How Much Money Can You Actually Make Selling Digital Products? (Real Numbers)
How Much Money Can You Actually Make Selling Digital Products? (Real Numbers)
One of the first questions I asked before I started was: is this actually worth it? Not the YouTube-thumbnail version of the answer. The real version. How much can you realistically earn selling digital products online?
After two years of doing this, I want to give you honest numbers — not the ceiling, but the full range.
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The Short Answer: It Depends on a Lot
I know that's not satisfying. But I'd rather give you a useful framework than a flashy headline number that doesn't match reality.
Here's what the range actually looks like:
- Beginners in month 1–3: $0–$200/month
- Gaining traction (3–6 months in): $200–$1,000/month
- Established with consistent traffic: $1,000–$5,000/month
- With an audience or solid SEO: $5,000–$20,000/month
- Outliers with viral products or big audiences: $20,000+/month
That's a massive range. So let's talk about what actually moves the needle.
What Determines How Much You Make
1. Your Product Type and Price Point
A $9 checklist and a $97 course are both "digital products," but they generate wildly different revenue.
If you're selling a $9 template, you need 56 sales to hit $500/month. If you're selling a $97 guide, you need 6. The higher your price point (assuming people will pay it), the fewer sales you need.
My first product was an ebook at $17. My best month with it was $340 — about 20 sales. Not life-changing, but proof it worked.
My second product was a $67 toolkit. Same amount of traffic, three times the revenue.
Lesson: price matters more than volume, especially early on.
2. How Many People See Your Product
No traffic = no sales. This is the biggest variable and the one most beginners underestimate.
Organic search traffic takes 3–6 months to build. Social media is faster but less predictable. An email list is the most reliable but takes time to grow.
In my first month, I had almost no traffic and made $34. By month 6, I had consistent organic traffic and was making $800–$1,200/month from the same products.
3. Your Conversion Rate
Getting traffic is half the battle. Converting visitors into buyers is the other half.
Average conversion rates for digital products are 1–3%. Meaning if 100 people visit your product page, 1–3 of them buy. Great pages push that to 5–8%.
Your product description, title, and social proof (testimonials, reviews) all affect this. I've doubled my conversion rate on a single product just by rewriting the description.
4. Your Platform and Setup
Some platforms take 15–30% fees. Others charge a flat subscription. The economics matter.
When I switched to MadeThis, I stopped losing a chunk of every sale to fees. That alone boosted my effective earnings by about 20%.
Real Income Breakdowns From People I Know
Let me share some real-ish numbers from the space (anonymized):
- A designer selling Canva templates at $19/each: $2,400/month after 18 months
- A teacher selling study guides at $12: $800/month consistently
- A marketer with a $197 course: $6,000–$8,000/month with email + SEO
- A freelancer selling proposal templates at $47: $1,200/month with almost no marketing effort
- Me, selling AI business tools at $37–$97: between $3,000–$5,000/month now
None of these people had big audiences when they started. They built their income over 6–18 months through consistent content and product improvement.
The Income Ceiling Is High, But the Floor Is Work
Here's what the gurus won't tell you: months 1–3 are usually hard. You'll likely make little to nothing. That's normal, not a sign that you're failing.
The people who hit $2,000–$5,000/month aren't geniuses. They're just people who kept going past the slow start.
What I wish I'd understood earlier:
- Your first product teaches you more than any course
- Traffic compounds over time — slow at first, then accelerating
- One good product can carry you for years with minimal upkeep
- Reinvesting early revenue (into tools, content, ads) accelerates growth
What to Realistically Expect in Year 1
If you start today and commit to one product, one traffic channel, and consistent improvement:
- Month 1–2: $0–$100 (learning phase)
- Month 3–4: $100–$400 (getting traction)
- Month 5–6: $400–$1,000 (compounding begins)
- Month 7–12: $1,000–$5,000+ (if you kept going)
This is a realistic range for someone who treats it like a real business, not a lottery ticket.
The Platform Choice Matters
I've sold on multiple platforms. The difference in setup, fees, and features changed my income significantly.
A good platform handles the store, checkout, delivery, and product management so you spend more time on product creation and traffic — which is where income actually comes from.
If you're ready to start, MadeThis gives you everything you need — madethis.com
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