas where you might need to scale back to balance your budget.
Making these decisions isn’t fun, but consider what is more important: paying off debt or buying a bigger television. These are choices only you can make. But if you’re willing to scale back now and pay off debt, it will be worth it when you can buy that new TV or those new shoes without guilt!
If you’ve scaled back on everything you can and your budget still doesn’t balance, make some calls to your debtors. Ask for a reduced interest rate or a lower minimum payment on your credit cards. You never know what they will accept until you make those phone calls.
My husband and I wanted to get out of debt, so we decided that we wouldn’t eat out as often. For more than two years, we ate dinner out no more than 10 to 20 times a year. We saved a lot of money, which we used to pay off debt. It was challenging, but the result was well worth the temporary sacrifice.
WHAT TO DO ONCE YOU HAVE A BUDGET
First of all – congrats! You now have a budget you can use. You should revisit and update your budget at the end of each month.
After a few months, you probably won’t need to make any changes. But if you get a raise, have an added expense or finally pay off your car, that will require a shift in your budget numbers. Remember that your budget must always end in zero!
Creating a budget isn’t easy, but once you have one set up and continue to refer to it, it will pay off. You’ll find it helps because you are now telling your money where you want it to go rather than it telling you where it is going each month. Financial control is a fantastic feeling.
Coupons. Just the word alone causes a little thrill of excitement to shoot through me! I’m a long-time coupon user. From the early days of carefully cutting out coupons when I was real young, to the newer, sleek, digital method that I came to know later, I’m a sucker for savings! However, sometimes the process of finding those coupons and achieving those savings can make you feel like you’re hunting for a needle in a haystack, instead of the fun treasure hunt it really should be. And as a busy stay-at-home mom to a toddler, you better believe that my days fly by, and hunting down coupons isn’t something I can do for long periods of time, especially when I surface with none to speak of. For my sake, and your own, I found a few of the best places to find coupons so your own little coupon treasure hunt can go from gritty confusion to shimmering elation!
Where to Find the Best Physical Free Coupons
There’re numerous different places to find coupons, but for a moment let’s talk about free coupons. Which are some of the most fun coupons to stumble upon. Thanks to lots of research, no longer will you wander around in the dark trying to locate your discounts. We’ve got you covered!
One of the simplest places to locate physical free coupons is in the Sunday newspaper. I’m not sure how many people get the average Sunday paper anymore, but the number of coupons inside it is, I believe, absolutely worth it. Many papers have a small coupon insert in the centerfold, and that’s where the gem of coupons is contained. There’s usually a small subscription fee for a newspaper but nowadays a lot of publishers give you the option to subscribe to just the Sunday paper. (Or a great little life hack that I’ve personally used a few times, is picking up a Sunday paper at the Dollar Tree store, if your town has one.) True to their wonderful name, you can snag a paper for only a dollar. Newspapers are loaded with free coupons, many of which promote the items you buy on the regular, fun unique products, or discounts on experiences that you might otherwise have missed. Things like coupons for grocery stores, restaurants, and fun hot spots in your local community, are just a few examples of the nuggets of treasure found within those black-inked pages. Keep a sharp eye out for any weekly ads as well. Newspapers are really good a resource for that.
Another great place to find free coupons is the normal stores and retailers that you frequent on a weekly or even daily basis. These could be manufacturer’s coupons that are directly printed on, or attached to any product that you buy in the store. Meaning as soon as you’ve bought that product, the coupon is yours to use for your next purchase of that same product.
Perhaps one of my favorite ways to score some good old free coupons, is to take a second glance at the junk mail that seems to arrive almost daily, or mail advertisements. It’s happened a few times where I’ve actually stopped and looked carefully through the miscellaneous mail, and I’ve found a gem of a coupon or a discount on something amazing. A restaurant for a fun date night in our area that just opened, or even a percentage off of a decadent facial from a nearby Zen-soaked spa. That one was coupon gold, my friend. (The moms will get it!)
A resource that is just a bit newer in the coupon game is coupons.com. It’s strictly a coupon site in which they have a whole section of printable coupons. You can just go to the site, search for the easily found printable coupon page, print out and cut out to your delight. There’s something kind of soothing about cutting out physical coupons and if they’re free, so much the better, in my opinion.
Where to Find the Best Digital Coupons
As with most things these days, they have a digital counterpart. Coupons are no exception. For this next batch of coupon-hunting ideas, you can set aside those sharp scissors and give your snipping hand a rest. Instead, you can pick up your phone and head to coupons.com again. However, this time you can scroll through their digital download coupon page! It’s chock full of tons of coupons that are as easy to access as just pressing a button on your phone to get some massive savings.
In case you’re new to the digital coupon game, they work the same exact way as physical paper coupons. Meaning you will redeem the coupon at checkout, but instead of a paper barcode, once you “click and clip,” your digital coupon you will most likely get a barcode or a coupon code that the cashier can scan to secure your discount on the product.
Social media is a fantastic resource for finding digital coupons, or mobile coupons, as they are sometimes called on the various social media platforms. They usually come with a promo code, or another type of barcode that will allow you to redeem your coupon at checkout. The next time you’re scrolling through Instagram, or your Facebook page, make sure to keep your eyes wide open for any great deals.
Along those same lines, Amazon is amazing for finding coupons. Even if you don’t currently hold an Amazon Prime Subscription, a lot of their products have one-time coupons. Things like grocery items, cleaning agents, pet supplies, electronics and baby supplies, have regular coupons and deals that you’ll be sure to benefit from. (As with any coupon, be aware of its expiration dates, and other fine print on your digital coupons!)
Also see: Can you use manufacturer coupons on Amazon?
A little further down the treasure hunt trail of searching for the best coupons, are coupon apps. Ibotta is a great resource. It’s more of a “save and earn cash back,” kind of a deal, and I have several mom friends who swear by this app. Sign up and see what kind of savings you can earn with this gem of a coupon app nugget.
Flipp is another great one. Meant mostly for grocery, home supplies, or pharmacy needs, this app caters towards shoppers with either iPhones or Android phones. It’s very simple to download and you’ll find a surplus of digital coupons sure to meet any and all of your shopping needs.
Also see: Is Amazon Prime worth it?
Where to Hunt Down Coupons for Specific Needs
Some of the most popular coupon categories are in the area of grocery, kids, and pets. If you happen to be looking for coupons in this area, listen close and we’ll tell you some of the best places to find these!
For hardcore grocery coupon hunters, you can’t get much better than Grocery IQ. This app will pull some of the best coupons from coupons.com as well as other online apps and places them all in one spot for you to digitally sift through. Get ready to cut that grocery bill in half, my friend! It seems that the app owner (coupons.com) is a bit behind on updating the app and some people have difficulties using it. Hopefully, they will continue development as I haven’t found anything that works as well.
Need a new seasonal wardrobe for the kiddos, but would like to save a bit of money while doing it? The Children’s Place is your best bet. With everything from kid’s clothes to shoes, and accessories for your little ones, the amount of access to discount deals and exclusive coupons on this site, is truly staggering. I’ve used it several times myself, and if my 3-year-old daughter insisting that she wear her pink and purple, flowy, tulle-covered tutu, ten days in a row without washing it is any indication of how many points you’ll score by your purchases, I’d say you’ll be in for a parent of the year award, for sure. They even have a whole “vacation,” clothes section, so if you’re planning a fun summer getaway for you and the kids be sure to check that section out!
We oftentimes consider our pets to be just as near and dear to us as our actual children, so of course we’ll give you the lowdown on one or two of the best places to snag coupons for pet food and other supplies for our lovey, furry companions.
PetSmart, which you might be familiar with, is just about the best there is as far as coupons go for all of your four-legged friends. They allow you to use their store coupons as long as they have a PetSmart barcode, these can be either physical coupons or digital that you redeem right at the checkout when you’re making your final purchases. They also have a wonderful coupon receipt option that you can take advantage of. This is where the coupon is printed right on the bottom of a previous receipt, which you can redeem at the time of your next purchase. Every time I’ve been there, I’ve received awesome customer service, in that my cashier reminds me about the coupon on the bottom of the receipt for my next purchase. I love that about my neighborhood PetSmart!
Hunting Down One Step Further Savings
Sometimes, as good as they are, one-time coupon savings doesn’t quite do the trick. If you find yourself in that same spot, you can do what I like to call, “one step further savings.” This is a semi-fancy way of saying, you can sign up for things like Target Rewards Circle, Kohl’s Rewards program, TJ Maxx Rewards, or Amazon Prime Membership’s Subscribe and Save.
These are rewards programs for these particular stores. (And, in case you’re not aware, most bigger stores like the ones listed above have a rewards program like this.) Even most online stores have them as well! They’re designed to cater to the loyalty of their shoppers and customers. Usually, they’re set up in the way that once you reach a certain number of “points,” or a certain amount of money that you’ve spent with them, you receive a percentage off of your entire purchase or individual items.
They really are wonderful programs. You can set yourself and your family up to save a bundle. If the stores mentioned here aren’t ones you usually frequent, never fear. As I said most bigger stores have these types of rewards for their shoppers and you can just about always find a great program fit at your favorite store to fit your needs. Places like Walmart, CVS, Home Depot, and Menards have been known to have them as well. And, as a little-known bonus, you’ll usually receive extra coupons during the year, and sometimes even a little special percentage off near your birthday. Well worth it for those little perks alone.
Hopefully, the way we’ve broken it down, your own coupon treasure hunt won’t be so much of a hunt anymore! Keep your eyes peeled, your hands outstretched, and your excitement on the rise as you gather up those big, glittering savings!
I love my kids. However, what I don’t love is just how quickly they grow! It seems that they can often outgrow clothes before they even wear out. It can make you feel like you have to purchase new clothes for them every time you turn around. That is not easy on the budget.
One way to keep your kids clothed and not break the bank is to shop your local consignment store or sale. Not only can you find clothes and toys for your younger family members, but you can also actually find items for your entire family!
Consignment stores can offer high-value name brands at prices that you can actually afford and are willing to pay. There are a few things in mind when you shop at these stores, or you can end up getting a “not so great deal.”
Read More:
HOW TO GET THE BEST DEALS AT CONSIGNMENT STORES
Know the price you would pay for a like item
When we had our 2nd child, I thought that I could help our budget and pick up some sleepers from our local consignment store. After all, with my coupons, I was paying about $5 – $6 for his sleepers. I figured that consignment stores were cheape, so I should shop there. I was wrong.
I found sleeper after sleeper that looked a little worn, had stains or was faded and the price was $4.00+. In fact, the nicest ones that I found that I would have considered purchasing cost $5.00. So, why would I buy a used item when I could pick up a brand new one for the same price?
Using apps, such as KidsConsignmentSales.com has an incredible map that you can use to find a sale near you. These are huge sales where people drop off their items for a one, two or even seven-day sale event.
Consider selling at consignment stores/events
If you have items that you would like to get rid of, you might consider a consignment store rather than a garage sale. You can save a lot of time and effort by going this route.
You will need to check with your local store event about the types of items they accept and the delivery style (box vs. trash bag). Make sure you also inquire about the quality, what they need, pricing and also commission rates. It can be a great way to downsize and clear out things to make room for more items.
Create a list
Don’t forget, kids’ consignment events offer you the chance to get an entire season of clothing in one trip. Of course, that means you need to be prepared to maximize that opportunity.
Before you shop, take inventory of what your child needs. That way, you will only get the things you need for your growing child. Our Back to School shopping list helps you get organized and keep track of everything you will need.
Know how your child will grow
Your child is going to grow, but the question is just how much? If you know your child’s current height and weight, you can easily predict what size he’ll wear in the coming year by using this helpful age growth chart.
Plan ahead
Winter jackets, baby gear, shoes, and school supplies like backpacks and lunch boxes are in high demand at children’s consignment sales. If these items are on your list, plan to head to those sections first.
Bring along a bag
Many children’s consignment sales do not provide shopping bags or carts. Make sure to bring your own. Some shoppers even use wagons, laundry baskets or rolling suitcases to tote their finds.
Leave the kids at home
No matter how well behaved your kiddos may be, it’s best to leave them home. You’ll want to focus on the shopping task at hand without having to worry about them or their whereabouts. Remember, there may be thousands of items to pick from, and you’ll want to be able to move through the aisles quickly.
Understanding the ins and outs of shopping consignment stores can really help keep your kids (and yourself) dressed in the latest styles — without breaking the bank!