Most intentional communities and cooperative housing projects generate revenue through a combination of membership fees or dues, rental income from community spaces or short-term rental of guest accommodations, sale of community-produced goods (food, crafts, educational services), and grants or donations for mission-aligned organizations.

Pangea Biotecture-developed communities have additional potential revenue streams: hosting educational retreats and workshops through Pangea Academy, demonstration site fees for students and visiting professionals, rental of production space (commercial kitchen, workshop, shared office) to community members and outside users, and potentially carbon sequestration credits for soil carbon building activities.

A community with multiple revenue streams is far more financially resilient than one dependent on a single source. If membership fees decline during an economic downturn, educational programming revenue may offset the loss. Diversification applies to community economics just as it does to ecological systems.