Selling digital products online is one of the most leveraged business models available right now. You create something once — a template, an ebook, a course, an AI prompt pack — and sell it thousands of times without ever touching inventory, dealing with shipping, or spending hours on fulfilment. In 2026, the barriers to entry are lower than ever, but so is the signal-to-noise ratio. This guide cuts through the noise.
If you're wondering how to sell digital products online and build something that generates consistent passive income, you're in the right place. We'll cover what to sell, where to sell it, how to price it, and how to actually get traffic.
Why Digital Products Are the Smartest Business in 2026
The numbers speak for themselves. The global digital goods market is growing at roughly 15% per year. Platforms like Etsy, Gumroad, and Payhip have made it possible for solo creators to reach millions of buyers without a marketing budget. And AI has slashed creation time — what used to take a week can now be done in a day.
Here's what makes digital products uniquely attractive compared to physical businesses:
- Zero COGS (Cost of Goods Sold): Once created, every sale is nearly pure margin. No manufacturing, no storage, no postage.
- Infinite scalability: Sell one copy or ten thousand — your workload doesn't change.
- Passive income potential: A product listed in 2024 can still generate sales in 2027 with no ongoing effort.
- Global market: Your buyers are everywhere. A Canva template sells as easily in Germany as in Australia.
- Low startup cost: You can launch with $0 using free tools and free marketplace plans.
The main challenge isn't creation — it's distribution. That's what this guide focuses on.
What Digital Products Actually Sell Well
Not all digital products are created equal. Here's what's performing in 2026 based on actual marketplace data:
Templates (Canva, Notion, Google Sheets)
Templates are consistently among the highest-volume digital product categories on Etsy and Gumroad. Canva social media templates, Notion productivity systems, Google Sheets budget trackers, and resume templates all sell steadily because they solve an immediate, concrete problem. A well-designed Canva bundle can sell for $15–$45 and move hundreds of units with the right SEO.
Ebooks and Guides
Ebooks work when they're specific. "How to start an Etsy shop" is too broad. "How to launch a digital planner business on Etsy in 30 days" converts. The more tightly scoped your ebook, the more it reads like a service rather than a product — and buyers pay for that specificity. Pricing sweet spot: $9–$29.
Online Courses and Mini Courses
Courses carry the highest price points ($97–$497+) but require more production work. In 2026, the trend is toward short, outcome-specific courses rather than multi-hour curriculum dumps. A 90-minute course that solves one specific problem can outperform a 20-hour course that covers everything.
AI Prompt Packs
One of the fastest-growing categories since 2024. ChatGPT and Claude prompt packs for specific use cases — copywriting, social media, business planning, Midjourney image prompts — are selling for $7–$47 and require minimal creation time. If you can build a well-tested, niche-specific prompt library, this is a fast path to your first digital product sale.
Printables and Planners
Evergreen. Wedding planners, budget trackers, habit trackers, kids' activity sheets, party invitations. These still move on Etsy by the millions. Seasonal items (Christmas, Halloween, back to school) spike heavily. Low price point ($3–$12) but high volume.
Best Platforms to Sell Digital Products in 2026
Platform choice matters more than most creators realise. Here's the honest breakdown:
Etsy
Best for: design-focused products (templates, printables, planners, invitations). Etsy has built-in traffic — 90+ million active buyers — which means you don't have to build an audience from scratch. The downsides: listing fees ($0.20 each), transaction fees (6.5%), and increasing competition. You need strong SEO and great product images to stand out. Use tools like Everbee to research profitable niches before launching.
Gumroad
Best for: ebooks, courses, prompt packs, software tools. Gumroad is dead simple to set up — you can have a product live in 20 minutes. It charges a flat 10% fee on the free plan or $10/month with 0% fees. Great for creators who already have an audience or traffic source. Not ideal for discoverability — Gumroad doesn't have Etsy's built-in search traffic.
Payhip
Best for: diversified creators who want a branded storefront. Payhip handles digital downloads, courses, memberships, and coaching from one dashboard. Free plan has 5% transaction fees; paid plans start at $29/month with 0% fees. The platform includes affiliate management, which helps with passive referral traffic.
Shopify + Digital Downloads App
Best for: scaling brands. Shopify gives you full control — your own domain, your branding, your email list. The Digital Downloads app (free) handles delivery. Shopify costs start at $29/month. This is where you end up once you're doing consistent volume and want to own your customer relationships. See our Shopify vs Etsy comparison for a detailed breakdown.
Teachable / Kajabi
Best for: course creators. If courses are your primary product, dedicated platforms like Teachable provide better student experience, completion tracking, and upsell flows than generic marketplaces. Teachable's free plan works for starters; Pro is $119/month but includes zero transaction fees and advanced analytics.
How to Price Your Digital Products
Pricing is where most creators leave money on the table. The instinct is to price low to attract buyers — but low prices signal low value, and they don't actually move more units in most categories.
Here's a framework that works:
- Printables and simple templates: $5–$15 per item, $15–$45 for bundles
- Complex templates (Notion systems, business kits): $27–$97
- Ebooks and guides: $9–$29 (sweet spot is $17)
- Prompt packs: $9–$47 depending on depth and niche
- Mini courses (under 3 hours): $47–$197
- Full courses: $197–$497+
The key is value-based pricing. Don't ask "what am I comfortable charging?" Ask "how much time or money does this save the buyer?" A Notion business template that saves someone 10 hours of setup time is worth $67, not $9.
Test prices. Raise them. Most creators are undercharging by 2–3x.
Getting Traffic Without a Big Audience
The hardest part of selling digital products is not creating them — it's getting eyeballs. Here's what works without a massive following:
Etsy SEO
If you're on Etsy, master keyword research. Use all 13 tags. Write titles that match exactly what buyers search for. Optimise your main image — it's the only thing that drives click-through rate in search results. A well-optimised Etsy listing with no marketing can generate consistent organic sales.
Pinterest is a search engine disguised as social media. Pins have a shelf life of months (vs. hours on Instagram). Create a board for each product category, pin consistently, and link back to your product listings. Pinterest works especially well for printables, planners, and Canva templates — visually rich niches that pin well.
SEO Blog Content
Build a simple blog targeting long-tail keywords related to your products. "Best Notion templates for freelancers" or "free budget tracker Google Sheets" — these searches happen millions of times per month. A few well-ranked articles can drive consistent traffic to your product pages for years.
Email List
Your email list is the most valuable asset in your digital product business. Offer a free product (a stripped-down template, a 5-page ebook, a sample prompt pack) in exchange for an email address. Then nurture that list and sell to them over time. Tools like Kit (formerly ConvertKit) make this straightforward and start free.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Having helped track what works across dozens of digital product niches, here are the patterns that kill new businesses:
- Building before validating: Spend 2 hours researching demand before you spend 10 hours creating. Check Etsy search volume, Google Trends, and subreddits to confirm people are actively looking for what you want to sell.
- One product, one platform: Diversify early. List the same product on Etsy AND Gumroad AND your own site. Cross-platform presence multiplies your surface area.
- Ignoring thumbnails: In digital product marketplaces, your image IS your product. Invest time in clean, professional mockups. Canva has excellent mockup templates — use them.
- Giving up too early: Most digital product businesses take 3–6 months to gain traction. Sales don't happen on day one. Consistency wins.
Your First Steps This Week
You don't need a perfect product line to start. You need one good product, on one platform, with solid SEO. Here's the action plan:
- Pick a niche you have knowledge or skills in
- Spend 2 hours validating demand on Etsy and Google
- Create one product using Canva, Notion, or Google Docs
- List it on Etsy or Gumroad with keyword-optimised title and tags
- Share it on Pinterest with 5–10 pins in the first week
- Set up a free email list with Kit and offer a freebie
- Repeat with a second product
The digital product business model rewards consistency over perfection. Your first product probably won't be your best — but it will teach you more than any guide can. Get it live, get the data, and iterate.
For more on building multiple income streams, check out our guide to passive income methods for 2026.