As OnlyFans grew, so did “agencies” that disappear overnight. Victims lose money, account access, and content. Below are signs to stop the conversation immediately.
Red flags
- They ask for “promotion” payment before launch ($500–2000+)
- They promise fixed $20k/month without analyzing your niche
- They demand a single OnlyFans password “for convenience”
- No contract—or they refuse to show a template before payment
- Pressure: “sign today or we give your slot away”
- They post your photos in a portfolio without written consent
- Communication only from a personal account, no company brand
- Reviews are screenshots only, with no way to verify
- Commission “up to 60%” with no transparent service list
- Threats when you try to terminate the agreement
How to protect yourself
Enable 2FA on OnlyFans; use roles, not your password. Keep content masters on your side. Read the exit clause. Do not send crypto for “ads” to unknown intermediaries.
A legitimate agency earns from your growth, not from your onboarding fee.
OFM does not charge an upfront “launch” fee. The application is free—a manager explains terms in chat before any commitment.
