The short answer: OnlyFans' official position is that all sales are final. The longer answer is that "all sales final" does not mean refunds never happen — it just means OnlyFans will rarely be the one to give you one. Here's how it actually works in 2026, what your options are, and what happens to your account if you go the chargeback route.

What OnlyFans' Terms Actually Say

OnlyFans' terms of service spell it out plainly: subscriptions, tips, and pay-per-view purchases are non-refundable except where required by law. That language has been there for years and it's enforced consistently. The platform processes thousands of transactions a day and is not in the business of arbitrating "I didn't get what I expected" disputes.

There are a few specific situations where they will refund — most of them involve a clear error on the platform's side, not on the fan's side or the creator's side.

When OnlyFans will actually refund you

Situations Where You're Stuck

Most of what fans want refunds for falls outside what OnlyFans will reverse. If you're hoping for a refund in any of the situations below, expect to be turned down.

How to Request a Refund the Right Way

Even though the success rate is low, there's a correct way to ask. Going scorched-earth on social media or in support tickets makes it less likely you'll get a refund, not more.

Open a support ticket through your account settings (Help & Support). Be specific: include the transaction date, amount, the creator's username if relevant, and exactly what went wrong. If it was a duplicate charge, attach a screenshot of your bank statement showing the two identical line items. If it was unauthorized account access, mention that.

Don't lead with anger. Don't threaten chargebacks in the first message. Support reps have heard every threat and your case will be evaluated faster if you're calm and factual. Response time is usually 2–7 days.

Chargebacks: What They Do and What They Cost You

If OnlyFans denies your refund and you genuinely believe the charge was fraudulent, you can dispute it with your bank or card issuer. This is a chargeback. It's the nuclear option for a reason.

What happens when you chargeback

The chargeback should be reserved for actual fraud (you didn't make the charge, your card was stolen) or clear platform errors that support refused to fix. Using it as a "I changed my mind" tool will get you locked out of the platform for good.

What Creators See on Their End

When you chargeback, the creator loses the money — not OnlyFans. The platform pulls the funds back from the creator's earnings, plus a chargeback fee on top (often $15–25 per dispute, depending on the payment processor). For smaller creators, a single chargeback can wipe out a meaningful chunk of a paycheck.

This is part of why creators hate chargeback abuse so much, and why the OnlyFans creator community shares lists of chargeback users on internal forums. If you chargeback and then later try to subscribe to other creators with the same identifying info, you may find yourself blocked from a lot of accounts.

Avoiding Refund Situations Altogether

Most refund requests come from one of three avoidable situations: forgotten auto-renew, impulse PPV purchases, and impulse tips during sexting sessions. All three are preventable.

What About Custom Content Disputes?

Customs are the gray zone. You tip the creator (often $50–$500+) for a personalized video, and there's no formal contract. If they ghost you or deliver something different than agreed, OnlyFans treats it as a private matter.

Your only real protection is to use creators with established reputations. Our customs guide covers what to ask and what red flags to watch for. Working through an agency-managed creator (like the talent in our creator directory) reduces this risk significantly because there's accountability behind the account.

The Bottom Line

OnlyFans refunds exist but they are rare and reserved for clear errors. Don't subscribe assuming you can get your money back if you change your mind — assume the opposite, and budget accordingly. Set up your account defensively (auto-renew off, prepaid card, spending cap), and you'll almost never need to think about a refund in the first place.