Tom's Survey Notes

Paid surveys vs other side hustles in Australia — the honest comparison

Quick disclosure: this page mentions Octopus Group, which I'm a member of and have a referral link to. No commercial relationship with any other side hustle or app mentioned. Full details on the Octopus review page and about page.

Short answer: Paid surveys are one of the lowest-paying side hustles in Australia, but also one of the lowest-effort and lowest-barrier. Realistic income: $20–100/month for casual use. If you have skills, time, or a car, almost any other side hustle pays more per hour. If you don't have those — students, people between jobs, people with unpredictable spare time, people who don't want to commit — paid surveys are a legit option with zero startup cost and zero accountability. Just don't mistake them for a real side hustle income source.

G'day — Tom here. I'm going to be straight with you: if the goal is "maximum dollars per hour", paid surveys are not the answer. I run this site and I'll tell you that. But they still have a place in the Aussie side hustle landscape for specific people. Here's the honest comparison.

What counts as a side hustle in Australia in 2026

For this comparison, a side hustle is any way to earn money outside your main job that doesn't require a full-time commitment. The Aussie side hustle landscape is broader than ever, and most options fall into six categories:

  1. Gig work (Uber, DoorDash, Menulog, Airtasker)
  2. Cashback apps (Cashrewards, ShopBack, Rakuten AU)
  3. Microtasks and paid surveys (Octopus Group, PureProfile, Prolific, Clickworker)
  4. Selling unused stuff (Facebook Marketplace, eBay, Gumtree)
  5. Freelancing (Upwork, Fiverr, Airtasker for skilled work)
  6. Renting things out (Camplify for caravans, Car Next Door, RentMyItems)

The full comparison at a glance

Side hustle Realistic hourly Startup cost Time commitment Skill barrier
Uber / DoorDash $20–30/hr after costs Car, ABN, registration 5 hours/week up Low
Airtasker (skilled tasks) $25–60/hr Free signup, tools you own Per-task, flexible Medium-High
Cashback apps n/a (passive) Free Zero — runs in background None
Selling unused stuff One-time, varies Free Hours per item Low
Freelancing (writing, design, dev) $30–150+/hr Skills, portfolio Hours per week minimum High
Tutoring (Cluey, Tutor Doctor, private) $30–80/hr Subject knowledge, WWCC Per-session Medium-High
Paid surveys $5–15/hr realistic Free Whatever you want None

Gig work — Uber, DoorDash, Menulog

The most common Aussie side hustle. After fuel, vehicle wear, insurance, and ATO obligations (you need an ABN and have to track income for tax), realistic earnings for an Uber driver in a major city are $20–30/hour, sometimes higher during surge periods.

Pros: High earning potential per hour, flexible hours, fast onboarding if you've got a registered car.

Cons: Requires a car. Wear and tear is real. ABN and tax compliance is your problem. Driver pay has been compressing year-over-year as more people join. Rideshare insurance costs more than personal.

Pay multiplier vs surveys: 2–4x more per hour.

Cashback apps — Cashrewards, ShopBack, Rakuten AU

Strictly these aren't a "side hustle" — they're a way to get money back on shopping you were already going to do. Install the app, click through it before buying online, and a small percentage comes back to your bank account.

Pros: Genuinely passive — once set up, it adds money for purchases you were going to make anyway. Zero ongoing effort.

Cons: Only earns when you're already spending money. Realistic earnings are typically $10–50/month for an average online shopper. Won't generate income on its own — it just reduces the cost of things you bought.

Use case: Cashback apps stack with literally any other side hustle. Install once, forget about it, collect the small bonus. There's no reason not to.

Selling unused stuff — Facebook Marketplace, eBay, Gumtree

One of the highest dollar-per-hour options, but it's not recurring income. You're converting stuff you already own into cash.

Pros: Can generate hundreds or thousands of dollars in a few weekends if you have stuff worth selling. Zero ongoing commitment after each sale. No platform fees on Facebook Marketplace and Gumtree.

Cons: One-time income — once the stuff worth selling is sold, the well runs dry. Time-consuming to photograph, list, message buyers, arrange pickup. Haggling and time-wasters are part of the deal.

Pay multiplier vs surveys: Highly variable. Worth doing once, but not a sustainable income source.

Freelancing — Upwork, Fiverr, direct clients

If you have a marketable skill — writing, design, web dev, video editing, voice acting, translation — freelancing pays the highest hourly of anything on this list. But it requires the skill, a portfolio, and putting up with clients.

Pros: $30–150+/hour is realistic for skilled work. Builds a portfolio over time. Can scale into full-time income.

Cons: You need a marketable skill. Building a reputation on Upwork or Fiverr is brutal — early gigs pay terribly until you have reviews. Client management is its own job. Tax and ABN compliance is required.

Pay multiplier vs surveys: 5–15x more per hour, but only if you have the skill to charge.

Microtasks and paid surveys

This is where paid surveys live in the broader landscape. Microtasks include:

Pros: Free to join, no skills required, no commitment. Possible from a phone or laptop in any spare 10 minutes. Genuinely accessible to anyone — including under-18s on certain panels (Octopus accepts members from 15).

Cons: Lowest-paying option on this list. Realistic earnings: $5–15/hour of active time, $20–100/month for casual use. Screen-outs are common. Won't ever scale into serious income.

Pay multiplier vs other options: Pretty much everything else here pays more per hour. Surveys compete on accessibility, not income.

The hourly pay ranking (rough)

  1. Freelancing (skilled): $30–150+/hr — highest if you have the skill
  2. Tutoring: $30–80/hr — requires subject knowledge
  3. Skilled Airtasker work (assembly, gardening, removalist): $25–60/hr
  4. Uber / DoorDash / gig delivery: $20–30/hr after costs
  5. Selling unused stuff: Variable, sometimes $50/hr, but not recurring
  6. Paid surveys and microtasks: $5–15/hr
  7. Cashback apps: Not a source of income, but a passive bonus on existing spending

Where paid surveys actually fit

If the goal is "maximum money per hour worked", paid surveys are at the bottom. No honest way to spin that — they pay less than driving Uber, less than tutoring, less than freelancing, less than basically any side hustle on this page.

The reason people do them anyway is that they're at the top of a different list: lowest barrier to entry. Specifically:

That makes paid surveys a legit option for people who genuinely can't or don't want to do the higher-paying options — students, retirees, people with health limitations, people with unpredictable schedules, people who don't want another commitment in their life.

When to pick something else

Pick a higher-paying side hustle if:

Pick paid surveys if:

The bottom line

Paid surveys are genuinely useful for the people they're useful for, and a poor use of time for everyone else. They're pocket money for spare time, not a real side hustle in the same league as driving Uber or freelancing.

If you've decided paid surveys are your fit, the next step is picking a panel. The Aussie panel comparison covers which ones are worth signing up to, and the Octopus Group review covers my #1 pick in full.

If you've decided they're not — good call, pick whichever side hustle above matches your situation and you'll do better.

Decided surveys are your fit? Start with Octopus Group — highest per-minute rate, cash to your bank at $20, no mucking around.

Sign up to Octopus Group →

Referral link — no sign-up bonus either way, and you can go direct at octopusgroup.com.au if you prefer. More on why I use this link.

Nothing on this page is financial, legal, or tax advice — just one bloke's take after a lot of research.