Not long ago, Jerrica Long hit a wall — literally.
The Greenlight Yourself founder and storytelling expert had been clocking 15 to 18-hour days in Hollywood, juggling jobs from assistant to showrunner. The grind caught up to her. She was running on fumes, so worn out that one night, she nodded off at the wheel and crashed her car into a wall.
After that, she knew something had to give.
“I left the industry for a while and knew that I could no longer function this way,” Long says. “I gave my body about a six-month break and came back knowing exactly what kind of work I wanted to do — and how to make it sustainable.”
Her story might sound extreme, but burnout like this is the rule, not the exception. Most side hustlers don’t wreck their cars, but plenty hit their own version of the wall. A SideHustles.com survey found that 67% of people with second incomes feel burned out, while DollarSprout’s 2024 Side Hustle Report shows that nearly 70% of Americans now have a side hustle, most of whom depend on that income.
It’s easy to see how that happens. Side hustles often mean working solo, with no benefits or safety nets, just long nights on top of a full-time job. The extra hours, the uncertainty, the mental load — it all adds up.
So where does that leave us?
The Lifespan of a Side Hustle
Most side hustles don’t crash and burn the way Jerrica’s did. They fade out quietly instead, often without the person even realizing it’s happening.
It’s difficult to find reliable data on exactly how long most side hustles last, but the SideHustles.com report also found that 18% of respondents felt more burned out from their side gigs than from their primary jobs. Nearly half said unstable or irregular income made things worse.
In other words, the work that was supposed to create freedom can start feeling like another job.
Stephanie High, a performance psychology practitioner and trauma-informed educator at Kaizen Catalyst, says many high-achieving hustlers approach her after driving themselves to the brink. Burnout doesn’t always arrive with a meltdown, she notes. Sometimes it shows up as subtle shifts — decision fatigue, emotional flatness, loss of motivation, or resentment toward work they used to love.
“A common trap I see is people treating their side hustle like a passion project but running it like a second full-time job, often without the systems, rest, or boundaries they’d expect from any traditional role,” she explains. “The emotional load builds quickly when you’re also managing visibility, client relationships, and constant reinvention.”
For many, that emotional weight creeps up slowly. What starts as excitement turns into obligation, almost without them noticing.
Gemma Eves — a wellness expert and founder of NeuroMassage — felt that shift firsthand while juggling a busy massage clinic and building an online wellness school. What began as a creative outlet eventually started draining her instead.
“Burnout didn’t hit me like a crash. It crept in,” she recalls. “I felt guilty for not doing enough, even when I was wiped out. I kept brushing off the signs, telling myself it was just a rough week, until I realized I was emotionally flat, physically depleted, and starting to resent the work I loved.”
By the time she recognized it, she was already empty. Looking back, Eves says she even regretted launching the wellness platform that once inspired her.
Related: 8 Tips for Balancing a Side Hustle and Your Full-Time Job
Why We Keep Going — Even When We’re Exhausted
If burnout is so common in the side hustle world, why do people keep doing it? The simple answer is that many feel they don’t have a choice.
In fact, it’s estimated that 70% of gig workers have pushed through burnout because they felt they needed to. Many face financial pressure to keep earning or feel they’ve already invested too much time and energy to stop now.
Some also see burnout as part of the deal. More than 80% of Gen Z and Millennial respondents said they view it as normal within side hustle culture. Over half said they cope by simply working through the exhaustion.
Still, it raises the question: should we just accept burnout as the cost of chasing extra income? Are passion projects worth it if they start eating away at your health or peace of mind?
“People ignore or downplay burnout signs, keep pushing, and only realize how deep they are when it’s hard to climb out,” said Eves. “Many believe stopping means failure.”
Related: How This PA Built a $10K/Month Recipe Blog on the Side
How to Avoid Burnout in a Side Hustle
Burnout may be common, but it doesn’t have to end your side hustle. There are practical ways to manage the fatigue and even recover if you’re already deep in it — especially for creators and freelancers who tend to blur the line between work and life.
High, tapping into your psychology expertise, suggests starting by remembering why you began your side hustle in the first place. Then, say no to anything that doesn’t serve that purpose.
“What helps most isn’t just surface-level self-care,” she says. “It’s rebuilding your relationship with output. That means creating sustainable rhythms — planning work around your energy instead of time blocks, learning how to rest without guilt, and separating your self-worth from constant productivity.”
For Gemma Eves, recovery came when she finally started practicing what she’d been teaching others. After noticing that her heart rate variability improved whenever she rested, she redefined what rest meant.
“I had to shift my mindset from ‘rest is giving up’ to ‘rest is needed,’” she says. Small changes made a big difference: limiting her side gig work to an hour a day, relaxing before bed, and allowing herself guilt-free downtime.
Those small boundaries helped her get her energy back. More importantly, they reminded her that a healthy hustle is one you can actually keep doing.
Related: How to Make $10K a Month: 15 Scalable Strategies That Work
When to Consider Quitting Your Side Hustle
Gig workers are often revered for their perseverance and tenacity, but those traits come with a cost. Hustlers don’t always know when to quit.
Burnout catches up with almost all of them, causing fatigue, emotional detachment, and lack of performance. Many can combat those symptoms by resting, redefining boundaries, and restructuring their work patterns. Yet sometimes, the exhaustion persists, and it can wreak havoc on mental health.
Therapist Gabrielle Juliano-Villani — previously featured on DollarSprout for building a five-figure Etsy shop selling digital templates
— knows that struggle firsthand. At one point, she was juggling roughly 15 income streams. The founder of GJV Consulting said she started feeling apathetic while supervising clinicians seeking their licenses.
“Apathy was my biggest red flag,” she says. “I literally did not care about anything, didn’t want to hear what my supervisees had to say, and at many points, I had thoughts of ‘why does this matter? Just Google it.’ [I was] being very irritable towards everyone in my life and feeling lost and hopeless.”
To address her issues, Juliano-Villani audited her time, writing down all of her side hustles, how she felt about them, how much time she spent doing them, and how much money they made. She realized she felt most resentful toward her supervisor gig because it required active participation, didn’t make much money, and tied her to a schedule. So, she quit.
“Pay attention to what puts you into fight or flight (makes you anxious, upset, angry, or frustrated) and notice those patterns,” she says. “That’s your body letting you know what you’re doing isn’t a good fit. Those are probably things that should not be in your work or perhaps need to be delegated.”
Her advice suggests that walking away doesn’t mean you’ve failed — just that your priorities have changed. Leaving at the right time can allow you to look back upon your side hustling as a productive season of life instead of a project gone sour.
The point of a side gig is to make your life better, so when it stops contributing to your happiness, you need to make some changes — whether that means pivoting, taking a break, or moving to a side hustle vs. a full-time job model that better supports your long-term well-being.
The real win isn’t pushing through the wall — it’s building a hustle that never drives you into one.
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