
In commemoration of Mandela Day and honoring the 67 years Mandela spent fighting for social justice, we have compiled a list of 67 business ideas to help aspiring entrepreneurs get their businesses started.
Whether you are looking for a side hustle, a low-cost business, or a freelance business, we’ve seen them all. We’ve grouped these ideas by what they actually demand from you: your time, your savings, or your existing skills. This allows you to pick the category that matches where you are right now.
Low-Cost Business Ideas You Can Start From Home
Here, we have listed businesses that do not require much capital to start. Most of these businesses can be started with less than a few thousand rands, and you can run these businesses with a smartphone and a WhatsApp Business account.
1. Home baking
2. Tutoring for school learners
3. Homemade skincare or soap production
4. Babysitting
5. Pet sitting and dog walking
6. Errand running for busy professionals
7. Meal prep service for offices
8. Handmade candle making
9. House cleaning and laundry service
10. Sewing and alteration services
These businesses require you to be consistent. Ensure that you treat delivery logistics and customer service seriously. That way, they can give you good reviews and refer you to other customers.
Freelance and Service-Based Business Ideas
Freelancing is where your existing skills turn into income without needing a shop, stock, or staff. This is the category with the lowest barrier to entry if you already have a marketable skill.
11. Freelance copywriting
12. Graphic design services
13. Bookkeeping for small businesses
15. Social media management
16. Photography for events and products
17. Video editing
18. Translation and transcription services
19. Resume and CV writing
2o. Life coaching or career coaching
You must create a portfolio to showcase your work when you freelance. By creating your own website, it enhances your portfolio even more. A domain name can change how seriously prospects take your quote.
Online and Digital Business Ideas
These businesses rely on the internet as the storefront. They scale differently from physical businesses because your audience isn’t limited to your suburb or city.
21. Dropshipping store
22. Print-on-demand merchandise
23. Blogging with affiliate marketing
24. YouTube channel in a specific niche
25. Online course creation
26. E-book writing and selling
27. Podcast production and hosting
28. AI app development for small businesses
29. Digital marketing agency
30. E-mail newsletter with paid subscriptions
Local and Community Business Ideas
Have a look at your neighbourhood and identify which has gaps that big chains ignore. These businesses depend on local trust more than online marketing.
31. Spaza shop or convenience store
32. Car wash service
33. Laundry and ironing service
34. Mobile hair and beauty services
35. Handyman and repair services
37. Event planning for small functions
38. Catering for local events
39. Second-hand clothing store
40. Recycling and waste collection service
Retail and E-Commerce Business Ideas
If you enjoy sourcing products and building a brand people recognise, retail still works, just not the way it did a decade ago.
41. Online clothing boutique
42. Handmade jewellery business
43. Speciality coffee or tea sales
44. Health food and supplement store
45. Baby products store
46. Stationery and gift shop
47. Beauty products reselling
48. Sneaker reselling
49. Vintage or thrifted fashion store
50. Local artisan marketplace
Instagram and TikTok Shop have made product discovery cheap, but fulfilment is where most retail side hustles quietly die. Anyone starting an e-commerce store should test their packaging and courier turnaround with five real orders before running a single paid ad campaign.
Creative and Niche Business Ideas
These are the business ideas built around a specific talent or interest, often overlooked because they don’t scale as fast, but they can build loyal, high-paying customers.
51. Custom illustration or portrait commissions
52. Music lessons
53. Voiceover work
54. Wedding planning
55. Interior design consulting
56. Personal styling
57. Freelance journalism
58. Ghostwriting for executives
59. Podcast guesting and speaker coaching
60. Custom stationery and invitation design
A Few More Ideas Worth Exploring
61. Airbnb hosting or property management
62. Fitness training or online coaching
63. Language teaching
64. Cleaning services for offices
65. App-based ride hailing as a driver-partner
66. Notary or document assistance services
67. Financial literacy workshops for small businesses
Businesses that survive past the first year aren’t necessarily the most original ones. They’re the ones where the founder picked something they’d still be willing to do when there are no sales. While passion can be useful in business, it doesn’t replace the dedication, strategy, and hard work needed to build a sustainable business. No matter what business you choose, you need to draft a business plan, but it does keep you showing up long enough to build one.
Start with what you already know how to do, price it properly from day one, and resist the urge to serve everyone. The narrower your first offer, the faster you’ll find out if people are actually willing to pay for it.
How to Choose One of These 67
Picking one of these businesses and sticking with it for long enough to see results might seem like a difficult thing. However, it’s very possible. Here are a few things worth considering before you commit:
Match the idea to your current bank balance, not your ambition. If you have under R5 000 to invest, freelancing or a service business will get you moving faster than retail or e-commerce, where stock and shipping eat into your margin before you’ve made a single sale.
Test demand before you build anything. Post about the service or product on your own social media first. If ten people ask how much it costs within a week, you have a signal worth acting on. If nobody asks, that’s information too. It’s not a reason to give up. It’s a reason to rethink who you’re actually talking to.
Price for your market, not for your ego. New entrepreneurs often undercharge out of fear of losing clients. Some overcharge instead, usually because they’ve seen a competitor’s rate online without knowing what’s included in that price. Look at three competitors and analyse what their packages include. Price yourself somewhere in that range until you’ve built a reputation that lets you charge more. If you are charging more, you must be able to justify it to your audience.
Don’t wait for the perfect logo or website. Many entrepreneurs started their business with nothing more than a WhatsApp number and word of mouth. Branding matters, but fortunately, there are free tools, like Canva, to support entrepreneurs and creatives in building their businesses.
In commemoration of Mandela Day and honoring the 67 years Mandela spent fighting for social justice, we have compiled a list of 67 business ideas… Read More


