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Make money from your house without moving out

The sharing economy allows you to turn your home into a hotel and your car into a taxi. We explain how – and why it’s good for you…

The internet has given us many things: unsurpassed knowledge at our fingertips; endless streams of movies and music; a cat GIF for every conceivable occasion. But most usefully of all, it’s given us new ways to make money.

A trend that started with eBay and matured through Craigslist, Gumtree and Etsy has now reached its zenith in the form of the shareconomy. And while you may not think you know what that little portmanteau refers to, chances are you’ve already taken advantage of it.

Ever booked a room on Airbnb? Then you’ve used the shareconomy. Hired a ride on Uber? Ditto. In essence, the shareconomy is the process of hiring – or hiring out – something that you own, so that others can get use from it when you don’t need it. Usually money changes hands along with the goods, but it doesn’t have to – some people lend their property to others for the sheer rosy-cheeked glow of being nice. Freaks.

The modern pressures
Personally, the twin burdens of a mortgage and two Disney-obsessed daughters weight me down too much to be charitable, at least in that way. So the shareconomy is for me a way that I can supplement my meagre journalist’s salary (if you’re reading this, bigwigs, that’s a hint) by making money from my main assets. Ahem.

Those assets are of course my house and my car. Now I can’t see why anyone would want to rent a room in my three-bedroom semi in Epsom but the success of Airbnb would suggest I’m in the minority. Launched in 2008, it now offers more than 500,000 places to stay in 34,000 cities around the world. Right now, three of those places to stay are in Epsom, with prices ranging from £37 to £119 a night. So maybe my loft room with free Wi-Fi, TV and early morning child-related alarm call isn’t such a bad sell after all. Look out for it soon, £6 a night if you don’t mind sharing with the cat.

My car represents a more sensible money-making option. It’s only four years old, has less than 7000 miles on the clock and has a big enough boot to swing a cat in (so long as you’re prepared to get your arms slashed up). Ideal fare for Uber, then.

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Now everyone is a cabbie
For the uninitiated, Uber is the peer-to-peer taxi service which has taken the world by storm over the past few years. It hooks up lift-needing punters with car-toting drivers for black-cab-beating fares – and unsurprisingly, has sparked demonstrations from licensed cabbies everywhere it has launched.

Unfortunately, Uber’s not for me. I only passed my test a year ago, so the idea of driving around unfamiliar streets late at night with a possibly drunk stranger sitting next to me trying to engage me in small-talk doesn’t appeal.

But there is still one option which could make me some money, and that’s easyCar Club. The service, and similar ones like it around the world, lets you rent out your car when you’re not using it.

The renters get cars for a far cheaper daily (or even hourly) rate than they’d get if they hired from an established rental service, the car owners get cash they wouldn’t otherwise have and everybody’s happy. Well, everyone except the established rental services. Given that my own car spends at least half of each week sat on my drive, it’s a no brainer.

Money for your pain
Yes, it’ll be annoying if I suddenly decide I need the car when someone’s hired it and yes, I’d expect to spend more on servicing as a result. But the lure of ready cash every month is too strong to resist.

Now, if only I can come up with a way to make money from the cat…

Marc McLaren is editor of Stuff.tv

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About

Marc was until fairly recently Editor of Stuff.tv, but now edits a site about cars instead. He has been a committed geek since getting a Tomytronic 3D aged seven, and a journalist since the week that Google was founded (really). He spends much of his free time taking photos of really small things (bugs, flowers, his daughters) or really big things (galaxies and the like through a telescope) and losing games of FIFA and Pro Evo online. You can email Marc at [email protected]