If you've been on OnlyFans for any length of time, you've probably seen a creator drop a link to her "Throne" — sometimes with a screenshot of a wishlist, sometimes with a short pitch like "spoil me, gifts go straight to my door, you stay anonymous." If you didn't grow up in the creator economy, you may have assumed Throne was just another name for Amazon wishlist. It's not. It's a different system, designed specifically for the kind of privacy adult creators actually need — and once you understand how it works, sending a gift to a creator becomes a lot less scary on both sides.

This guide covers what Throne is, how creators use it, what's different about it vs. an Amazon wishlist, and how to use it without accidentally leaking your name or hers.

What Throne actually is

Throne is a gift-list platform built by and for creators. From the creator's side, she signs up, adds products to her list (they pull from a catalog that includes Amazon, ASOS, Sephora, gym brands, gaming retailers, and tons of others), and gets a single public link to share with fans. From the fan's side, you click her link, pick something off the list, pay, and the gift gets shipped to her — without you ever seeing her real address and without her seeing your real name or email if you don't want her to.

That last part is the whole point. On an Amazon wishlist, even with the "anonymous shipping" trick, there are leak points — your name often shows up on the receipt, the order confirmation email is yours, and depending on how she set up her wishlist, her real name and at least a partial address can sometimes be inferred. Throne wraps the whole transaction in a layer of intermediation so the creator and the fan stay anonymous unless they both choose otherwise.

What gets put on a Throne list

The list isn't only lingerie and lights. Adult creators use Throne for the same range of stuff anyone would buy from Amazon, plus content-related gear. Common categories:

The price range on Throne items is huge. Most fans gift in the $10-50 range. Big tippers buy $100-500 items. Lists usually have a mix of low-ticket items (so anyone can participate) and bigger items (so whales have something to splurge on).

Why creators prefer Throne over Amazon wishlists

Three big reasons.

1. The address never leaves Throne

Amazon's "anonymous" wishlist setting hides the buyer's name on the gift slip, but the creator's shipping address is technically known to Amazon and any retailer she's listed at. If a fan looks closely at the package label (or pulls a tracking number out of the email), there are leak vectors. Throne acts as a middleman: the creator gives her address to Throne once, Throne handles all forwarding and concealment from there.

2. The fan stays anonymous too

From the buyer side, you don't need to give a real name. The creator sees "a fan sent you something" or whatever alias you typed at checkout. If you've ever wanted to send a gift but didn't want her to be able to Google your full name, Throne solves that.

3. The catalog is wider

Throne pulls from dozens of retailers, not just Amazon. So creators can list things Amazon doesn't sell (specialty lingerie brands, certain gear, niche supplements) without managing five separate wishlists across five sites.

How to send a Throne gift safely

If you've decided you want to send a creator something off her Throne, here's how to do it without exposing anything you don't mean to.

Use a privacy-friendly payment method

Throne accepts most cards. If you want extra anonymity, use a virtual card (Privacy.com, Revolut disposable cards, Cash App virtual cards, or your bank's virtual card feature if it has one). We have a whole guide on virtual cards for adult-platform purchases — same logic applies here.

Don't use your real name at checkout

Throne's whole appeal is anonymity, but if you type your full real name into the "gift message from" field, you just defeated it. Use a handle, an initial, or leave it blank.

Skip the "I want to meet you in person" gift messages

Gift messages are visible to the creator. Keep them light and respectful — "enjoy" or "saw this and thought of you" is fine. Long, intense messages attached to a $20 gift make creators uncomfortable and don't get you any closer to her DMs.

Don't expect a personal thank-you every time

Bigger creators get dozens of Throne gifts a week. You may get a generic post-stream shoutout or a public thank-you grid on her social, not a one-on-one DM. That's not rudeness — it's volume. The same etiquette rules we cover in how to treat OnlyFans creators with respect apply here too.

Common Throne gotchas

Some practical things people miss:

Throne vs. tipping — when does each make sense?

If you're picking between sending a $30 gift and sending a $30 tip, the answer is almost always "tip" if your goal is to make the creator's life easier. Tips clear instantly, no shipping, no platform fees on the physical-goods side, and the creator can spend the money on whatever she actually needs.

Throne makes more sense when you specifically want to give a physical thing — usually because the creator asked for that thing, or because you want her to think of you when she uses it ("the ring light from a fan" beats "another $30 tip from a fan number 4,712"). It's also a good entry-point gift for fans who don't want to look like they're trying to buy attention but do want to show appreciation.

The bottom line

Throne is the cleanest, safest way to send a creator a physical gift in 2026. It protects her privacy, it protects yours, and the catalog is wide enough that you can almost always find something she actually listed (vs. guessing). If you've been wanting to gift a creator but didn't want to send your real name on an Amazon package, this is the answer.

If you're not sure which creators you want to support yet, browse our full creator roster — most of the creators we rep have Throne links somewhere in their bio.