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Digital Products for Teachers: 10 Things to Create and Sell in 2026

Teachers are sitting on years of refined materials that other educators and parents would gladly pay for. Here are 10 digital products teachers can create, price, and sell online for passive income in 2026.

2026-06-24 · By SellRamp Team · 11 min read

Digital Products for Teachers: 10 Things to Create and Sell in 2026

Teaching is one of the most knowledge-intensive professions in the world. After a few years in the classroom, a skilled teacher has built a library of lesson plans, differentiation strategies, classroom systems, and assessment tools that took hundreds of hours to develop. Most of that work lives on a hard drive or in a filing cabinet, generating nothing after it is used once. SellRamp exists to change that.

Other teachers, tutors, homeschool parents, and school administrators are searching every day for exactly the kind of materials you have already built. This guide covers the ten best digital products teachers can create and sell online in 2026, how to price them, where to list them, and how to turn years of classroom expertise into a stream of income that works while you sleep.

Why Teachers Are Perfectly Positioned to Sell Digital Products

The most common objection teachers raise is that their materials are "just for their classroom." That is exactly why other educators want them. Materials built under real classroom conditions, refined through actual student responses, and adapted for genuine learning challenges are far more credible than anything assembled by a curriculum company that has never taught a period one class on a Monday morning.

Teachers also tend to underestimate the size of the market for their work. In the United States alone, there are approximately 3.5 million public school teachers. Add private school educators, tutors, homeschool parents, and education professionals internationally, and the addressable audience for well-built teacher resources is enormous.

The other structural advantage is that educational materials have long shelf lives. A well-designed reading comprehension activity for fifth graders does not expire next year. You build it once, list it, and it sells for years.

The 10 Best Digital Products Teachers Can Create and Sell

1. Lesson Plan Templates

A reusable lesson plan template is the most natural first product for any teacher. The structure you use to plan a week of instruction, including your warm-up format, learning objective framing, activity sequencing, and exit ticket design, is something newer teachers are actively looking for. They do not want a blank page. They want a proven scaffold.

Build your template as an editable Google Doc or as a fillable PDF. Create a general version and a subject-specific version. A math lesson plan template looks different from an ELA lesson plan template, and buyers are more likely to purchase something designed for their content area. Price a single-subject template at $9 to $19, or bundle multiple subject versions at $29 to $39.

2. Differentiated Activity Packs

Differentiation is one of the most time-consuming parts of teaching and one of the most searched topics among working educators. If you have built activities that offer the same learning objective at multiple levels of access, that work is genuinely valuable to any teacher working in an inclusive classroom.

A differentiated activity pack covering a specific skill such as finding the main idea, solving multi-step word problems, or understanding figurative language, delivered at three tiers, is a practical product with immediate classroom application. Price activity packs at $7 to $15 per skill bundle, or $29 to $49 for a comprehensive unit.

3. Classroom Management Systems and Guides

Veteran teachers have cracked codes that took them years to develop. How you handle transitions, structure group work, manage attention, build routines in the first two weeks of school, and respond to behavioral challenges are skills that newer teachers are hungry for. A written guide that walks through your system in detail, with templates for the documents you actually use, is a strong and differentiated product.

This product sells well to student teachers, first and second-year educators, and teachers who are changing grade levels or schools. Price a comprehensive classroom management guide at $19 to $39.

4. Rubrics and Assessment Tools

Assessment design is one of the most technically demanding parts of teaching, and most teachers default to rubrics they find online that are too generic to be genuinely useful. A well-constructed rubric for a specific task, a research paper in grades 6 through 8, a science lab report, a persuasive essay at the high school level, is a product that saves the buyer significant time and produces better student feedback.

Bundle rubrics by task type or by subject area. An "ELA Assessment Toolkit" that includes rubrics for narrative writing, informational writing, literary analysis, and oral presentation can sell for $24 to $49 and serves a teacher for multiple years.

5. Sub Plans and Emergency Lesson Packs

Every teacher knows the anxiety of calling in sick and scrambling to leave plans a substitute can actually execute. A set of low-prep, no-technology-required, standards-adjacent sub plans that any substitute can pick up and run is a product with very high purchase intent. Buyers are often in a time crunch and want something they can grab and use within minutes.

Build subject-specific or grade-band-specific sub plan packs. Include five to ten complete lesson options with clear instructions, all necessary student materials, and a class roster template. Price at $12 to $29 per pack. These convert reliably because the pain point is immediate and concrete.

6. Parent Communication Templates

Teachers spend more time writing parent emails, progress update letters, conference scripts, and behavior communication templates than most people realize. If you have developed a communication system that keeps parents informed, minimizes misunderstandings, and protects you professionally, other teachers will pay for it.

A parent communication template pack that covers the twenty to thirty most common scenarios, including late work notifications, behavior concerns, IEP-related updates, and end-of-term progress summaries, can be packaged as an editable Google Doc collection. Price at $19 to $34. School counselors and administrators are also buyers for this product type.

7. Escape Rooms and Gamified Review Activities

Interactive review activities are consistently among the highest-selling items in the educational digital product space. Classroom escape rooms, scavenger hunts, and gamified test prep activities that are content-specific and standards-aligned sell at premium prices because the design investment is visible and the classroom experience is noticeably better than a worksheet.

A well-designed escape room for a specific unit, such as systems of equations, the American Revolution, or cell biology, can sell for $7 to $15 per activity. Bundle ten to fifteen activities into a yearlong review pack and price it at $49 to $89. These products also perform well in teacher Facebook groups and Pinterest boards, which means buyers often share them with colleagues, driving referral sales.

8. Digital Planning Tools and Teacher Organizers

Teachers are natural planners, and many build their own planning systems in Google Sheets, Notion, or Excel because nothing commercially available fits how they actually work. If your planning system has evolved to the point where you genuinely rely on it, it is worth packaging and selling.

A digital teacher planner built in Notion or Google Sheets that handles weekly lesson scheduling, grade tracking, parent contact logs, and supply inventory is a product with broad appeal. A Notion template for teacher organization, structured around the actual workflow of a classroom educator, can sell for $19 to $49. Spreadsheet-based grade books with built-in average calculations and color-coded tracking systems are also popular.

9. Tutoring and Homeschool Curriculum Materials

The tutoring market and the homeschool community are underserved by traditional educational publishers and represent strong demand for educator-created resources. Materials built for one-on-one or small-group instruction, including skill-specific workbooks, reading comprehension bundles, math practice sequences, and writing programs, sell consistently to parents and private tutors who do not have access to school-based curriculum.

A six-week math intervention packet targeting a specific skill gap, such as fraction operations or decimal place value, gives a tutor or homeschool parent a structured program without requiring them to design it themselves. Price these at $15 to $39 depending on scope. A full-semester curriculum bundle can command $59 to $129.

10. Professional Development Guides for New Teachers

If you have moved into a mentor, department chair, or instructional coach role, you have perspective that first and second-year teachers actively seek. A practical written guide covering your first-year survival framework, your feedback strategies, your student relationship approach, or your grading philosophy is a product that sells to a motivated audience.

New teachers spend their own money on professional development because their districts cannot provide enough of it. A 30-page written guide priced at $14 to $29 is an accessible purchase for someone who wants a perspective shaped by actual classroom experience rather than a university methods course.

How to Price Teacher Digital Products

Most teacher creators underprice their work because they compare their products to free resources on Teachers Pay Teachers. Ignore that comparison. Price based on the time you save the buyer and the outcome your resource produces.

A rule of thumb: price a single-use resource at $5 to $9, a unit resource at $12 to $24, a system or bundle at $29 to $59, and a comprehensive curriculum at $69 and above. If your product saves a teacher two hours of planning, charging $15 for it is not only reasonable but represents tremendous value from the buyer's perspective.

Test your pricing by listing at the midpoint of your target range, watching your conversion rate over the first thirty days, and adjusting based on what you learn. Products that sell quickly at your initial price were likely underpriced.

Where to Sell Your Teacher Digital Products

The most important platform decision is whether you want discovery traffic or margin control. Marketplaces with built-in audiences charge high fees in exchange for visibility. Platforms that let you keep more of your revenue require you to build your own traffic.

SellRamp gives teachers both. The platform provides marketplace discovery, where buyers browse and find new products organically, while keeping fees at 10%. You retain 90% of every sale. There are no monthly subscription fees, no listing costs, and no arbitrary product moderation. Setup takes minutes, and your products are live and discoverable the same day.

For a teacher selling a $15 resource pack, the difference between a 40% marketplace fee and SellRamp's 10% fee is $4.50 per sale. At 100 sales per month, that is $450 per month in additional earnings from the same sales volume, equivalent to roughly $5,400 per year simply from choosing the right platform.

How to Market Teacher Resources Online

Pinterest is the most powerful distribution channel for teacher digital products. Teachers use Pinterest to collect and organize classroom resources, and a well-designed pin linked to your product page can drive consistent organic traffic for months after you post it. Create pins that show your product in use, display a key page from the resource, or walk through the outcome it produces.

Teacher Facebook groups are the second highest-converting channel for most teacher creators. Many groups explicitly allow promotional posts on designated days. Participate authentically in conversations, answer questions with real knowledge from your classroom, and mention your products when they are genuinely relevant.

TikTok and Instagram Reels are growing channels for classroom teachers who can show their classroom in action. A 30-second clip showing how an activity works during class, or a walkthrough of a planning template, generates more trust than any product description. You do not need a large following to generate initial sales this way.

Your First 30 Days as a Teacher Creator

The fastest path to a first sale is to start with one product that solves a very specific problem for a very specific teacher. Not "a lesson plan template," but "a week-long lesson plan template for fifth-grade ELA teachers using a workshop model." The narrower the description, the faster the right buyer recognizes that your product is exactly what they need.

Spend your first week building and listing that one product on SellRamp. Write a product description that describes the problem it solves, what is included, how long it takes to implement, and who it is best suited for. Add preview images that show the actual pages of the resource so buyers can evaluate the quality before purchasing.

In weeks two and three, share the listing in two or three relevant Facebook groups and on your Pinterest account. Do not lead with the sale. Lead with the problem: "Tired of writing sub plans from scratch at 10 PM? Here is the packet I use." The product link is the answer, not the announcement.

By week four, you will have data. You will know which groups converted, which pin format got clicks, and whether your price is right. Build your second product from what you learn.

The Income Math for Teacher Creators

At 50 sales per month of a $19 product, you earn $855 after SellRamp's 10% fee. At 100 sales per month, that is $1,710. A teacher who builds a catalog of 10 to 15 products over six months, each averaging 20 to 30 sales per month, can realistically generate $2,000 to $5,000 per month in supplemental income without creating anything new.

The work compounds. A product you build today can still be generating sales three years from now. That is the part-time job that does not require you to show up.

If you are a teacher with materials worth sharing, the only thing standing between your filing cabinet and passive income is a product listing. Start selling on SellRamp today and put years of classroom expertise to work for you beyond the school day.