The answer isn’t as simple as “remote pays less” or “in-person pays more.” The real picture is messier—and more interesting—than that. After spending years participating in, organizing, and researching paid studies, I’ve learned that compensation varies wildly based on study type, time commitment, platform, and whether you’re willing to sit in a fluorescent-lit room for three hours. Here’s what you can expect to earn, where the hidden costs eat into your pay, and which opportunities actually deliver real money.
Here’s the raw breakdown of what most paid research opportunities pay in the US market as of early 2025:
| Study Type | Typical Pay Range | Average Hourly Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| Online Surveys | $0.50 – $5 | $3 – $8/hour |
| Remote 1-on-1 Interviews | $50 – $150/hour | $50 – $150/hour |
| Remote Focus Groups | $75 – $200/session | $25 – $75/hour |
| In-Person Focus Groups | $75 – $350/session | $20 – $60/hour |
| In-Person Product Testing | $50 – $300/session | $15 – $50/hour |
| Clinical Trials | $100 – $5,000+ | Varies widely |
| Academic Lab Studies | $20 – $75/hour | $20 – $75/hour |
The numbers above reveal an important pattern: in-person studies don’t automatically pay more. In fact, when you account for travel time, the hourly equivalent often drops below what remote interviews pay. What in-person studies do offer is consistency—while remote opportunities compete for your attention with millions of other qualified participants, in-person slots are harder to fill, so recruiters pay a premium to show up.
The real money isn’t in either category at the extremes. The highest earners I know treat research participation as a volume game on remote platforms while cherry-picking specific in-person opportunities that pay $200+ for a couple hours of their time.
Several factors determine compensation beyond whether the study is remote or in-person:
Study duration is the most obvious factor. A 15-minute usability test on UserTesting pays around $10, while a 90-minute interview on Respondent.io can pay $200 or more. But duration alone doesn’t explain the gap.
Specialized knowledge drives pay through the roof. If you work in healthcare, software development, finance, or another high-demand field, you qualify for niche studies that pay $300–$500 for an hour of your time. Companies need experts, and the supply of qualified participants is thin.
Location matters for in-person studies but almost never for remote ones. Studies in major metro areas (New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Los Angeles) consistently pay 20–40% more than identical studies in smaller markets. This is pure supply-and-demand—recruiters in expensive cities must compete for a more expensive participant pool.
Recruiter type influences pay significantly. Market research firms (Ipsos, Kantar, Schlesinger Group) typically pay more consistently than academic researchers, who often work with constrained budgets. Product companies hiring directly through their own platforms pay best of all because they skip the middleman.
Screening requirements paradoxically increase what you earn. The more specific the screening criteria—current software users, people with particular health conditions, business owners in specific industries—the higher the pay. You’ve already proven you’re hard to find.
UserTesting dominates the remote usability testing space. Participants record their screen and voice while completing tasks on websites or apps. Most tests pay $10 for about 10 minutes of work, though tests with longer instructions or multiple tasks pay $15–$30. The platform has a low barrier to entry (you just complete a sample test), consistent flow of opportunities, and pays via PayPal within 7–10 days.
The catch: you’re competing with a massive global pool of participants. Tests disappear within minutes of posting, and the pay doesn’t scale with experience—newcomers and veterans earn the same rates.
Prolific has built a reputation for higher-paying academic surveys compared to survey mills like MTurk or Survey Junkie. Average pay sits around $6–$12 per hour, with most surveys taking 15–45 minutes. What makes Prolific stand out is their participant-first approach—they take a larger cut from researchers rather than squeezing participants, and their screening process means you only see studies you qualify for.
The minimum payout is $5, and they pay via PayPal. The platform is particularly strong for academic and social science research, so if you have backgrounds in psychology, sociology, or related fields, you’ll find more relevant studies.
Respondent.io is where the serious money lives—if you qualify. This platform specializes in 30–60 minute interviews with professionals, and pay ranges from $75 to $500+ per study. The catch is steep: you need to complete a detailed profile and demonstrate expertise in at least one industry.
Most studies here are B2B-focused, looking for people with specific job titles or industry experience. A single study can pay more than a month of consistent surveying on other platforms. The application process is competitive, but once you’re in, opportunities arrive regularly if your profile matches demand.
Pinecone Research operates on invitation-only, which is actually a good sign for pay consistency. Studies typically pay $3–$5 each and take 10–20 minutes, with occasional product tests that pay $15–$20 plus free products. The platform is owned by Nielsen, giving it access to legitimate market research opportunities.
The main limitation: it’s genuinely hard to get an invitation. Joining their waitlist and checking periodically is the best approach, or you might find referral codes in online communities dedicated to paid research.
In-person studies reward you for your time and location, but finding them requires different strategies than remote platforms.
Major cities have dedicated research facilities that run constant focus groups and product tests. Companies like Schlesinger Group, Wufoo (no relation), and RMG connect participants with these opportunities. Typical pay for a 90-minute focus group runs $100–$175 in most markets, though Manhattan and San Francisco sessions regularly hit $200–$300.
These facilities post opportunities on their own sites and on aggregators. Creating accounts with 5–6 different facilities in your metro area gives you the best chance at consistent invitations.
University labs pay less than private market research but offer unique opportunities. Psychology departments frequently need participants for cognition, perception, and decision-making studies, typically paying $10–$30 per hour. Business schools run marketing and organizational behavior studies with similar rates.
The advantage: schedules are often flexible, locations are campus-based (often with free parking), and you can build ongoing relationships with labs that invite regular participants back.
This is where in-person compensation reaches its peak. Clinical trials for new medications, medical device testing, and health behavior studies can pay anywhere from $500 to $5,000+ for multi-day or multi-week commitments. The time commitment is significant—some trials require overnight stays or repeated visits—but the pay reflects that.
Finding these opportunities requires searching for local clinical research centers and signing up for their participant databases. Sites like ClinicalTrials.gov list trials actively recruiting participants, though these are more oriented toward patients with specific conditions than general paid research.
Companies like Unilever, P&G, and smaller consumer brands run in-home product tests where you try products and complete diaries or surveys. These often pay $50–$150 per product, and some test programs run 4–6 weeks with multiple products, totaling $300–$600. The work is minimal—you just use products as instructed and report back.
These opportunities are typically managed through specialized testing companies like Olson or Vivvix, which maintain participant panels organized by demographics and shopping habits.
Here’s where most articles on this topic drop the ball. They give you the headline pay rates and move on. But the real math is uglier.
That $150 focus group sounds great until you factor in an hour of commuting each way during rush hour, 30 minutes of waiting in the lobby, and 15 minutes of paperwork. What looked like 2 hours of work becomes 4 hours of your day. Your actual hourly rate just dropped from $75/hour to $37.50. Do this regularly and you’ll start to feel the grind.
I made this mistake early on. I’d book back-to-back in-person studies across town, spend $30 on Uber, and wonder why I wasn’t actually making money despite accepting “high-paying” opportunities.
Most remote platforms take 7–14 days to pay out, and some have minimum thresholds that mean waiting weeks to access your money. UserTesting and Prolific are relatively fast, but Respondent.io can take 30 days to process payments. If you’re relying on study income, these delays create real cash flow problems.
Additionally, some platforms build in fees. If you receive payment in a currency other than your own, conversion fees eat into your earnings. PayPal fees (roughly 2.9% + $0.30) apply on most platforms, reducing a $100 payment to about $97.
You find a study paying $75 for 45 minutes. You spend 20 minutes answering screening questions. You don’t qualify. That $0 just cost you 20 minutes you could have spent on a guaranteed $10 survey elsewhere. On platforms with aggressive screening, qualification rates can be as low as 10–20%, making the effective hourly rate far lower than headline numbers suggest.
Building a strong profile, being selective about which studies you attempt, and using platforms with better screening efficiency (Prolific screens participants upfront rather than making you answer questions repeatedly) all help mitigate this.
If you earn $600 or more from a single platform in a calendar year, they’re required to send you a 1099. Research study income is taxable as ordinary income, not passive income or capital gains. This matters if you’re treating research participation as a significant side income. Set aside roughly 25–30% for taxes if you’re earning thousands annually.
Most participants don’t realize this until tax season hits. Platforms won’t remind you. Keep records of everything you earn, because reconstructing it from PayPal statements eight months later is painful.
Most advice says in-person studies pay more. This is technically true for the absolute top end—in-person focus groups can reach $300+, matching the highest remote opportunities. But the median in-person study pays less than the median remote interview once you account for the hassle factor.
Here’s what I mean: a remote interview at $100/hour on Respondent.io requires you to show up on a video call from your home, no travel, no parking, no waiting in a lobby. A focus group at $150 for two hours in a downtown office building might net you $35/hour when you factor in commute and wait time.
The participants I know who earn the most treat remote as their baseline income—consistent, low-friction work that adds up—while using in-person opportunities as bonuses when something particularly well-paid comes up in their area.
Do remote studies pay less than in-person studies?
Not necessarily. Remote interviews with professionals on platforms like Respondent.io often pay $100–$300 per hour, exceeding what most in-person focus groups offer. Where in-person studies can compete is at the very top end—some product testing and medical studies pay significantly—but the average remote study pays similarly or better when you account for time invested.
What’s the highest-paying type of research study?
Clinical trials can pay the most, ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars, but require significant time commitments and sometimes specific health conditions. For generally accessible opportunities, professional interviews on Respondent.io and similar platforms offer the highest regular pay, with rates of $150–$500 for an hour of conversation.
How do I find legitimate paid research studies?
Start with established platforms: UserTesting, Prolific, Respondent.io, Pinecone Research, and Survey Junkie for remote work. For in-person opportunities, register directly with market research facilities in your area and with university research portals. Avoid any platform that asks you to pay to access studies—legitimate research companies pay you, not the other way around.
Can you make a full-time income from research studies?
It’s extremely difficult. Even the most dedicated participants report earning $500–$2,000 per month at the absolute high end, and this requires applying to dozens of studies daily, having rare expertise, or living in a major metro area with constant in-person opportunities. For most people, research studies work better as side income rather than primary revenue.
The research industry is shifting, and the compensation landscape will evolve with it. AI-powered analysis is reducing the number of traditional focus groups companies need—why pay for eight participants to discuss a product when natural language processing can extract insights from a handful of users? But this same technology is creating new opportunities: AI training data collection, prompt evaluation studies, and conversational interface testing are all emerging categories that didn’t exist two years ago.
The participants who will earn the most in the next few years aren’t choosing between remote and in-person—they’re building diverse portfolios of platforms, maintaining profiles that make them valuable across multiple study types, and treating research participation as a skill that compounds over time. Your first $100 study might take weeks to find. Your tenth will arrive in your inbox automatically because you’ve built the reputation and profile that researchers are looking for.
The money is there. The question is whether you’re willing to learn where to find it—and whether you’ll make the mistake I made of chasing headline numbers instead of calculating what you’re actually earning per hour of your life spent.
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