Starting dropshipping/print on demand business as a minor as someone who wants to make money with limited income?
Hello! As a freshman in high school, soon sophomore, I have learned a lot out and in school. I want to begin making money now, and I have heard of both drop shipping and print on demand businesses for minors. Print on demand seems more easily accessible to my age, and I want opinions on how to start, my success rate, and from those experience, how much money can be expected to make if I put my all into it (which if I do I will)! I am more likely to do print on demand, but it depends on the money that goes in and out of it, and how each works legally. I still have research a bit, but I wanted to know some opinions. I am also aware I may not make a lot, but with the right effort and hardworking I believe I can.
1 answer
Ibrahim’s Answer
Let me give you some real talk based on what I’ve seen:
💡 Print-on-Demand vs. Dropshipping (For Minors)
Print-on-Demand (POD) is generally the better fit for someone your age:
No need to buy inventory.
Less customer service hassle.
No need to deal with international suppliers like in dropshipping.
It’s creative and fun — you can design t-shirts, mugs, hoodies, etc., and sell through places like Etsy, Redbubble, or Shopify (with Printful or Printify).
Dropshipping, on the other hand, can work too — but:
It usually requires more money up front for ads.
You have to deal with longer shipping times and more customer complaints.
The learning curve is steeper, and success is harder without spending on ads.
So you’re right to lean toward POD!
📈 What’s the Success Rate?
If you really put your all into it — learning design, branding, SEO, and how to market yourself — you can absolutely make money.
But here’s the realistic timeline:
First 3–6 months: You might make $0–$100. This is learning time. You’ll test designs, figure out how Etsy works, and improve.
After that: If you build a store that people like and stay consistent, it’s realistic to make $50–$500/month after your first year.
Some teens even grow their shops to $1,000+/month, but that’s with time, smart niche selection, and sometimes paid ads.
💸 Costs and Legal Stuff
Start-up costs: Basically free if you use a platform like Etsy + Printify. You only pay when you sell something.
Software/tools: You can use free tools like Canva for designing. Don’t buy expensive courses right now — there’s tons of free info on YouTube.
Legal stuff: Since you’re under 18, you’ll need a parent/guardian to help set up your accounts (like Etsy or a PayPal/Stripe account). It’s 100% doable — just talk to them and explain your plan.
💪 Final Advice
Start small — Pick one niche (like pets, school clubs, mental health, or gaming) and make a few designs.
Focus on quality and design — Unique, clever designs beat generic ones every time.
Be consistent — Upload weekly, study what sells, and improve your craft.
Treat it like a learning experience — Even if you make $20, you’re learning valuable skills (design, marketing, business) most people don’t get until their 20s.
You’ve got a solid mindset already, and that’s honestly more important than anything else. Stick with it, keep learning, and don’t be afraid to ask for feedback or advice — you’re not alone in this!
If you ever want to brainstorm niche ideas or need feedback on designs, I’d be happy to help. Keep that hustle going, you’re doing amazing.