If you can draw or paint and people keep asking for custom pieces, this is your signal. Selling art commissions is a clean side hustle where your skills become cash on call. Think of it like a focused martial arts drill. You pick your stance, define your strikes, and repeat them with precision. Do it right and you can bring in steady money while leveling up your craft.
How selling art commissions works
- Choose a clear offer. Examples include pet portraits, wedding or couple portraits, DND character art, Twitch emotes, album cover art, book illustrations, or branding icons. Specific sells faster than vague.
- Build a simple portfolio. Five to ten strong samples in the exact style you want to sell. Host on a clean Instagram grid, a single Notion or Carrd page, or a Behance gallery.
- Set tiered pricing and scope. For example headshot, half body, full body. Include what the client gets, size, file formats, timeline, and how many revisions.
- Open limited slots. Create urgency by offering five to ten slots per batch. When full, close the list.
- Collect a deposit. Standard is 50 percent upfront through Stripe, PayPal, or Etsy. Start work only after payment lands.
- Deliver with a process. Send a rough sketch for approval, then a colored draft, then final delivery with watermark removed after final payment.
Who this side hustle is best for
- Artists who can finish pieces reliably in a set timeframe
- People comfortable with feedback and collaboration
- Creators with a distinct style that clients can recognize
- Students and nine to five workers who want a flexible, project based income stream
Startup cost and time to first dollar
- Digital art setup can be lean. iPad with Procreate or a drawing tablet with Krita or Clip Studio Paint. Expect 0 to 800 dollars depending on what you already own. Traditional art has supply costs of 30 to 150 dollars for paper, paints, and shipping materials.
- Portfolio hosting is free to low cost. Instagram, ArtStation, Behance, and Carrd all work.
- You can land a first commission in one weekend if you already share your work online. New accounts usually see their first paid slot within one to three weeks by posting consistently in the right places.
Where to find commission clients
- Instagram and TikTok. Post time lapses and before and afters. Use hashtags like petportraitcommission, dndart, charactercommission, twitchartist, weddingportrait.
- Etsy commissions. Great for pet portraits, wedding art, family portraits. Search for your niche, study the top listings, and match their clarity.
- Fiverr and Upwork. Set clear packages with fast delivery options for a higher rate. Good for emotes, logos, and book covers.
- Discord and Reddit. Join art commission servers and subreddits like r/HungryArtists, r/commissionsopen, and niche game servers. Follow their posting rules.
- Your warm audience. Friends, coworkers, and local businesses. Offer a small friends and family discount for your first ten testimonials.
Art commission pricing and realistic earning potential
- Character headshot stylized 40 to 150 dollars, 2 to 5 hours
- Full body character with color 100 to 400 dollars, 5 to 12 hours
- Pet portrait digital 60 to 200 dollars, 3 to 6 hours
- Wedding couple portrait 200 to 600 dollars, 6 to 15 hours
- Twitch emotes 20 to 40 dollars per emote, bundle of 5 for 120 to 180 dollars, 2 to 5 hours total
- Logo or stream overlay 80 to 300 dollars, 3 to 8 hours
- Ten pet portraits in a month at 120 dollars each equals 1200 dollars
- A weekend opening of five Twitch emote bundles at 150 dollars equals 750 dollars
- Four full body character pieces in a month at 220 dollars each equals 880 dollars
Examples
As your queue and social proof grow, you can raise prices by 10 to 20 percent every one to three months.
Risks and how to guard your energy
- Scope creep. Stop it with a written brief, clear deliverables, and a two revision limit. Extra revisions billed at an hourly rate.
- Chargebacks or no shows. Always take a deposit. Use invoices and keep conversation in writing.
- Burnout. Open limited slots, batch your steps, use templates, and schedule breaks.
- Underpricing. Track hours and set a floor rate. If a 6 hour piece at 60 dollars feels bad, your price is wrong.
- Rights issues. Default to personal use only. Charge extra for commercial use, merch rights, or exclusive rights. Put it in writing.
- Copyright. Use only your own work and licensed assets. Avoid tracing or using unlicensed references.
Your simple commission playbook
- Pick a lane. Choose one clear niche for your first thirty days like pet portraits or DND characters.
- Publish a commission sheet. One image that shows three packages, prices, add ons, timeline, and how to book.
- Create a request form. Google Form with fields for reference images, description, usage, deadline, and contact.
- Announce and open five slots. Post on Instagram, Reddit, and two Discord servers. Reply fast. Collect deposits.
- Deliver like a pro. Sketch approval within two days, final within one to two weeks depending on scope. Ask for a testimonial and permission to share.
Final coaching note Approach this like a disciplined kata. Specialize, price with confidence, and communicate like a calm pro. Selling art commissions is not a lottery. It is a repeatable sprint. With a focused niche, a clean commission sheet, and consistent posting, you can turn your creativity into a reliable side income that grows with every finished piece.

