Just been diving into passive income strategies lately, and honestly, the $1K monthly mark is a solid target to aim for. It's that sweet spot where financial freedom actually starts feeling real. Here's what I've been looking at.



First thing — if you've got some capital to work with, dividend-paying stocks and REITs are your friends. These actually generate cash regularly without you having to do much once they're set up. The math is straightforward: invest in stable dividend funds through platforms like Vanguard or Fidelity, reinvest your returns, and watch it compound. Some people go the REIT route through Arrived or Fundrise to get real estate exposure without managing properties directly. If you want flexibility, REIT stocks like Iron Mountain trade publicly and give you similar benefits.

Now, if you don't have serious capital but you've got skills or knowledge — that's where digital products come in. E-books, online courses, printables. The beauty is once you create them, they sell repeatedly with minimal effort. Platforms like Udemy, Etsy, and Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing make this accessible. Takes some upfront work and marketing, but the passive income potential is legit.

Peer-to-peer lending is another angle I keep seeing. Lend through platforms, get interest returns of 5-9% annually. Do the math: $140K invested at 9% gets you over $1K monthly. Obviously that's a big starting point, but you can begin smaller and reinvest returns until you hit your target.

Beyond these, there's affiliate marketing, blogging, rental properties, YouTube channels — honestly the list goes on. The common thread? They all require upfront setup, but once running, they generate income while you focus on other stuff. Some cost nothing to start (YouTube, blogging), others need investment. Just remember you'll owe taxes on whatever you earn, though certain deductions can help offset that.

The real insight here is that passive income isn't actually passive initially — you're building infrastructure. But once it's in place, you're essentially printing money. That's worth the effort.
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