Side Hustles in Canada to Pay Off Debt Faster: 25 Realistic Ideas

Paying off debt faster is one of the most powerful things you can do for your financial health in Canada. Every dollar of extra income directed at high-interest debt doesn’t just reduce your balance — it reduces the interest accumulating on that balance, creating a compounding positive effect that accelerates your debt payoff timeline dramatically.
The challenge is real: most Canadians working full-time don’t have obvious extra hours or obvious extra income sources. But the landscape of side income has changed fundamentally in the past decade. Technology platforms, the gig economy, remote work, and the monetization of skills and assets have created more viable side-hustle options than at any previous point in Canadian history.
This guide covers 25 realistic, practical side hustle ideas for Canadians focused on debt repayment — organized by category, with honest assessments of income potential, startup requirements, and the Canadian-specific tax and regulatory considerations you need to know.
All income from side hustles in Canada is taxable. Whether you earn $500 or $50,000 from side work, it must be reported to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). If your total self-employment income exceeds $30,000 in any four consecutive calendar quarters, you are required to register for and collect HST/GST. Starting out, track every dollar earned and every expense incurred — you’ll need this for your tax return.
Side hustle income directed specifically at debt repayment can dramatically shorten your payoff timeline. Even $500 per month in extra income applied to a $20,000 credit card balance at 19.99% interest saves over $8,000 in interest and cuts years off your repayment schedule.
How to Choose the Right Side Hustle When You’re in Debt
Not all side hustles are equal, and when your goal is debt repayment, certain factors matter more than pure income potential. The best side hustle for a debt-focused Canadian is one that:
- Starts generating income quickly — You don’t want a business that takes 12 months to become profitable while you’re paying 20% interest
- Has low startup costs — Taking on more debt to start a side business is counterproductive
- Fits around your primary job — Burnout is real; choose something sustainable
- Pays regularly and reliably — Consistency matters more than potential in the debt-payoff phase
- Leverages skills or assets you already have — The fastest path to income uses what you already bring to the table
For each of the 25 ideas below, we provide an honest income estimate, startup cost range, and a realistic timeframe to first dollar earned.
Category 1: Service-Based Side Hustles (Skills You Already Have)
Service-based side hustles are among the fastest paths to income because they leverage skills you’ve already developed. Startup costs are typically near zero, and clients can be found quickly through personal networks, local community boards, or platforms like Kijiji and Facebook Marketplace.
1. Freelance Writing and Content Creation
Canadian businesses, marketing agencies, and websites constantly need written content: blog posts, website copy, email newsletters, social media content, and more. If you write well — in English or French — freelance writing is among the most accessible and scalable service-based side hustles available.
| Experience Level | Typical Rate (Canadian) | Hours to Earn $500 |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner (no portfolio) | $15–$30/hour | 17–33 hours |
| Intermediate (some portfolio) | $40–$75/hour | 7–13 hours |
| Experienced specialist | $80–$150+/hour | 4–7 hours |
Where to find clients: LinkedIn, Contently, ProBlogger, Upwork, direct outreach to local businesses, Kijiji
Time to first income: 1–3 weeks
Startup costs: Near zero (computer and internet connection already required)
2. Virtual Assistance
Virtual assistants (VAs) handle administrative, organizational, and logistical tasks for busy entrepreneurs and small businesses remotely. Tasks include email management, scheduling, data entry, customer service, social media scheduling, and research. The demand for VAs in Canada has grown substantially as more businesses operate online.
Income range: $20–$50/hour
Where to find clients: Upwork, Fiverr, VA-specific Facebook groups, LinkedIn
Time to first income: 1–4 weeks
3. Bookkeeping for Small Businesses
If you have accounting or finance experience — or can learn basic bookkeeping — small Canadian businesses constantly need help managing their books. Many small business owners are not financially trained and struggle with GST/HST tracking, accounts payable/receivable, and monthly reconciliations.
Income range: $25–$65/hour
Certification note: You don’t need a CPA designation to do basic bookkeeping. Courses through CPA Canada’s preparatory program or Bookkeeping Certification programs are available online.
Time to first income: 2–6 weeks
Bookkeeping is one of the most underserved needs of Canadian small businesses with under $1M in revenue. The average small business owner pays $600–$1,200 per month for basic bookkeeping services. If you can take on just two small clients, you’re at $1,200–$2,400 per month in extra income.
4. Social Media Management
Many Canadian small businesses — restaurants, retailers, trades businesses, health and wellness practitioners — need someone to manage their Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, or LinkedIn presence. If you’re active on social media and understand content creation, this is a marketable and in-demand skill.
Income range: $300–$800/month per client (retainer model)
Time to first income: 2–4 weeks
Tip: Offer a free 2-week trial to a local business in exchange for a testimonial — this builds your portfolio quickly.
5. Tutoring and Teaching
Academic tutoring is perennially in demand across Canada, with parents willing to pay premium rates for quality tutors in math, science, English, French, and test prep (SAT, ACT, university entrance exams). Online tutoring platforms have expanded the market beyond your geographic area.
Income range: $25–$80/hour (in-person or online)
Where to find students: Tutors.ca, Wyzant, Lessonface, school board community boards, local Facebook groups
Time to first income: 1–2 weeks
6. Graphic Design
If you have design skills — even basic proficiency in Canva or Adobe products — Canadian small businesses, nonprofits, and event organizers regularly need logos, social media graphics, marketing materials, and presentation design. The creative economy offers strong demand for design work at all skill levels.
Income range: $25–$100+/hour; project-based work from $100 to $2,000+ per project
Platforms: 99designs, Fiverr, Upwork, direct client relationships
When pricing design or any service work, think in project rates, not hourly rates. Charging $500 for a logo package versus $25/hour means you benefit from working efficiently — and clients prefer knowing the total cost upfront. Once you build speed, your effective hourly rate climbs significantly.
7. Photography
Photography can generate meaningful side income in Canada through several channels: event photography (weddings, corporate events, birthday parties), portrait sessions, real estate photography, and stock photography. The real estate photography niche is particularly lucrative — many realtors pay $150–$300 per property shoot.
Income range: $75–$250+/hour for event/portrait work; $150–$400 per real estate shoot
Startup costs: If you already own a camera, near zero. Entry-level DSLR kits available for $500–$800 if needed.
Category 2: Platform-Based Gig Work (Flexible Hours, Immediate Income)
Platform-based gig work offers the fastest path to income of any side hustle category. Sign up, verify your identity, and you can be earning money within days — sometimes the same day. The trade-off is that these platforms typically offer lower income per hour than skilled service work, and income can be variable.
8. Rideshare Driving (Uber/Lyft)
Rideshare driving is one of the most accessible immediate-income options for Canadians with a reliable vehicle and a clean driving record. Uber and Lyft operate in most major Canadian cities, and the sign-up process takes approximately one week (background check and vehicle inspection required).
Income range: $18–$28/hour after platform fees (before fuel and vehicle costs)
Important consideration: After accounting for fuel, vehicle wear, insurance considerations, and CRA taxes on self-employment income, net income is lower. Track mileage diligently — it’s tax-deductible.
Requirements: Clean driving record, vehicle that meets platform standards (typically 2012 or newer for Uber), valid Canadian driver’s license
9. Food Delivery (DoorDash, SkipTheDishes, Uber Eats)
Food delivery platforms in Canada allow flexible scheduling — work when you want, stop when you want. Income is generally lower per hour than rideshare, but the required vehicle can be a bicycle in many urban areas, reducing costs significantly.
Income range: $15–$22/hour (cycling); $18–$25/hour (vehicle)
Best markets: Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Montreal
Peak income times: Lunch, dinner, and weekends
10. Task-Based Work (TaskRabbit)
TaskRabbit connects people who need help with physical tasks — furniture assembly, TV mounting, moving assistance, yard work, minor repairs — with people who can do them. It operates in major Canadian cities and has relatively low competition in many service categories.
Income range: $30–$80/hour depending on task type
Top categories: Furniture assembly, moving help, home repairs, cleaning
Startup costs: TaskRabbit registration fee ($25 USD); basic tools for relevant tasks
11. Pet Sitting and Dog Walking (Rover)
Canada’s pet industry is massive and growing. Rover.com and Wag connect pet owners with local sitters and walkers, and demand is particularly strong in urban areas where pet ownership is high. Rates in cities like Toronto and Vancouver are especially strong.
Income range: $20–$45/walk; $40–$85/night for boarding; $25–$55 for drop-in visits
Startup costs: Near zero (Rover takes a platform fee from earnings)
Best for: Animal lovers who want flexible, enjoyable work
12. Grocery and Errand Shopping (Instacart)
Instacart operates across Canada and pays independent contractors to shop and deliver groceries. It requires a vehicle in most markets and strong organizational skills. It’s less lucrative than rideshare but requires less customer interaction and can be done in shorter time blocks.
Income range: $14–$22/hour including tips
Requirements: Reliable vehicle, smartphone, ability to lift grocery loads
Category 3: Asset Monetization (Earning from What You Own)
This category is unique: instead of trading your time for money, you’re earning income from assets you already own. For Canadians with the right assets, this can generate passive or semi-passive income that doesn’t eat into limited evening and weekend hours.
13. Renting a Room or Basement Suite (Airbnb or Long-Term)
If you own your home or have a landlord who permits subletting, renting a spare room or basement suite is one of the highest-yield income opportunities available. In markets like Toronto and Vancouver, even a single room generates substantial monthly income.
Income range: $800–$2,500+/month (long-term); $50–$200+/night (Airbnb in urban markets)
Important: Check your municipal zoning and any strata/condo rules before listing. Many municipalities require short-term rental (STR) licences. Income is fully taxable but many expenses are deductible.
14. Renting Your Parking Spot
In high-density urban areas, a parking spot can generate meaningful monthly income. Platforms like ParkWhiz and SpotHero connect parking spot owners with renters, or you can list directly on Kijiji or Facebook Marketplace.
Income range: $100–$500+/month in downtown Toronto or Vancouver
Startup costs: Near zero
Best markets: Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Montreal
15. Renting Your Vehicle (Turo)
Turo allows you to rent your personal vehicle to verified renters when you’re not using it. This works particularly well for Canadians who work from home or take transit regularly, leaving a vehicle sitting idle for extended periods.
Income range: $500–$1,500+/month depending on vehicle type and location
Important: Your personal auto insurance does not cover Turo rentals. Turo provides its own coverage while the vehicle is rented. Review this carefully with your insurer before listing.
16. Selling Unused Items (Decluttering for Dollars)
Before pursuing any new income-generating activity, many Canadians find that they’re sitting on hundreds or thousands of dollars of unused items: clothing, electronics, sports equipment, furniture, tools, collectibles. Platforms like Facebook Marketplace, Kijiji, Poshmark (clothing), and eBay make selling fast and easy.
Income range: $500–$5,000+ as a one-time burst of debt-payoff funds
Time to cash: Often within days on Facebook Marketplace
Tip: Apply every dollar of decluttering income directly to your highest-interest debt immediately.
Decluttering income is an excellent “quick win” to build momentum in debt repayment. Even a single $1,000 payment made directly to your highest-interest balance reduces the interest charged on every subsequent payment — the effect is immediate and visible on your statement.
Category 4: Digital and Online Income (Scalable Over Time)
Digital income sources often have slower startup times but higher long-term potential. Some can eventually generate income passively — without ongoing active hours. For debt-focused Canadians, combining one fast-cash service hustle with one longer-term digital hustle is often an optimal strategy.
17. Selling Digital Products (Etsy, Gumroad)
Digital products — printable planners, templates, graphic design assets, educational content, knitting patterns, photography presets — can be sold repeatedly with no additional production cost after the initial creation. Etsy has a large market for digital downloads in Canada.
Income range: Highly variable; from $50 to $5,000+/month depending on niche and marketing
Startup costs: Etsy listing fees ($0.20 CAD per listing); time invested in creation
Time to meaningful income: 2–6 months typically
18. Online Course Creation
If you have expertise in any subject — fitness, cooking, career development, language learning, software skills, a trade — creating and selling an online course can generate recurring income. Platforms like Teachable, Thinkific (a Canadian company), and Udemy host and sell courses.
Income range: $200–$5,000+/month after course is live and marketed
Time to first income: 2–4 months to create and launch a quality course
Thinkific note: Thinkific is based in Vancouver and offers a free plan — ideal for Canadian creators starting out.
19. YouTube or Podcast Monetization
Long-term digital content creation — YouTube channels, podcasts — can generate advertising income, sponsorship income, and affiliate income. However, these are genuinely long-term projects: meaningful income typically takes 12–24 months to develop. For debt repayment, this is best viewed as a 2-year runway investment rather than an immediate solution.
Income range: $0 initially; $500–$10,000+/month after 12–24 months with audience growth
Best for: People who already have content ideas and enjoy content creation
20. Affiliate Marketing
Affiliate marketing involves promoting other companies’ products and earning a commission when someone buys through your link. Many Canadian creators earn meaningful affiliate income through blogs, social media, YouTube, and email newsletters. Canadian-relevant programs include Amazon.ca, Canadian Tire, Shopify, and financial product affiliate programs.
Income range: Highly variable; from near zero to thousands per month
Startup costs: Near zero (if you already have an online platform)
“I paid off $31,000 in student debt in 26 months — my day job covered minimum payments, and a combination of freelance writing and Etsy digital products covered every extra dollar. The key was treating side hustle income like it didn’t exist for spending, only for debt.”
Category 5: Trades, Labour, and Skilled Hands-On Work
For Canadians with trades skills, physical capability, or practical knowledge, hands-on side hustles can be among the highest-paying options available — particularly because trades labour in Canada is in high demand and short supply.
21. Painting (Interior/Exterior)
Residential painting is one of the most accessible skilled side hustles for Canadians. Startup costs are relatively low (rollers, brushes, drop cloths, tape), and many experienced painters work evenings and weekends generating $400–$800 per day on residential projects.
Income range: $35–$65/hour; $400–$800+/day
Startup costs: $200–$500 for quality equipment
Marketing: Kijiji, local Facebook groups, word of mouth
22. Landscaping and Snow Removal
Lawn care in summer and snow removal in winter provide year-round income opportunities for physically capable Canadians. Snow removal is particularly in-demand in Prairie provinces and Ontario. Regular commercial accounts (driveways, walkways) can provide reliable weekly income through winter months.
Income range: $30–$60/hour for lawn care; $35–$75/hour for snow removal
Startup costs: $500–$2,000 for equipment (or leverage existing tools)
23. General Handyman/Repair Work
Minor home repairs, furniture assembly, painting touchups, installation of light fixtures, shelving, and other “handyman” tasks are persistently in demand, particularly in condo and apartment-heavy markets where residents cannot easily do these things themselves. You don’t need a contractor’s licence for minor repairs in most provinces.
Income range: $40–$75/hour
Platforms: TaskRabbit, Kijiji, local Facebook groups
24. Moving Assistance
Moving is one of those tasks people consistently need help with and consistently underestimate. Renting out your truck (or just your labour and carrying ability) to people moving apartments, furniture, or storage units can generate strong hourly income, particularly around month-end (when most Canadian apartment leases turn over).
Income range: $30–$50/hour as a mover; $80–$150+/hour if you provide the truck
Peak times: End of month, spring/summer moving season
25. Personal Training or Fitness Coaching
Certified personal trainers can generate substantial side income, particularly if they’re willing to train clients in parks, home gyms, or client residences — eliminating the gym rental fee. Online coaching through platforms like Trainerize allows Canadians to coach clients anywhere in the country.
Income range: $50–$100+/hour in-person; $200–$800+/month per online coaching client
Certification: Canfitpro certification is the most recognized in Canada; courses run $600–$1,200
The Math: How Side Hustle Income Accelerates Debt Payoff
To make this concrete, here’s how different monthly side hustle income levels affect the payoff timeline for a $25,000 balance at 19.99% interest, assuming you’re currently making a minimum payment of $500/month:
| Monthly Extra Payment | Payoff Timeline | Total Interest Paid | Interest Savings vs. Minimum Only |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0 (minimum payment only) | 8.5 years | $26,400 | — |
| $200/month extra | 4.2 years | $13,900 | $12,500 saved |
| $500/month extra | 2.6 years | $8,200 | $18,200 saved |
| $1,000/month extra | 1.6 years | $4,800 | $21,600 saved |
| $2,000/month extra | 11 months | $2,500 | $23,900 saved |
The numbers are striking. An extra $1,000/month — achievable through a combination of rideshare driving, a few tutoring clients, and some freelance work — can eliminate $25,000 in credit card debt in under 2 years and save you over $21,000 in interest. That’s not a small difference. That’s life-changing.
Canadian Tax Considerations for Side Hustle Income
This section is worth reading carefully before you start — because the CRA takes a clear interest in self-employment income, and being prepared for your tax obligations prevents an unpleasant surprise in April.
All Side Income Is Taxable
Every dollar you earn from a side hustle is taxable as self-employment income (Line 13500 on your T1 return). It is added to your other income and taxed at your marginal rate. Depending on your province and total income, this could mean 20–50% of your net side income goes to tax.
Business Expenses Are Deductible
The good news: legitimate business expenses reduce your taxable side income. Common deductible expenses include:
- Mileage driven for business purposes (use the CRA’s prescribed rate: 70¢/km for the first 5,000km in 2025, 64¢/km thereafter)
- A portion of your home office expenses (if you work from home)
- Equipment and software used exclusively for the business
- Marketing and advertising costs
- Professional development and courses
- Bank fees on business accounts
CPP Contributions on Self-Employment Income
When you’re self-employed, you pay both the employee and employer share of CPP contributions on your net self-employment income — currently approximately 11.9% on earnings above the Year’s Basic Exemption ($3,500). This is a significant additional cost that many new side hustlers don’t anticipate. Budget for it.
GST/HST Registration
If your gross self-employment income (across all businesses combined) exceeds $30,000 in any four consecutive calendar quarters, you must register for GST/HST with the CRA, charge applicable sales tax, and remit it. Below $30,000, registration is optional but may be beneficial (allowing you to claim input tax credits on business purchases).
Set aside 25–30% of every side hustle payment you receive into a dedicated savings account for taxes and CPP. When tax season arrives, you’ll either owe most of it or — if you’ve tracked your deductible expenses well — you may have a pleasant surplus. Never commingle side hustle tax reserves with your spending money.
Structuring Your Side Hustle for Maximum Debt Impact
The single most important rule for using side hustle income to pay off debt is this: every dollar of side hustle income must be automatically and immediately directed to your debt. Not to savings. Not to lifestyle upgrades. Not to “treating yourself after a hard week.” To debt — specifically to your highest-interest debt first (the debt avalanche method).
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Choose 1–2 Side Hustles to Start
Don’t spread yourself too thin. Choose one or two side hustles that fit your skills, schedule, and startup budget, and do them well. It’s better to consistently earn $600/month from one focused effort than to attempt five hustles and earn $150 from each while burning out.
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Open a Dedicated Side Hustle Bank Account
Keep all side income in a separate account. This makes tracking income easy for tax purposes and prevents the money from blending with your regular spending. Open a free or low-fee chequing account specifically for side hustle deposits.
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Set Up Automatic Debt Payments
Link your side hustle account to your credit card or loan account and set up an automatic extra payment every week or biweekly — immediately after income is deposited. Automating this step removes the psychological temptation to spend the money elsewhere.
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Track Your Progress Monthly
Maintain a simple spreadsheet or use a free app (Mint, YNAB, or a Google Sheet) to track: total debt at the start of the month, total side income earned, total extra payments made, and remaining balance. Watching the debt number drop month after month is powerful motivation to keep going.
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Increase Your Rate as You Learn
Most service-based side hustles are underpriced at the start because you don’t yet have reviews, referrals, or a portfolio. As you build these assets, incrementally raise your rates every 3–6 months. Doubling your effective hourly rate from $25 to $50 is often achievable within 12–18 months of focused effort.
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Maintain Your Physical and Mental Health
Side hustling while carrying debt is stressful. Build mandatory rest time into your schedule. Burnout that causes you to quit your day job, damage your primary employment, or require medical attention is far more costly than the debt you’re trying to eliminate. Sustainable progress beats unsustainable sprinting every time.
The All-25: Side Hustle Quick Reference
| # | Side Hustle | Income Range (CAD) | Startup Cost | Time to First Income |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Freelance Writing | $15–$150+/hr | $0 | 1–3 weeks |
| 2 | Virtual Assistance | $20–$50/hr | $0 | 1–4 weeks |
| 3 | Bookkeeping | $25–$65/hr | $0–$500 | 2–6 weeks |
| 4 | Social Media Management | $300–$800/mo/client | $0 | 2–4 weeks |
| 5 | Tutoring | $25–$80/hr | $0 | 1–2 weeks |
| 6 | Graphic Design | $25–$100+/hr | $0–$50 | 1–4 weeks |
| 7 | Photography | $75–$250+/hr | $0–$800 | 2–6 weeks |
| 8 | Rideshare Driving | $18–$28/hr | ~$0 | 1–2 weeks |
| 9 | Food Delivery | $15–$25/hr | ~$0 | 3–7 days |
| 10 | TaskRabbit | $30–$80/hr | $25 (USD) | 1–2 weeks |
| 11 | Pet Sitting/Dog Walking | $20–$85/session | $0 | 1–2 weeks |
| 12 | Instacart Grocery | $14–$22/hr | $0 | 3–7 days |
| 13 | Room/Basement Rental | $800–$2,500+/mo | $0–$500 | 1–4 weeks |
| 14 | Parking Spot Rental | $100–$500+/mo | $0 | 1–2 weeks |
| 15 | Turo Car Rental | $500–$1,500+/mo | $0 | 1–2 weeks |
| 16 | Selling Unused Items | $500–$5,000+ (one-time) | $0 | 1–5 days |
| 17 | Digital Products (Etsy) | $50–$5,000+/mo | $0–$20 | 2–6 months |
| 18 | Online Course Creation | $200–$5,000+/mo | $0–$200 | 2–4 months |
| 19 | YouTube/Podcast | $0–$10,000+/mo | $100–$500 | 12–24 months |
| 20 | Affiliate Marketing | $0–$5,000+/mo | $0 | 3–12 months |
| 21 | Painting | $35–$65/hr | $200–$500 | 1–2 weeks |
| 22 | Landscaping/Snow Removal | $30–$75/hr | $500–$2,000 | 1–2 weeks |
| 23 | Handyman/Repairs | $40–$75/hr | $0–$300 | 1–2 weeks |
| 24 | Moving Assistance | $30–$150+/hr | $0–$500 | 1–2 weeks |
| 25 | Personal Training | $50–$100+/hr | $600–$1,200 | 4–8 weeks |
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to register a business to start a side hustle in Canada?
For most small-scale side hustles, you can operate as a sole proprietor using your own name without registering a business. However, if you want to operate under a business name (e.g., “Smith Landscaping” rather than “John Smith”), you must register the business name with your provincial registry. Registration is typically inexpensive ($60–$80 in most provinces). Once your income reaches a consistent level, registering a sole proprietorship also makes it easier to open a business bank account and demonstrates legitimacy to clients.
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Will side hustle income affect my EI eligibility?
Self-employment income does not disqualify you from collecting Employment Insurance (EI) if you lose your primary job — but it is reported and may affect the amount you receive. If you’re collecting EI and also earning self-employment income, you are required to report that income to Service Canada. Failure to report income while collecting EI can result in repayment requirements and penalties. For clarity on your specific situation, contact Service Canada directly.
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How do I avoid lifestyle inflation when earning side hustle income?
This is the biggest risk in the side hustle-for-debt-payoff strategy. The moment extra income starts flowing, the temptation to spend it on lifestyle upgrades is powerful. The most effective mitigation strategies: (1) Set up automatic extra debt payments before you can spend the money. (2) Track your debt balance visually — a chart that goes down every month is more motivating than a chart that goes sideways because you spent the extra income. (3) Give yourself a small, predetermined “fun budget” from side hustle income (e.g., 10% of everything earned) so it’s not all restriction and sacrifice.
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