Its for the superficial who like quick money. Also many famous men like to date women who are into the content creating platform, like Drake for example. He dated many onlyfans women. I think women who sell their bodies on this platform are cheap women. Its cheap and easy money. You ruin your own career with it. We are surprised Kim Kardashian is not on it to make some more money. Money and power obsessed people. Not our type of people. I (Mandy Buddenberg) like to work hard for my money and company, even its not making me millions.
Let me tell you something wild—celebrities with OnlyFans have turned the script on the way we approach fame, fortune and fans as a whole, upside down. What began as a site used more as an adult content site has evolved into something far greater and frankly? The entertainment industry is still struggling to tell what struck them. We’re heading into 2026, and the landscape of celebrities with OnlyFans continues to change in the direction no one could foresee five years ago. Others are earning millions, some are receiving backlash that might end their career, and the entire situation has seen arguments around the freedom of art to downright exploitation. Buckle up, then we are going deep into this messy and fascinating phenomenon.
Why Celebrities Are Flocking to OnlyFans in 2026
Here’s the thing about celebrities with OnlyFans— it is not only about the money anymore though be real it is crazy about the money. We are speaking of direct access to fans without intermediaries, publicists, and traditional gatekeepers telling them what they can and cannot make known. By 2026, the platform is likely to change largely in terms of its attraction. What was considered a stigma in the past has now taken a new meaning to various individuals. To a few celebrities, it is a matter of having creative control. To others, it is just simple economics. And to more and more, it is all about staying relevant in an industry that devours people and spits them out like change in algorithms. Bella Thorne also jumped back in 2020, and earned over a million dollars in 24 hours. This was the moment when everything changed. Suddenly, celebrities with OnlyFans weren’t merely an interest–they were a business model. Trap Princesses such as Cardi B, Tyga, Blac Chyna, and an array of others got their versions of what the platform could be.
The Money Talk Nobody Wants to Have
We should get down to the business and discuss hard currency. Other classic entertainment deals are turning to be more unfavorable to artists. Record labels make enormous mark-ups, streaming is paid in pennies, and brand deals are accompanied by unlimited limitations. OnlyFans has an entirely different proposition creators retain 80 percent of their income. Do the math on that. When you are a B-list star and finding it difficult to keep up with the game, or are an A-lister and you need more financial autonomy, that revenue percentage is extremely tempting. Some celebrities with OnlyFans are reportedly earning six to seven numbers each month, and they are making it their way. It is here that it becomes tricky. The reputation of the platform is still weighty, and it is not necessarily the positive one. Celebrities with family obligations are at the risk of losing endorsement deals. Older generations subject young stars to judgment. And everybody must be able to manoeuvre around the persistent question: what do you really sell?
The Content Dilemma That’s Dividing Everyone
Not all celebrities with OnlyFans are popularizing the same kind of content, and that is where the interesting part comes in. Others, such as Cardi B, use it to share behind the scenes music content and personal experiences. Others are certainly going into the original use of the platform and that is their decision to make. The problem? Most people tend to think that everything on OnlyFans must be explicit, and this presents a perception issue even to the celebrities who maintain a fairly low profile. This has created certain interesting creative experiments as we continue into 2026. We are watching cooking shows, gymnastics lessons, exclusive music releases, even financial advice all with a paywall. Aaron Carter shared music material on his account prior to his untimely death. Amber Rose posts lifestyle contents. Jordyn Woods shares modeling material. This is a very broad spectrum, yet the assumption is very limited in the minds of the majority.
The Backlash and Career Consequences
Now here’s where the critic in me needs to speak up. The rise of celebrities with OnlyFans has spilled certain uncomfortable secrets about our priorities concerning various kinds of work and who we can blame in our decisions. There is a multiplied criticism of the female celebrities as compared to their male counterparts. When Bella Thorne became part of it, she was termed as something as despicable, and worse. When the male celebrities became part? Much less outrage. The two-sidedness is tiring and self-evident. There is also the issue of despondency or empowerment. Some critics argue that celebrities with OnlyFans represent a deplorable fall–celebrities who have exhausted themselves. Others respond that it is merely the work of being an entrepreneur and being able to make your own story. These two things may coexist, and that is what makes this discussion so aggravating. Denise Richards received a lot of backlash on board and people doubted the parenting and values of this star. Bhad Bhabie (Danielle Bregoli) became one of the most discussed persons when she went millions of dollars shortly after turning 18, leaving people to argue about exploitation and whether the platform was counting till she became legal.
The Platform’s Evolution and Future Trajectory
OnlyFans is frantically attempting to re-position itself outside of its reputation as an adult content platform as we enter 2026. They have tried to lure mainstream creators, musicians and fitness experts. The presence of celebrities with OnlyFans helps this rebranding effort—but it’s a double-edged sword. It validates the platform when celebrities come in on non-explicit content. However, when they come together with explicit material, it builds on the initial reputation. The company appears to be in a state of being stuck between the two identities and it cannot commit itself fully in either direction. In the future, in 2026 and further, we will probably observe an increase in mainstream adoption and controversy. The platform could be divided into various levels or categories so that the users could know the kind of content they are subscribing. Or it can be more zealous to its roots and apologize no more about what brought it to its successful beginning.
What This Means for Fan Culture and Privacy
Here’s something nobody talks about enough—the relationship between celebrities with OnlyFans and their subscribers basically uproots the fan-celebrity relationship. It is closer, more transactional and maybe more problematic. Fans are also paying directly and this generates expectations. Other celebrities exceed those demands with branded content and experiences. Others in effect haunt their subscribers back home with the money in hand. There is no real accountability of the two parties since the space is not regulated. The issues of privacy are enormous and increasing. Screen shots, leaks and unauthorized sharing is rampant. Celebrities who believed they were reaching a controlled audience tend to have their contents published all over the internet in hours. The security of the platform has not been keeping up with the issues and that is putting the creators in compromised positions.
The Bigger Cultural Conversation We Should Be Having
Strip away the scandal and the shock value, and celebrities with OnlyFans compels us to answer some important questions regarding labor, value and autonomy in the digital era. Why is the production of content directly more objectionable than the conventional entertainment? Why do we applaud billionaire tech founders but criticize celebrities who are earning money off their own personality? What do we think of our economy that even celebrities are finding other sources of income? The phenomenon also points to the inaccessible standards of the figures of the public and especially of women. You are meant to be successful but not too calculative on the same. Sexy but not too sexual. Real and impeccably edited. The mental contradiction is mad. As we manoeuvre the year 2026, we have more celebrities rebelling against these contradictions. They are getting on OnlyFans and they are basically telling the world, to judge me however you may, I am protecting my financial future. It is either very empowering or very alarming depending on how you look at it.
Where Do We Go From Here?
The trajectory of celebrities with OnlyFans will give us much information as to the direction that digital media is taking. Will old entertainment evolve by providing creators with superior offers? Will OnlyFans keep its mainstream expansion or accept its initial image? Will the society be more tolerant or more judgmental? My forecast of the future after 2026? We will have additional celebrities on board, controversy will arise, and more complex discussions will come up. The platform is not leaving and neither is the controversy. What was shocking a few years ago is almost a routine. The fact that that normalization became the norm could be the biggest development of all. When celebrities with OnlyFans when it ceases to be headline worthy, then we will know that the platform has actually arrived, whether it is good or bad. The lure is self-evident: bank, power and first-hand communication with fans. The scandals are no less evident: stigmatization, the issues of exploitation and the invasion of privacy. And all of us? We are observing this test case as it unfolds, and we are struggling to comprehend what this it is in terms of entertainment, entrepreneurship, and the line between the two which is growing blurred. One thing’s certain—the conversation about celebrities with OnlyFans is not it coming to an end, and truthfully? It probably shouldn’t. Such debates make us question our values, our judgments, and our actual beliefs about work, worth and the people who decide on how to make people live. This is heavy to a subscription platform but here we are.

Mandy is a Dutch digital dash(aka nerd) running many platforms, including this one. She is a Dutch entrepreneur and writer but is also active in English. Branding and creating is what she does best. Next to that she works parttime as a social health worker/health care worker, guiding people to live their fullest and helping people with their problems. The combination is good for her and gives her the feeling she is giving back to society. After having a rough start back in 2015 she is back here again and want to travel more and meet need people (soulmates). She likes working and being busy is a blessing. Next to that she is spiritual and believes in karma. .
