Fake profiles on OnlyFans aren't a fringe issue anymore. Estimates from creator-protection services peg the share of accounts using stolen, recycled, or AI-generated images somewhere between 8% and 15% of all new accounts created in 2025–2026. The fakers have gotten significantly better in the last 18 months, mainly because image generators got significantly better. Here's how to tell what you're actually looking at before you subscribe.

The Three Categories of Fake

Not all fakes are the same. Knowing which type you're dealing with changes the warning signs to look for.

1. Stolen photo accounts

Someone takes a real creator's photos (or random Instagram model's photos) and reposts them under a different name. These have been around forever. The faker may chat from the account, may sell PPVs, but the photos and videos all came from somewhere else. The actual person in the pictures has no idea.

2. AI-generated personas

This is the fast-growing category. The "creator" is a fully fabricated person. AI generates the photos, sometimes AI even handles the chat. There is no real human behind the photos at all. Some platforms allow this with disclosure; OnlyFans technically does not, but enforcement is uneven and the AI accounts have proliferated.

3. Chat agency accounts

The model in the photos is real, but the person you're chatting with isn't her. A chat agency operates the DMs, often with multiple chatters per account, sometimes scripted, sometimes not. The model herself may never see your messages. This is technically allowed under OnlyFans' rules with disclosure (the "OFM" model), but most agencies don't disclose.

Stolen Photo Red Flags

The classic stolen-photo profile. Easier to detect than AI fakes if you know what to look for.

AI-Generated Profile Red Flags

This is the harder one. Modern image generators produce photos that look real on a phone screen, especially if you're not specifically looking for tells. But there are patterns.

The voice test

The fastest test for an AI account: ask for a voice note saying your username. Real creators do voice notes routinely. AI accounts either go silent, respond with a stock voice sample, or start making excuses. A custom voice note with your specific username spoken aloud is extremely hard to fake at scale.

Chat Agency Red Flags

If the person in the photos is real but the DMs are run by an agency, you may not care — many fans are fine with the experience as long as the content is authentic. But if you specifically want to talk to her, here's how to tell when you're not.

Reverse Image Search: Your Best Single Tool

If you only do one thing, do this: take the public preview photo and reverse-search it.

Run all three when in doubt. Hits on Instagram under a different name, hits on a previous OF profile that got banned, hits on stock photo sites — those are all kill signals.

What's Worth the Subscription Anyway

Not every fake is worth avoiding for the same reason. If a chat agency runs the DMs but the creator is real and posts authentic content, that may be fine for what you want. If the entire profile is AI, you're paying for content with no real person involved. If photos are stolen, you're funding someone who isn't the woman in the photos and creating real harm to the actual creator.

Decide what matters to you, then verify accordingly.

Working Through Curated Sources

The simplest defense against fakes is to start with creators who've already been verified by someone you trust. Agencies that manage creator accounts (like NaughtyAlliance) verify identity, ID, and ownership of the photos before signing anyone. You can browse our verified creator directory as a starting point — every creator on the roster is the actual person in the photos.

For more on staying safe across the platform, our subscriber safety guide and scams to avoid post cover the broader landscape.