Sophie Rain, Camilla Araujo, and Denise Richards Ranked as OnlyFans Stars Most Likely to Trigger Divorce, Survey Finds


Last Updated: July 2, 2025
A new national study suggests that OnlyFans has crossed a psychological boundary for many married Americans, shifting from a form of online entertainment into what a significant number of wives now define as a direct violation of marital trust.
According to original research conducted by OnlyFinds, a platform that analyzes trends and behavior across the OnlyFans ecosystem, many women no longer see subscriptions as passive consumption. Instead, they interpret them as interactive, secretive, and emotionally charged relationships—in some cases severe enough to justify ending a marriage.
At the center of this shift are a small number of highly visible creators whose fame, perceived intimacy, and cultural relevance make them uniquely threatening in the eyes of wives.
Historically, the boundaries around infidelity were relatively clear. Traditional adult content—while often controversial—was largely anonymous and non-interactive.
OnlyFans has fundamentally altered that equation.
The platform allows:
The study indicates that these elements are precisely what many wives find most troubling. For them, OnlyFans feels less like content consumption and more like a hidden relationship.
The survey, conducted among 2,000 married women in the United States, reveals a sharp redefinition of fidelity in the digital age:
These numbers suggest that OnlyFans is not merely controversial—it is actively reshaping marital expectations.
Only respondents who said they would consider divorce immediately (42%) were asked a follow-up question:
Which single OnlyFans creator would be the final straw?
The results show a striking concentration around a small group of high-profile figures.
| Creator | % of Divorce-Ready Wives |
|---|---|
| Sophie Rain | 34% |
| Denise Richards | 26% |
| Camilla Araujo | 21% |
| Bonnie Blue | 12% |
| Lily Phillips | 7% |
Together, the top three account for over 80% of all responses among women who described themselves as divorce-ready.
At just 20 years old, Sophie Rain emerged as the most frequently cited dealbreaker in the study.
According to the analysis, her ranking is less about explicit content and more about symbolism. She represents a form of digital intimacy that many wives find uniquely destabilizing: highly visible, highly personal, and emotionally accessible.
The age gap between Rain and many subscribers also plays a role. Respondents repeatedly expressed discomfort at the idea of their husbands paying for interaction with someone young enough to be their child.
In this sense, Rain functions as a symbol of perceived moral and relational transgression, not merely attraction.
Denise Richards’ position as the second-most threatening creator surprised many observers—but the reasoning is consistent across responses.
Richards is not seen as a fantasy figure. Instead, wives tend to interpret a husband subscribing to her content as embarrassing or even degrading, given her public struggles, financial difficulties, and extensive reality television exposure.
Rather than aspirational desire, Richards evokes discomfort—particularly the idea of financially supporting a highly public figure whose personal turmoil is already well documented.
This reaction highlights how context and narrative shape perceptions of threat.
One of the most revealing findings is a contradiction between public controversy and private threat.
Creators who openly criticize extreme or shocking behavior on OnlyFans—positioning themselves as more “respectable”—are seen by wives as more dangerous, not less.
Why?
Because these creators are:
In contrast, overtly controversial creators are often dismissed as spectacle rather than temptation.
The study suggests that OnlyFans has forced couples to confront a new category of infidelity—one that is not defined by physical contact, but by attention, secrecy, and emotional investment.
For many wives, the problem is not sexual arousal. It is:
This represents a fundamental shift in how fidelity is understood in the digital era.
One conclusion is clear: many married men significantly underestimate how their online behavior is perceived.
What may feel harmless or inconsequential is often interpreted by wives as:
In a substantial minority of cases, it is viewed as grounds for divorce.
OnlyFinds is an independent OnlyFans discovery and analytics platform that studies trends across creators, audiences, and subscription behavior.
Through aggregated data analysis and original research, OnlyFinds examines how subscription-based platforms influence digital culture, economics, and modern relationships.
This study was conducted online between June 1 and June 14, 2025.
All respondents confirmed their marital status through qualifying questions before completing a 10-question survey focused on attitudes toward OnlyFans, digital boundaries, and perceptions of infidelity.