Beer Money for Beginners: How Much Can You Actually Earn?
6 min read
A plain-English beginner's guide to UK beer money — what it is, realistic earnings, the best low-effort routes, and how to get started safely.
What is 'beer money'?
Beer money is the easy, low-effort cash you can earn on the side from sign-up bonuses, bank switch offers, refer-a-friend codes and cashback — enough for a few rounds, a treat, or a useful top-up, rather than a full income.
The appeal is the effort-to-reward ratio: most offers take minutes, pay in real cash or near-cash, and come from regulated UK providers.
How much can you realistically earn?
Doing the main bank switch offers alone can net £1,000+ a year if you stack them through the year. Add free-share offers, referrals and cashback and a motivated beginner can comfortably clear well over £1,000 in their first year — front-loaded, since switch bonuses are the biggest single wins.
It tapers over time as you exhaust the one-off new-customer bonuses, but new offers launch constantly, so there's always something fresh.
Great offers to start with
HSBC
Switch to an HSBC current account and get £220 cash — the highest standard UK bank switch bonus available in June 2026.
Medium15-20 minutesPayout 4-6 weeks
Verified 16 June 2026
Trading 212
Sign up to Trading 212 via a referral link and get a free share worth between £8 and £100. One of the most popular UK investing sign-up offers.
Easy5-10 minutesPayout 3-5 days
Verified 16 June 2026
First Direct
Switch to a First Direct 1st Account for £200 cash, plus consistently top-rated mobile and telephone banking. Bonus recently increased from £175.
Medium15-20 minutesPayout ~28 days
Verified 16 June 2026
The easiest routes for beginners
- Bank switch bonuses — the biggest single payouts (£100–£220 each).
- Free share offers — often just a £1 deposit for a free share.
- Refer-a-friend codes — quick app sign-ups for smaller bonuses.
- Cashback — earn a percentage back on spending you'd do anyway.
FAQ
- Is beer money taxable?
- Cash bank-switch bonuses are generally not taxable as income, but rules vary by offer type and your circumstances. If you earn significant amounts, check current HMRC guidance or speak to an accountant.
- Do I need good credit?
- Some offers involve a credit check (e.g. opening accounts), but many app sign-ups and free-share offers don't. Each offer page lists the requirements.
Last updated 17 June 2026. Offers change frequently — always confirm details on the provider's site before applying. Not financial advice.