Can You Really Make Money Selling Printable Activity Worksheets for Kids?
What actually works, what doesn’t, and how to start, even if you don’t want to design everything from scratch.
3/24/20264 min read


This post contains affiliate links. If you click through and make a purchase, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools that I genuinely think can help you grow your digital resource business.
The "passive income" dream is often sold as this magical thing where you push a button, and money just falls out of the sky while you’re sipping a latte. We’ve all seen those videos. Someone sitting on a beach claiming they made ten thousand dollars in a weekend by selling a few cat coloring books on Amazon. It sounds a little too good to be true, doesn't it? Well, maybe it is, at least in the way they describe it. But that doesn’t mean the business itself is a fake.
I’ve spent a lot of time in the digital product world, especially with educational resources(I currently sell on TeachersPayTeachers). One thing I’ve learned is that teachers and parents are always, always looking for ways to save time. If you can provide that time-saving value, you can definitely build a real business. The catch is usually the design work. Not everyone has ten hours a week to sit in Canva or Powerpoint and align text boxes until their eyes hurt. I think that’s where most people give up before they even start. They have the ideas, but the execution feels like a mountain they aren't ready to climb.
The Reality of the "Printable" Market
Let’s talk about what actually works. If you go to TeachersPayTeachers, Etsy or Amazon KDP right now and search for kids' activity products, you’re going to see thousands of results. It’s crowded. I’m not going to sugarcoat that. If you make a generic "Math for Kids" worksheet, it’s probably going to sit there and collect digital dust.
What actually sells are products that solve a specific problem or hit a very specific niche. Maybe it's a "Travel Activity Pack for 5-Year-Olds" or a "Vocabulary Practice for Early Readers." The more specific you get, the better your chances are. This is where the problem comes in: creating those specific, high-quality pages takes a massive amount of effort.
This is usually where people start looking for shortcuts. And to be fair, shortcuts aren't always a bad thing. In the digital world, we call these shortcuts PLR (Private Label Rights). It’s a fancy way of saying someone else did the hard work of designing the pages, and they are selling you the right to rebrand them and sell them as your own.
As someone who is quite inquisitive, I decided to do research about thos so called shortcut and I discovered the Payman Activity Book Bundle, and it’s a perfect example of this "shortcut" strategy. If you’re looking for a foundation to build on, you have to know exactly what you’re getting so you don't mislead your own future customers.
This bundle is specifically designed for kids between the ages of 4 and 10 years old. In teacher-speak, that’s your Pre-K through 2nd Grade (and maybe even early 3rd Grade) crowd. It isn't for middle schoolers. It hits that sweet spot of early childhood development where kids are just starting to grasp how words and numbers work.
What’s actually inside the 450+ pages?
The bundle covers four core subject areas that are always popular in the elementary world: featuring adorable dinosaurs, birds and cars. But it’s the skills they cover that make them sellable. They focus on:
Word Building & Spelling
Vocabulary Growth
Coloring
Math
Letter Recognition
Technically speaking, you’re getting 450+ printable pages at 300 DPI (which means they’ll look crisp when printed, not blurry). It comes in JPG, PNG, PDF, and the most important one: Canva. Plus, they throw in 100+ ready-made book cover graphics. If you’ve ever tried to design a book cover that actually looks good as a tiny thumbnail on a phone screen, you know that those templates alone are worth their weight in gold.
The biggest hurdle to starting a shop is "The Blank Page Syndrome." You open Canva, you see a white square, and you have no idea where to start. With a bundle like this, the square isn't white anymore. It’s already 90% done.
But I have to give you a warning. If you buy a bundle like this and just upload it exactly as it is to Etsy or Amazon, you might run into trouble. Why? Because other people are buying it too. The secret to actually making money is the "Remix." You take these high-quality graphics, and you rearrange them.
You use the PLR license (which allows you to rebrand, edit, and resell) to your advantage. You don't just use it; you turn it into a unique product. Maybe you take the vocabulary pages from the "Jobs" section and mix them with specific coloring pages to create a unique "Career Day" workbook. That’s how you win. You use the PLR as your foundation, not your finished house.
So how does this actually turn into income?
Don’t sell the bundle. Break it down.
A huge collection sounds impressive, but it’s not how people usually buy. Think about it. When someone searches on Teachers Pay Teachers, they’re not typing: “massive worksheet bundle with everything inside”. They’re searching for something specific.
“CVC word worksheets”
“animal vocabulary printables”
“kindergarten morning work”
So instead of uploading one big product, you split it into smaller, focused ones.
Get specific about who it’s for
This part is easy to overlook. You might have a worksheet that could work for “kids.” But that’s too broad. Try narrowing it down a bit:
ESL learners
preschool students
homeschool routines
early readers
And once you define that context, everything else becomes clearer. Your title. Your description. Even your product cover.
List it where people are already buying
Platforms like Teachers Pay Teachers and Etsy already have traffic. Which is helpful. Because it means you’re not starting from zero.
Is it Worth it?
Maybe you’re wondering if people still buy printables now that everything is digital. To be candid, I think they buy them more now. Parents are desperate to get their kids off iPads. Teachers are desperate for supplemental materials that don't require a screen. The demand is there.
The question is whether you can provide a product that feels high-quality and thoughtful. Using a "done-for-you" bundle gives you a professional look immediately. It allows you to focus on the part of the business that actually makes money: the marketing and the branding.
I’m a big fan of doing things the "hard way" when it matters, but for foundational skills like spelling and word building for 1st graders, why reinvent the wheel? If someone has already built a beautiful wheel, just buy the rights to it and focus on where you’re going to drive the car. Click here to start your journey.
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