What is photography?
Photography remains one of the most accessible creative side hustles. Specialise in headshots (£80–£200/session), product photography for Etsy and Amazon sellers, local events, or family portraits. A modern smartphone genuinely can book your first clients — the quality of your eye and your reliability matter far more than expensive equipment at the start.
Bark.com — the top platform to get started
Find local photography clients. Start today and earn your first income this week.
Get started →
How to start photography in 4 steps
-
1Build a focused portfolioShoot 20 strong photos in one niche. Specialisation makes you look more professional and helps ideal clients immediately self-select and get in touch.
-
2List on the right platformsBark.com for general photography clients, Etsy for product photography packages, and Instagram for organic discovery from your target market.
-
3Pick your nicheHeadshots, product photography, newborns, and events all have strong demand but very different competition levels and rates.
-
4Add passive stock incomeSubmit your strongest shots to Shutterstock and Getty Images. Passive income compounds over time as your portfolio grows.
Ready to start? Bark.com is the best place to begin
Find local photography clients. Join thousands of UK earners already using it.
Start now →
Pros and cons
✓ Pros
- Creative work
- Earn £300–£3,000 per month
- Start within 2–8 weeks
- Startup cost: £0–£1,000
- Medium effort required
× Cons
- Requires consistent effort to build
- Income may be variable initially
- Competition exists in this space
- Takes time to reach full earnings
- Requires self-motivation
Frequently asked questions
A modern iPhone or Samsung Galaxy is genuinely sufficient for headshots, products, and events at starter rates. A mirrorless camera unlocks higher-end clients.
No. A strong portfolio and reliability are all that matter to most clients. Photography courses accelerate skill development but aren't a prerequisite.
Headshots: £80–£150 for 30 minutes. Events: £200–£600 for 4 hours. Product photography: £50–£200 per product batch. Research local competitors first.