Average OnlyFans Income (2025): What Creators Really Earn


Last Updated: May 9, 2025
OnlyFans has changed how creators monetize—subscriptions, tips, and pay-per-view (PPV) messages can all add up. But if you’re wondering what the average creator actually earns, the answer is: it depends… and the distribution is brutally uneven.
This guide breaks down the most repeated data points across public research summaries and industry reporting, then explains what they mean in real-life terms—especially if you’re not a celebrity walking in with millions of followers.
When people talk about OnlyFans income, they usually mix three different things:
Across widely-circulated datasets and reports, a few themes keep showing up:
These numbers are most useful as directional signals, not guarantees. They highlight the same reality: OnlyFans is a winner-take-most marketplace.
Here are the core stats people reference most often when trying to understand OnlyFans earnings:
The median (not the average) is the number that matters most for expectations.
If median monthly income is $180 before fees, that means:
After OnlyFans takes its 20%, $180 becomes roughly $144.
If the average subscription price is $7.20, and a creator has around 21 fans, subscription revenue would be:
That’s already close to the median range—meaning many creators are living near that zone even before tips and PPV.
Median-level creators usually aren’t making money because they posted “one viral clip.” They’re earning modestly through:
It’s not glamorous, but it’s real.
OnlyFans earnings don’t look like a normal “average job” curve. It’s more like:
A common way this is reported is:
| Revenue Share | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Top 1% of creators | ~33% |
| Top 10% of creators (includes top 1%) | ~73% |
| Remaining 90% of creators | ~27% |
This happens for a few reasons:
So yes: the platform has massive upside—but it is not evenly shared.
Even with a low median, OnlyFans does produce extreme winners.
Reports commonly claim:
Here’s the important framing:
| Earnings Tier | Approx. Creators | What it really implies |
|---|---|---|
| $1M+/year | 300+ | Ultra-rare, top-tier distribution + strong monetization |
| $50K+/year | 16,000+ | Still a small minority, but achievable with consistency + audience |
High earners usually share some combination of:
A commonly cited figure is ~33% of creators relying on OnlyFans as their primary income.
That doesn’t mean they’re all rich. It means:
Think of it like any self-employment path:
some people replace a job, some supplement income, and some chase scale.
OnlyFans typically takes 20%, leaving creators with 80%.
Using the widely cited average subscription price:
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Average subscription price | $7.20 |
| Platform cut (20%) | $1.44 |
| Creator keeps | $5.76 |
For most creators, the best approach is often:
If you want the honest version:
If you’re researching OnlyFans to understand the earning potential, use the median as your baseline and treat extreme earnings stories as outliers—not the norm.
If you’re a fan looking for someone specific (or you just want better discovery than endless scrolling), OnlyFinds helps you search and browse creators with filters like category, price, and location—so you can actually find what you’re into.
Search smarter. Discover faster. Save favorites.
OnlyFans does not publish complete creator income distributions publicly, so figures in “average income” articles often come from a mix of:
Treat all figures as best-available estimates, not audited platform disclosures.