With the economy still in flux and costs creeping upward, 2026 will demand more creative approaches to earning and growing income. Whether you’re an employee, freelancer or investor, the smartest money moves this year are the ones that make your money, and your mindset, work harder for you.

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Boosting your income “starts with a mindset shift,” said Frank Scarso, CEO of Avanza Capital Holdings. “Don’t just think about earning more, think about deploying smarter.”

If you’re not investing your money, it’s losing ground to inflation, Scarso warned. “Direct lending, high-yield savings structures and other steady-return strategies can all enhance take-home pay without adding hours to your week.”

The key is consistency, he added — treating income “not as an event, but as an ecosystem that grows through diversification and disciplined reallocations of capital.” Too many people wait for “the right time” to invest, he said, but yield opportunities don’t wait for the economy to calm down.

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One of the most effective moves in 2026 will be “treating yourself like a business with multiple revenue channels,” said Yuri Berg, chief business development officer at FinchTrade. He advised people to “audit what you already own or know.”

“Do you have a spare room? Rent it out. Have professional skills? Sell consulting hours on weekends,” he said. “The goal is creating two or three income sources before you need them. With tariffs raising costs and inflation eating away at purchasing power, relying on one paycheck is risky. Start small but start now. Pick one thing you can monetize within 30 days and commit to it.”

Your money should be working while you sleep, Berg said. “Move cash from traditional savings accounts into high-yield accounts paying 4% or more. That’s free money for doing nothing.”

Other smart steps include locking funds you don’t need for six months into CDs with guaranteed returns, maxing out your employer’s 401(k) match and exploring dividend-paying stocks if you can handle moderate risk.

Even small adjustments pay off. A $10,000 emergency fund earning 4% instead of 0.5% puts an extra $350 in your pocket annually, Berg pointed out.

If you want to earn more, start with what you already know. From remote healthcare support roles like medical coding — which pays around $40 an hour — to skilled trades or tutoring, many in-demand jobs can be done part time.

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