For many Nigerian women, hobbies that began as boredom cures, coping mechanisms, or pure joy have slowly turned into income streams. Not all of the women sharing here are earning millions. Some months are slow. Some months are zero. But the numbers are real, the lessons are hard-earned, and the money counts. These stories highlight how they monetised their hobbies, told through their experiences.

1. “My Dad Told Me to Stop Hoarding Yarn and Start Selling.” — Praise*, 27
I started crocheting because I genuinely loved it. For a long time, my house was just full of yarn, half-finished projects and ideas I kept promising myself I’d complete. I wasn’t thinking about money at all.
It took about six months before I earned anything. Even now, my income isn’t consistent because I mostly rely on word of mouth, and I’m not very intentional about promotion. Some months, nothing comes in. Other months, someone places a big order and reminds me why I started.
Crocheting also comes with costs nobody really talks about, sourcing quality yarn, creating content, and the physical strain. My hands feel it.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Crocheting
First payout: ₦5,000
Current average: Irregular
Slow month: ₦0
Peak month: ₦70,000
Biggest challenge: Materials, promotion, physical strain
2. “I Only Wanted Perfumes For Myself. The MOQ Forced Me Into Business.” — Kosi*, 23
I didn’t plan to start a perfume business. I was just building my personal collection when I found a supplier on TikTok. When I reached out, they told me the minimum order quantity was 12.
Instead of backing out, I looked for people who wanted to join the order. Then I realised how cheap the perfumes were and added an extra ₦5,000 margin. That first batch made me ₦35,000, which I reinvested immediately.
Between July and December 2025, I made around ₦500,000 selling perfumes casually, mostly to friends and family. I move at my own pace, and logistics is my main expense, but it hasn’t discouraged me.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Perfume reselling
First payout: ₦50,000
Current average: ~₦80,000 monthly
Slow month: ₦50,000
Peak month: ₦150,000
Biggest challenge: Logistics costs
3. “I Volunteered to Write. Then Someone Offered to Pay.” — Timii*, 29
I was already writing before money entered the picture. I volunteered to write for someone, and when she insisted on paying me, something clicked.
It took me the whole of 2024 to properly stabilise things, but I was earning along the way. When I’m not actively chasing clients, income slows down. When I’m handling multiple projects, it can get intense but very rewarding.
Most of my earnings go straight back into improving my work setup. Better tools make a real difference.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Story writing
First payout: ₦15,000
Current average: ₦50,000–₦100,000
Slow month: Depends on effort
Peak month: ₦200,000–₦350,000
Biggest challenge: Mental labour and reinvestment costs
4. “Someone Saw My Oil at a Trade Fair and Asked to Buy It.” — Folu*, 18
I didn’t set out to sell hair oil. I was at a trade fair sourcing packaging for another idea, and I brought my own bottle of oil. Someone saw it and wanted to buy it immediately.
Weeks later, during a bored December moment, I remembered that interaction and decided to try selling. I got my first orders within two hours. Because it was a pre-order, I didn’t use my own money for capital.
Logistics has been the biggest shock for me. Delivery costs have forced me to turn down customers outside my state more times than I’d like.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Organic hair oil production
First payout: ₦30,000 (including capital)
Current average: ~₦20,000 per batch
Weekly earnings: ₦10,000+
Biggest challenge: Delivery costs
5. “I Love Baking, but Quality Ingredients are Expensive.” — Chiamaka*, 31
I always knew baking could become more than just sharing treats with friends. It just took time to align.
By 2024 and 2025, the money became more consistent, though not every month. Ingredients, logistics and even marketing, which is ironic because I work in marketing, are still ongoing challenges.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Baking
First payout: ₦100,000
Current average: ~₦100,000 (not monthly)
Slow month: ₦30,000
Peak month: ₦100,000
Biggest challenge: Ingredients, marketing, logistics
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6. “Crochet is Expensive, but Finishing a Piece Still Feels Good.” — Modesayo*, 24
I’ve been crocheting for almost three years, mostly for family and friends. For a long time, it was just a hobby, not something I saw as a business.
My first ever payment was ₦2,500 for a bralette I made for a friend. December was the first time it felt more serious. I earned ₦30,000 crocheting a bag, and that changed how I saw the possibilities.
Right now, I’m preparing pieces for a proper launch and hoping to finally treat crochet like the business it can be.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Crocheting
First payout: ₦2,500
Most recent peak: ₦30,000
Current average: Irregular
Biggest challenge: Cost of yarn and time
7. “Editing Pays Well, but Expenses Never Stop.” — Ewa*, 20
I make money consistently from video editing, but it comes with regular expenses. Software subscriptions, internet and electricity eat into my income every month.
My breakthrough moment came when a friend paid me to edit a short business video. That one job led to referrals and helped me take myself more seriously.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Video editing
First payout: ₦30,000
Current average: ₦200,000 monthly
Slow month: ₦50,000–₦80,000
Peak month: ₦150,000–₦200,000
Biggest challenge: Operating expenses
8. “People Told Me I Should Model Long Before I Got Paid.” — Zainab*, 26
I was always tall and slender, and was told to try modelling from a young age. I did a few shoots for people I knew at 15 and 16. I started taking payments when I got into university.
My first gig was ₦10,000. As I gained experience and agents scouted me specifically for mixed-race casting, I never earned less than ₦100,000 per shoot. Now at 26, I have a rate card, headshots, and a thriving Instagram following. I earn ₦300,000 – ₦800,000 depending on the shoot and brand.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Modelling
First payout: ₦10,000
Current average: ₦300,000–₦800,000
Slow month: Varies
Peak month: ₦800,000
Biggest challenge: Competition and seasonal work
9. “Writing Romance Pays, But the Mental Labour is Real.” — Oluwakemi*, 29
I turned my love for reading into writing and ghostwriting. My first payout came in dollars, and that alone validated the effort.
Income depends on contracts and gigs, but in strong months, I earn upwards of ₦500,000. There are no material costs, but the mental and emotional energy it takes to keep writing is heavy.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Ghostwriting
First payout: $50
Slow month: ₦100,000
Peak month: ₦500,000+
Biggest challenge: Creative exhaustion
10. “Some Months are Zero. Some Months are ₦95k.” — Nancy*, 20
I’ve been crocheting for three years, and the income is unpredictable. Some months, nothing sells. In other months, one order changes everything.
What keeps me going is how fast my first piece sold. Even with rising yarn prices and logistics costs, I’m still pushing and hoping consistency comes with time.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Crocheting
First payout: ₦12,000
Slow month: ₦0–₦2,000
Peak month: ₦95,000
Biggest challenge: Yarn and delivery costs
11. “I Turned My Love For Weed Into Events and Income.” — Amara*, 33
I’ve been smoking since my early 20s, but I started monetising around 27. At first, it was on and off, just dealing here and there. Very slowly, I started making real money. Then I realised I could turn it into events: Puff & Paint, Puff, Sip & Paint, pool parties, beach parties, house parties, weed is always the overarching theme.
My day job managing an artist helps me take these events across the world. Of course, the events are always bigger and better in places where weed is legal, which lets me scale things internationally. It’s been a long, slow build, but seeing people enjoy themselves while I earn has been worth it.
Cost Breakdown
Hobby: Weed-themed event curation
First payout: ₦20,000 (early small deals)
Current average: ₦150,000–₦400,000 per event
Slow month: ₦0–₦50,000
Peak month: ₦500,000+
Biggest challenge: Legal restrictions, logistics, scaling events
None of these women had a perfect plan. Most started accidentally. Almost all underestimated the hidden costs, logistics, materials, burnout, or time.
But the pattern is clear: people were already asking them to do these things for free. The money came when they decided to say yes and charge.
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