📘 1000 Side Hustle Ideas Home ← Teaching, Coaching & Consulting ← Coding & Tech Tutoring
HUSTLE #744 8.5 Coding & Tech Tutoring

Teach Kids and Teens Coding Through Virtual Classes

💰 Startup Cost $0-100
⏰ Time/wk 6-12 hrs
📊 Difficulty ★★★★☆
🏆 1st Month $ $400-1200
💵 Monthly Range $1.5k-4k
⏱ First $ In 2-5 weeks
Outschool for listing classes for K-12 students. Zoom for live interactive classes. Scratch and Replit for kid-friendly coding environments. Code.org for curriculum inspiration.
Parents are eager to give their kids coding skills, and schools rarely provide quality computer science education. If you can code and enjoy working with young learners, you can teach virtual coding classes to kids and teens. Use block-based programming (Scratch) for ages 7-10, Python or web development for ages 11-14, and more advanced topics like AP Computer Science prep or game development for teens. Charge $15-30 per student for group classes of 6-12 students (earning $90-360 per hour), or $40-75 per hour for one-on-one tutoring. Create progressive curricula — a 6-week Scratch course, an 8-week Python course, a game development summer camp — that students progress through sequentially. Market to parent Facebook groups, local homeschooling networks, and on Outschool's built-in marketplace. The key is making sessions engaging and project-based; kids should build something shareable every few lessons to maintain excitement.
🚀 First Step
Design a 6-week beginner Scratch or Python curriculum with a specific final project, then list it on Outschool with a catchy class title.
  • Design classes around creating a specific game or app — 'Build Your Own Mario Game in Scratch' sells 10x better than 'Introduction to Programming'
  • Use Outschool's marketplace — they handle payment, scheduling, and discovery so you can focus on teaching
  • Offer progressive course pathways (Beginner -> Intermediate -> Advanced) — parents will sign kids up for the whole sequence once they see engagement
🛠 Tools & Resources: Outschool, Zoom, Scratch, Replit, Code.org, Canva, Google Slides