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15 Remote Jobs You Can Start With No Experience (2026)

MRBy Michael Reyes, CFP® Updated June 30, 2026 7 min read

Quick Answer

You can start earning remotely with no experience through entry-level roles that onboard with a short skills test instead of a resume: customer service and chat support, data entry and microtasks, virtual assistant work, transcription, search-engine evaluation, AI data labeling, and website testing. Pay ranges from about $3–$20+ an hour depending on the platform. Most are 1099 contractor roles, so set aside 25–30% for taxes.

"Experience required" is the frustrating catch-22 of job hunting — but plenty of legit remote work skips it entirely. These roles judge you on a quick assessment, not a resume or work history, which makes them some of the fastest ways to start earning from home.

Remote jobs you can start with no experience

Customer service & chat support

Answering questions by phone, email, or chat for retailers and tech companies. Often W-2, sometimes flexible/part-time. Look at platforms like Concentrix, LiveOps, and Working Solutions.

Data entry & microtasks

Small, repetitive online tasks — tagging, categorizing, surveys. Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) and Clickworker onboard almost anyone.

Virtual assistant

Scheduling, research, email, and admin support. Fancy Hands and Time Etc start you with a test task, not a resume.

Transcription

Turning audio into text. Rev and GoTranscript qualify you with a grammar and transcription test.

Search & AI data evaluation

Rating search results or improving AI models. Appen and DataAnnotation-style platforms hire via a skills exam.

Website & app testing

Get paid to think aloud while using sites and apps. UserTesting pays per test after a sample recording.

Avoid scams: a real job never asks you to pay to start. Skip listings that want bank details up front or promise huge pay for almost no work.

How to get started

  • Pick one or two platforms and complete their assessment — don't spread yourself thin.
  • Set up reliable basics: a quiet space, decent internet, and a headset for phone/chat roles.
  • Track your earnings from day one — most of this is 1099 income you'll owe taxes on.

Remember: most of this is 1099 income

Because most entry-level remote work pays you as a contractor, no tax is withheld — you owe self-employment tax (15.3%) plus income tax, and may need to pay quarterly. Set aside about 25–30% of what you earn. Estimate it with the 1099 tax calculator and the self-employed tax calculator. Worried about screening? See jobs that don't do background checks.

Frequently Asked Questions

What remote jobs can I get with no experience?

Entry-level remote work that typically needs no prior experience includes customer service and chat support, data entry and microtasks, virtual assistant work, transcription, search-engine evaluation, AI data labeling, and website/app testing. Most of these onboard you with a short assessment rather than a resume or work history.

Do remote entry-level jobs require a degree?

Usually not. Microtask sites, transcription, data annotation, user testing, and most gig platforms care about whether you can pass a skills test, not your education. Some customer service roles prefer a high school diploma, but a college degree is rarely required for entry-level remote work.

How much do no-experience remote jobs pay?

It varies widely. Microtasks and testing often work out to $3–$15 an hour equivalent; transcription and data annotation can reach $10–$20+; entry-level customer service roles are commonly $12–$18 an hour. Pay depends on the platform, your speed, and how much work is available.

Are these remote jobs employee or contractor roles?

Most are independent-contractor (1099) roles, meaning no taxes are withheld and you're responsible for self-employment tax plus income tax. Some customer service positions are W-2 employee roles. Check each listing, and set aside 25–30% of contractor income for taxes.

How do I avoid remote job scams?

Never pay to get a job, and be wary of listings that ask for bank details up front, promise huge pay for little work, or communicate only through chat apps. Legit platforms don't charge you to start. Stick to established sites and research any company before sharing personal information.

Do these jobs run a background check?

Most contractor and microtask platforms don't run a criminal or credit check — they verify your identity for tax purposes instead. See our guide to jobs that don't do background checks for the details and a longer list.