One of the biggest hurdles when starting a niche website is deciding what niche to go after. Analysis paralysis is real. You can spend weeks researching the perfect niche and never actually build anything. Sometimes the best thing you can do is look at a big list of ideas, let something catch your attention, and then do the research to validate it.
Here are 26 niche site ideas across a range of topics. Some are evergreen. Some are seasonal. All of them have audiences actively searching for information right now.
- Holiday party planning and activities
- Kitchen remodeling tips and costs
- Moving and relocation guides
- New Year's Eve party planning
- Online dating advice and app reviews
- Parenting skills and child development
- Pregnancy and prenatal health
- Real estate investing for beginners
- Thanksgiving hosting and entertaining
- Skin tag and wart removal
- Wedding planning and activities
- Buying and selling on online marketplaces
- Feng shui for home and office
- Motorsports and racing (drifting, rally, etc.)
- Airport guides and travel tips
- Social media platform tutorials
- Air travel rules and TSA guidelines
- Mortgage refinancing advice
- Renting apartments and houses
- Youth sports coaching resources
- Motocross and off-road racing
- Tattoo ideas, care, and aftercare
- Vitamins, supplements, and nutrition
- Astrology and horoscopes
- Email marketing automation
- Backyard games and outdoor activities
How to Evaluate a Niche Idea
A list of ideas is just a starting point. Before you commit to building a site, you need to validate the niche. Here is what to look for.
First, check search volume. Use a keyword research tool like Ubersuggest, Ahrefs, or Google Keyword Planner to see how many people are searching for topics in this niche each month. You want enough search volume to make the effort worthwhile, but not so much competition that you cannot realistically rank.
Second, look at monetization potential. How will you make money from this niche? Affiliate programs, display advertising, digital products, and sponsored content are the main options. Some niches, like insurance and finance, have high ad rates and affiliate commissions. Others, like casual hobbies, may have lower per-visitor revenue but massive audiences.
Third, consider your own interest and expertise. Building a niche site requires creating a lot of content over months and years. If you pick a topic you find boring, you will burn out. If you pick something you genuinely know about or want to learn about, the content creation process becomes sustainable.
Stop Researching, Start Building
The biggest mistake I see aspiring niche site builders make is spending months choosing a niche. Pick something from this list or from your own brainstorming, do a few hours of keyword research to confirm there is opportunity, and start building. You will learn more from publishing your first 20 articles than from another week of deliberation. The best niche site is the one you actually build.




Great list Mark! Two thoughts I’ve had lately… hungry crowds and evergreen. I think your list covers those areas nicely. My buyhomeblog niche is slowly getting off the ground, and I will get clubquitsmoking there soon.
Thanks for the list. There are some timeless ideas in there.
My problem is not that I can’t come up with niches, but that I haven’t got time to implement all my ideas. Can you get me a few more hours in my day?
Thanks Mark, this is a great list of ideas. An interesting this to do here is to cross reference it with Google’s keyword tool (https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal) to see the volume of searches for some of these ideas.
This is a great article! Notwithstanding the points you mentioned, finding good domain name is a challenge these days. I recommend http://www.squadhelp.com for finding great domain names. This site uses the “wisdom of crowds” allowing users across the world to submit domain name suggestions. The best suggestion wins a prize that is setup in advance by the contest holder, creating a win win situation for every one. Contests start at $35 and users typically receive 200+ good name suggestions within 2 days
These are great ideas. I’m thinking about starting a niche site along with the blog I’m already doing and have been doing some research on it.
Glad that was some help, Wade. Thanks for stopping by.
Mark