Are you thinking about how to start art commissions but aren’t sure where to start (or struggling to get clients)?

Maybe you’re wondering:

  • How tf do I even get clients?
  • Am I “good enough” to charge?
  • What if nobody buys?!

I hear you. And I promise it’s way scarier thinking about starting than after you’ve started. At one point, even I thought it was impossible to make money as an artist myself until I actually started. Now I pay bills from art.

I’m not a genius. If I can do it, so can you.

The trick? You don’t need everything figured out before you begin. You just need a simple, repeatable process.

Here’s how to get going without overcomplicating it.

Step 1: Announce That You’re Open for Art Commissions

Sounds obvious, but you’d be surprised how many artists never actually tell people they’re open to business when focusing on how to start art commissions. Don’t be shy – make it clear! Confidence is critical to selling!

  • Add a link in your bio (even if no one clicks it at first)
  • Post often (at least 2-3x a week, daily is better)
  • Mention commissions at the end of posts at least once a week
  • Drop the occasional/casual “BTW, commissions open!” in your captions and stories

Nobody can buy if they don’t know you’re selling.

Note: You can start offering commissions whenever, but I HIGHLY recommend you don’t start offering commission until you have at least a few hundred follows.

Step 2: Offer 5 Free Commissions to Start (Yes, free.)

I know, I know. “Work for free??” But listen – this isn’t forever. And you really aren’t working for free. You give the “free” commission in exchange for a testimonial and/or review

Doing a few small, free commissions does 2 great things:

  1. You get precious experience and confidence working with clients
  2. You gain social proof i.e. validity from other people that you do good work

People are way more likely to pay you when they see others already have gotten good results from your service.

Introducing some scarcity (only 5 slots available) can also help drive demand. People are more likely to buy when there’s a limited amount of something.

Step 3: Start Charging Money (Low at First)

Once you’ve done a handful of commissions, open 5 new slots for a small fee – $5 a piece. Don’t complicate things with busts, waists, or full body. 5 bucks even.

The goal here isn’t to get rich yet. It’s to:

  1. Get used to the feeling of being paid for your art – to build your confidence
  2. Attract budget-friendly buyers who help build your portfolio – and experience
  3. Create a sense of demand – people love hiring artists who are already getting work

Step 4: Gradually Raise Your Prices

Now every 5 commissions you get, introduce 5 new slots and bump up your price by 5 bucks (that’s $10 now btw).

Now every time you fill your 5 slots, increase the price by $5.

As you release new slots you can even point out that the next round “will be more expensive” and “join the waitlist” if they sell out – hopefully driving more urgency from prospective buyers.

Keep doing this until you hit your target pricing. This makes it easier for you to:

  • Build confidence charging for your work.
  • Slowly attract clients willing to pay more.
  • Stop second-guessing your worth.

By the time you hit your ideal pricing, you’ll have dozens of pieces backing up your experience, testimonials, and momentum.

Bonus Step: Target a Community

You can take commissions from anyone, but if you want to get work faster, focus on a specific community. People are way more likely to buy from an artist who understands their niche.

Love drawing D&D characters? Offer commissions in tabletop RPG groups. Obsessed with anime OCs? Tap into fandom communities. Huge on pet portraits? Find pet owner forums.

When your work aligns with what people are already looking for, getting commissions becomes WAY easier—because you’re offering something they already want. Instead of waiting for clients to magically appear for the art you love making, go where they are, and give them what they want.

It comes down to would you rather feed your ego or your bank account? Personally I like the latter cuz it buys groceries xd

What If I Just Want to Charge Right Away?

Go for it. If you’d rather skip the free work and start with paid commissions, that’s fine. Just be realistic.

When you want a commission would you rather hire an inexperienced, unvalidated artist or someone with a more robust portfolio?

The Takeaway for Starting Art Commissions?

Raise your price 5 dollars every 5 commissions until you’re rolling in it.

You don’t have to wait until you’re “good enough” or have a perfect strategy when learning how to start art commissions. Just start. Your future clients aren’t going to magically appear – you’ve gotta get out there and start building your portfolio.

If nobody bites at first? That’s fine.

Keep showing up. Keep sharing. Keep refining.

My first paid contract was 5 dollars an image. I was SEVERELY underpaid. Now, my last (and current) contracts are worth thousands of dollars.

It happened to me. It can happen to you.

Now go prove your parents wrong and get paid for being an artist 💪

Peace and Love,

Brosatsu

BTW if you need help figuring out how to charge and deliver commissions, you should read this guide >>