digital products – Bowerist https://bowerist.com Creative Business Tips & Resources for Creative Entrepreneurs Fri, 13 Mar 2026 20:20:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://bowerist.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-Bowerist-logo-square-funky4-32x32.png digital products – Bowerist https://bowerist.com 32 32 Digital Product Revenue: A Realistic Income Breakdown for Beginners https://bowerist.com/digital-product-revenue/ Fri, 13 Mar 2026 20:20:20 +0000 https://bowerist.com/?p=2229 You’ve got the ideas. You’ve got the skills. But how much can you actually earn selling digital products?

It’s one of the first questions every aspiring digital product creator asks — and one of the hardest to get a straight answer to. Most advice online is either wildly optimistic (“I made $10k in my first month!”) or frustratingly vague (“It depends”).

The truth? Digital product income is real, achievable, and — when you understand the numbers — surprisingly predictable. You don’t need a massive audience or a viral launch. You need a plan, a product suite, and a basic understanding of how the maths works.

In this article, we’ll break down realistic income scenarios for digital product sellers at every stage — from your first $500/month to building a full-time income. We’ll model out real numbers across different product mixes, factor in platform fees, and show you exactly what it takes to hit your goals.

And if you want to plug in your own numbers? Try our free Digital Product Income Calculator to model your own product suite.

How digital product income actually works

Before we dive into the numbers, let’s get clear on the basics.

Digital products are files or resources you create once and sell repeatedly — no inventory, no shipping, no per-unit production costs. Common examples include:

  • Templates (Canva, Notion, spreadsheets, planners)
  • Printables (wall art, checklists, journals)
  • Guides and ebooks (how-to PDFs, workbooks)
  • Presets and filters (Lightroom, video editing)
  • Design assets (fonts, icons, mockups, social media kits)
  • Educational content (mini-courses, tutorials, workshops)

Your revenue comes down to a simple formula:

Revenue = Number of Products × Price × Sales per Month

Then you subtract platform and payment processing fees to get your net income — the money that actually hits your account.


Where to sell digital products (and what they charge)

Where you sell affects how much you keep. Here’s a quick breakdown of the most popular platforms and their fee structures:

PlatformBest forTypical feesBuilt-in audience?
EtsyTemplates, printables, planners~6.5% (listing + transaction + processing)Yes — large buyer marketplace
Creative MarketDesign assets, fonts, graphics~40% commission (they take a bigger cut)Yes — design-focused audience
GumroadCourses, ebooks, any digital file10% flat feeSome — growing creator marketplace
Kit (ConvertKit)Creator products sold to your email list~3.5% + processingNo — you bring your audience
Your own websiteFull control, brand building~2.9% + $0.30 (payment processing only)No — you drive all traffic
PayhipDigital downloads, courses5% (free plan) or 0% (paid plan)No — you bring your audience

💡 Key takeaway: Platforms with built-in audiences (like Etsy) charge higher fees but bring you buyers. Selling on your own site means lower fees but you need to drive your own traffic. The smartest strategy? Sell on both — use marketplaces for discovery and your own site for higher margins.


The income scenarios: let’s run the numbers

Here’s where it gets interesting. We’ve modelled out four realistic income scenarios to show what’s possible at different stages of your digital product business.

For each scenario, we’ll factor in a 6.5% average selling fee (roughly what you’d pay on Etsy or a combination of platforms). If you’re selling on your own website with just payment processing, your net income would be even higher.


Scenario 1: The Starter — 5 products, $30–$50 range

You’re just getting started. You’ve created a small collection of premium templates or guides and you’re testing the waters.

ProductPriceSales/moGross
Brand Kit Template$458$360
Social Media Bundle$3512$420
Client Onboarding Kit$406$240
Invoice Template Pack$3010$300
Freelance Pricing Guide$505$250
  • Total gross revenue: $1,570/month
  • Fees (6.5%): −$102
  • Net revenue: $1,468/month
  • Annualised: ~$17,616/year

✅ The takeaway: Even with just 5 products in the $30–50 range, you can build a meaningful side income. At ~8 sales per product per month, that’s only about 1–2 sales per day across your whole shop. Very achievable.


Scenario 2: The Builder — 10 products, $5–$50 mix

You’ve been at it for a few months. You have a mix of low-ticket impulse buys and higher-value bundles. This is the sweet spot for most creators building momentum.

ProductPriceSales/moGross
Checklist Printable$540$200
Weekly Planner$830$240
Instagram Story Templates$1225$300
Pin Templates Pack$1520$300
Notion Dashboard$1815$270
Brand Style Guide Template$2512$300
Client Welcome Kit$3010$300
Business Planner$358$280
Freelance Starter Bundle$456$270
Complete Brand Kit Bundle$505$250
  • Total gross revenue: $2,710/month
  • Fees (6.5%): −$176
  • Net revenue: $2,534/month
  • Annualised: ~$30,408/year

🔥 The takeaway: A mixed-price product suite is powerful. Your $5–15 products act as entry points — they’re easy impulse buys that get customers into your shop. Your $30–50 products are where the real revenue lives. Notice how the top 4 highest-priced products generate more revenue than the bottom 6 combined, even with fewer sales.


Scenario 3: The Volume Play — 20 products, $5–$20 range

You’ve gone wide instead of deep. Lots of lower-priced templates and printables — the kind that sell well on Etsy and Pinterest where people browse and buy on impulse.

ProductPriceSales/moGross
Daily Planner$545$225
Habit Tracker$540$200
Grocery List Printable$535$175
Budget Tracker$730$210
Meal Planner$728$196
Goal Setting Worksheet$825$200
Reading Tracker$822$176
Gratitude Journal$920$180
Cleaning Schedule$630$180
Fitness Planner$1018$180
Wedding Planner Checklist$1215$180
Resume Template$1215$180
Instagram Highlight Covers$1020$200
Pinterest Pin Templates (10 pack)$1412$168
Canva Reel Templates$1512$180
Mood Board Template$1018$180
Social Media Calendar$1514$210
Email Newsletter Template$1810$180
Media Kit Template$1810$180
Content Calendar Spreadsheet$2010$200
  • Total gross revenue: $3,860/month
  • Fees (6.5%): −$251
  • Net revenue: $3,609/month
  • Annualised: ~$43,308/year

📌 The takeaway: Volume works — but it takes a lot of products to get here. With 20 products averaging ~22 sales each at ~$10, you’re looking at nearly 440 transactions per month. That’s very doable on Etsy with good SEO and Pinterest driving traffic, but it takes time to build up. The upside? Each new product compounds your income because your shop becomes more discoverable.


Scenario 4: The Hybrid — 12 products across multiple platforms

This is the strategy we recommend. You sell the same (or similar) products across multiple platforms — your own website, Etsy, and a creator platform like Kit or Gumroad. Different platforms, different audiences, compounding reach.

ProductPricePlatformFee %Sales/moNet
Brand Kit Template$45Own site3%10$437
Brand Kit Template$45Etsy6.5%8$337
Social Media Bundle$25Own site3%15$364
Social Media Bundle$25Etsy6.5%20$468
Pin Templates Pack$15Etsy6.5%25$351
Notion Dashboard$20Gumroad10%12$216
Freelance Starter Guide$18Kit3.5%20$347
Client Welcome Kit$35Own site3%8$272
Weekly Planner Printable$8Etsy6.5%35$262
Invoice Template$12Etsy6.5%18$202
Business Planner Bundle$50Own site3%5$243
Business Planner Bundle$50Etsy6.5%4$187
  • Total net revenue: $3,686/month
  • Annualised: ~$44,232/year

🎯 The takeaway: Multi-platform selling is the most resilient strategy. You’re not dependent on one algorithm or one marketplace. Your own site gives you the highest margins, Etsy gives you free discovery traffic, and Kit/Gumroad let you sell directly to your email list. Notice how the same products sold across multiple platforms compound your total income.


What the scenarios tell us

Let’s put all four scenarios side by side:

ScenarioProductsPrice rangeNet/monthNet/year
The Starter5$30–50$1,468$17,616
The Builder10$5–50$2,534$30,408
The Volume Play20$5–20$3,609$43,308
The Hybrid12 (multi-platform)$8–50$3,686$44,232

Key patterns:

  1. You don’t need hundreds of products. 5–12 well-made products can generate meaningful income.
  2. Higher-priced products earn more per sale — but lower-priced products sell more often. The best strategy mixes both.
  3. Multi-platform selling wins. The Hybrid scenario earns almost the same as the 20-product Volume Play, with fewer products and less effort.
  4. Fees matter, but they’re not the whole story. Etsy’s 6.5% fee is worth it when it brings you buyers you wouldn’t have found otherwise.

How to think about pricing your digital products

Pricing isn’t just about picking a number. Here are some principles that work:

The $5–15 range: entry-level products

  • Single templates, printables, simple planners
  • These are impulse buys — buyers don’t think twice
  • High volume, low margin per sale
  • Great for building reviews and shop credibility on Etsy
  • Best for: Etsy, Pinterest traffic, discovery

The $20–35 range: mid-tier products

  • Template bundles, multi-page planners, workbooks
  • Buyers expect more value — multiple files, better design, clear use case
  • The “sweet spot” for most digital product sellers
  • Best for: Own website, Etsy, Gumroad

The $40–50+ range: premium products

  • Complete kits, bundles, courses, comprehensive systems
  • Buyers expect professional quality and a transformative outcome
  • Fewer sales, but much higher revenue per transaction
  • Best for: Own website, email list, Kit

💡Pro tip: Create a “product ladder” — a $7 printable that upsells to a $25 template bundle, that upsells to a $50 complete kit. Each product brings the customer closer to your highest-value offer.

creative tools for creating products

The real costs nobody talks about

The scenarios above factor in platform fees, but there are other costs to consider when calculating your true net income:

  • Design tools: Canva Pro (~$13/month), Adobe Creative Cloud (~$55-100/month), or Figma (free–$15/month)
  • Website hosting: WordPress hosting (~$10–30/month) or Squarespace (~$16–33/month)
  • Email marketing: Kit/ConvertKit (free up to 10k subscribers), Mailchimp (free tier available)
  • Etsy listing fees: $0.20 per listing (small but adds up with variations)
  • Etsy ads: Optional, but many sellers spend $1–10/day to boost visibility
  • Your time: This is the biggest “cost.” Creating a quality digital product takes 5–20+ hours depending on complexity

The good news? Most of these are fixed costs that don’t increase as you sell more. Once a product is created, the marginal cost of each additional sale is essentially zero — that’s the magic of digital products.


How long does it actually take?

Let’s be honest about timelines. Here’s a realistic progression for most digital product sellers:

Months 1–3: The Setup

  • Create your first 3–5 products
  • Set up your shop (Etsy and/or own website)
  • Revenue: $0–200/month
  • Focus: Product quality, listing optimisation, learning what sells

Months 3–6: The Traction Phase

  • Expand to 5–10 products
  • Start getting reviews and repeat customers
  • Revenue: $200–800/month
  • Focus: SEO, Pinterest, understanding your analytics

Months 6–12: The Growth Phase

  • 10–15+ products, possibly across multiple platforms
  • Revenue: $800–2,500/month
  • Focus: Bundles, upsells, email list building, scaling what works

Year 2+: The Compounding Phase

  • 15–25+ products with a strong catalogue
  • Revenue: $2,500–5,000+/month
  • Focus: Automation, new platforms, premium products, passive income

This isn’t a guarantee — it’s a realistic trajectory for someone who creates consistently, optimises their listings, and treats this like a real business (even if it’s a side hustle).


5 tips to maximise your digital product income

1. Create bundles

Take 3–5 related products and sell them as a bundle at a slight discount. Bundles increase your average order value and give buyers a reason to spend more. A $12 template + a $15 template + a $10 planner sold individually = $37. As a bundle at $29? You sell more units and the customer feels like they got a deal.

2. Optimise your listings for search

Whether it’s Etsy SEO or Google SEO for your own site — your product titles, descriptions, and tags determine whether anyone finds you. Research what people are actually searching for and write your listings for them, not for you.

3. Use Pinterest as a traffic engine

Pinterest is essentially a visual search engine. Create pins for every product and every blog post. Pinterest traffic is passive, evergreen, and converts well for digital products. One well-performing pin can drive sales for years.

4. Build an email list from day one

Every platform can change its algorithm tomorrow. Your email list is the one audience you truly own. Offer a free lead magnet (a simple template or checklist) and nurture your subscribers with value before selling to them.

5. Sell the same product on multiple platforms

Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. List your products on Etsy, Gumroad, your website, and Creative Market. Each platform has a different audience. The extra 30 minutes it takes to list a product on a second platform could double its sales.


Model your own numbers

Every business is different. The scenarios in this article are meant to give you a realistic framework — but your products, your audience, and your pricing will be unique.

That’s why we built the Digital Product Income Calculator.

Plug in your own products, prices, and estimated sales. Adjust platform fees. Set your monthly income goal. The calculator shows you exactly what it takes — gross revenue, fees, net income, and how close you are to your goal.

It’s free. No sign-up required.

Try the Digital Product Income Calculator →


The bottom line

Digital product income isn’t a fantasy — it’s maths. And when you understand the maths, you can build a plan that actually works.

You don’t need to go viral. You don’t need a huge following. You need:

  • A small, focused product suite (5–15 products is plenty to start)
  • A mix of price points (entry-level through premium)
  • Presence on at least 2 platforms (marketplace + your own site)
  • Consistent effort on SEO and Pinterest for organic, compounding traffic
  • Patience — this compounds over time, not overnight

The creators who succeed with digital products aren’t the ones with the most followers. They’re the ones who understand their numbers, create consistently, and play the long game.

Start with the numbers. Build from there.


Want more tools and resources for building your creative business? Browse the Bowerist blog for practical guides on branding, design, and growing a business that works for you.

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