A lot of doctors I talk to are thinking about side businesses.
Sometimes it’s about money. Sometimes it’s about flexibility. Sometimes it’s just the realization that medicine cannot be the only thing they rely on forever.
I actually like that instinct. I think it’s healthy for physicians to think beyond a single income stream or a single role. Diversifying income and identity can be empowering, especially in a profession that asks so much of us. For many, this starts with exploring a physician side hustle as a way to create optionality without immediately upending their career.
But I have also seen side businesses quietly make life harder instead of easier. And when that happens, it usually has less to do with the business itself and more to do with why it was started in the first place.
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Why Doctors Start Thinking About Side Businesses
Most doctors who explore side businesses are coming from one of two places, even if they don’t realize it yet.
Some are coming from the desire for expansion. They’re curious. They’re thinking long term. They want options. They may not love every part of medicine, but they don’t want to leave it either. They just don’t want their entire future to hinge on one job, one employer, or one income stream. This way of thinking aligns closely with career freedom, where medicine remains a choice rather than a constraint.
That’s usually a healthy place to start.
Others are coming from escape. They’re feeling burnt out. Frustrated. Feeling boxed in. They are hoping that a business, or real estate, or something else will fix that feeling quickly.
There’s nothing wrong with feeling exhausted. Medicine has changed, and it’s understandable that people feel worn down. But when a side business is built from a place of urgency, it almost always feels heavier than expected. This is where the overlap between physician burnout and financial decisions becomes problematic.
I’ve had conversations with physicians who told me they wanted to start a business or invest in real estate, and when we slowed down, it became clear it wasn’t really about the business at all. They just needed relief. They wanted to escape.
When that’s the starting point, everything about the side business feels more intense. The learning curve feels unbearable. Setbacks feel personal. And instead of creating freedom, the business becomes another source of pressure.
The Tradeoff Doctors Often Underestimate
There’s another piece of this that I think we don’t talk about honestly enough.
Being a physician is still one of the most reliable and well-compensated uses of time available. That doesn’t mean medicine is perfect. It just means that, from a practical standpoint, it’s hard to replace.
I think the last thing most doctors want is to leave a stable, well-paying job only to step into a high-effort business that pays less, at least for years. This is why it helps to be clear on what financial freedom actually means and how long it realistically takes.
I’ve seen physicians jump into active real estate or small businesses thinking it would be less stressful, only to realize they traded one form of burnout for another. Even something commonly framed as flexible, like real estate as a side business, can demand more time and energy than expected early on.
Different problems. Same exhaustion.
That doesn’t mean entrepreneurship or real estate are bad paths. I believe deeply in both. It just means the tradeoffs deserve more honesty than they usually get.
A Better Way to Think About Side Businesses
This is the lens I keep coming back to, and it’s the simplest way I know how to think about this.
A side business should expand your options, not replace your identity.
When a side business is about expansion, it feels lighter. It creates flexibility. It opens doors over time.
When it’s about replacement, it feels urgent and heavy. It carries the weight of fixing everything at once.
That difference matters more than the idea itself.
When a Side Business Makes Sense for a Doctor
A side business tends to make sense when you have some margin. Not unlimited time, but enough energy to learn without panic.
It helps when you’re not relying on it to replace your income quickly and when you can be patient with the process.
It also helps when you still respect medicine for what it is. For many physicians, clinical income is actually their greatest asset. Used intentionally, it can fund learning, investing, and experimentation without pressure. This is why many doctors begin with passive income for physicians rather than jumping straight into something highly active.
I’ve seen doctors take this slower approach. They kept practicing medicine. They didn’t rush. And over time, they created real options.
Not overnight freedom, but flexibility and choice.
When a Side Business Usually Makes Things Worse
On the other hand, a side business is usually a bad idea when you’re already maxed out.
If you’re exhausted, overwhelmed, and barely holding things together, adding another responsibility rarely helps. Most side businesses increase stress before they reduce it, at least early on.
And if the main motivation is fear, comparison, or urgency, that’s usually a signal to pause.
There’s a hard truth here that’s still worth saying.
A side business rarely fixes burnout. It usually exposes it.
Sometimes the better move isn’t adding something new. It’s stabilizing what you already have. Reducing hours. Creating breathing room. Addressing the source of the burnout first. For many physicians, that starts with reclaiming time freedom before taking on anything else.
Waiting can be a smart decision, even when it doesn’t feel productive.
Using Medicine as a Tool, Not a Trap
I’m a big believer in diversification, not just of income, but of identity.
I don’t think one role should meet all of your needs. Medicine doesn’t have to be all or nothing. You don’t need to abandon your highest earning skill to build a life with more flexibility.
When physicians start using medicine as a tool rather than a trap, things shift. Income becomes leverage. Time becomes more intentional. Decisions feel less reactive.
That’s not about leaving medicine. It’s about using it wisely.
A Simple Way to Decide If a Side Business Is Right for You
If you’re thinking about starting a side business, here are a few questions worth sitting with.
- Are you building this to expand your options or to escape your current situation?
- Do you have enough margin to be patient with it?
- Would you still pursue it if it took longer and paid less than you hope?
If those questions feel uncomfortable, that’s not failure. It’s clarity.

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Final Thought
You don’t need to rush into a side business to build a life you enjoy.
Side businesses are tools, not solutions. And even the right move at the wrong time can still be the wrong move.
You don’t need to leave medicine to create freedom. You need clarity, patience, and respect for the season you’re in.
Get those right, and the opportunities will still be there.
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Peter Kim, MD is the founder of Passive Income MD, the creator of Passive Real Estate Academy, and offers weekly education through his Monday podcast, the Passive Income MD Podcast. Join our community at the Passive Income Doc Facebook Group.
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