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58-year-old whose side hustle renting out his pool made $195,000 in 2 years: Here’s what you need to succeed


On the surface, Jim Battan’s side hustle seems like an American dream: He’s made $195,379 in revenue since September 2020 by renting out his amenity-packed backyard pool to over 10,000 people.

But Battan, a 58-year-old IT consultant, says he cautions others against mimicking his side hustle, even though he is Swimply’s highest earner out of 25,000 pools in the U.S., Canada, and Australia.

“If people think they’re going to build a pool and turn it into something that will earn $200,000 in two years, it’s a little bit of a fantasy,” warns Battan. “I’ve put a ton of work into it, and you have to have the right mindset. You have to have the right circumstances and a competitive advantage no one else has,” he says.

Here are the three reasons why Battan’s six-figure side hustle isn’t for casual pool owners.

1. Renting out your pool as a side hustle is competitive

When Battan joined Swimply two years ago, the Covid-19 pandemic had shut down public pools and there were only about seven other Swimply pools near West Linn, Oregon, the town of 27,000 people where Battan and his wife live. Now, there are at least 88 pools available to rent near the Portland, Oregon suburb, according to the site.

Battan says that number is growing — and the competition has more than halved his pool’s traffic.

“[Demand] is down even more than 50% over the last couple of months,” Battan says. “Kids are back in school and at soccer practice. On Swimply, there’s been phenomenal growth on the host side, so people have a [larger] array of pools to choose from.”

Despite decreasing demand, Battan continues to out-earn all other pool-owners on Swimply. He pulled in $117,000 last year, according to documents reviewed by CNBC Make It, but that number has dropped to $58,500 in 2022.

In July, Swimply co-founder and CEO Bunim Laskin told CNBC Make It that increased competition just means the platform is growing, and that successfully run pools will always have swimmers.

“As with any marketplace, there are ups and downs for individual hosts,” Laskin said at the time. “As the word gets out about Swimply, and we add additional hosts to the platform, we are also adding just as many additional users.”

Battan doesn’t regret joining the platform, though some side-effects of Swimply’s growth — from increased competition to occasionally slow customer support — have been frustrating. “It’s been a challenge for me,” he says.

2. Maintaining the pool is expensive

3. It’s time consuming



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