Adult creator agencies have exploded since OnlyFans went mainstream. Some are great. Many are predatory. This is the plain-English guide to what they actually do, what they should and shouldn't ask of you, and how to tell the difference.
The Short Version
An adult creator agency is a company that helps adult content creators run the business side of being a creator — in exchange for a percentage of revenue. Usually that means content scheduling, fan messaging (chatters), social media promotion, sometimes content production support, and platform strategy across OnlyFans, Fansly, ManyVids, and others.
What a Real Agency Does
- Promotion and growth. SEO, blog spotlights, social cross-posts, paid ads on adult-friendly networks, traffic from directories.
- Chat management. Responding to fan DMs at all hours, upselling PPV content, building loyalty. (Done by humans on the agency side, with the creator's voice and approval.)
- Content scheduling. Posting regularly even when the creator is busy or off-shift.
- Cross-platform strategy. Which platforms to be on, what content goes where, how to bundle.
- Analytics + reporting. Telling the creator what's working and what's not.
- Brand / contract negotiation. When sponsors, collabs, or licensing deals come up, an agency negotiates better terms than a solo creator usually can.
What an Agency Should Charge
Industry-standard agency commissions range from 15% to 35% of net creator revenue. Higher percentages should come with significantly more service (full chat team, custom content production, paid ads spend, etc.).
If an agency wants 50% or more, walk away. That's not a partnership — that's a labor arrangement.
What a Real Agency Should Never Do
- Charge upfront fees to "join" or "get featured." Real agencies make money when you make money.
- Demand exclusivity across all platforms with no carve-outs.
- Ask for ownership of your content beyond promotional rights.
- Take over your account passwords without you keeping access. You should always be able to log into your own accounts.
- Lock you into multi-year contracts with no exit clause.
- Refuse to put the commission split in writing.
- Skip 18 USC 2257 paperwork. If they don't ask for ID and a signed release, they're either inexperienced or willfully ignoring the law.
Do You Actually Need One?
Honest answer: depends on where you are.
You probably don't need an agency if…
- You're brand new and making under $1k/month. The commission would eat your margin. Build first.
- You enjoy the marketing side and have time for it.
- You want full creative control over voice and tone.
An agency probably helps if…
- You're plateaued at a few thousand a month and don't have time to scale promotion yourself.
- You hate replying to DMs but know that's where most revenue is.
- You want to be on OnlyFans + Fansly + ManyVids simultaneously without quadrupling your workload.
- You want someone else to handle SEO, blog presence, social, and discovery.
How to Vet an Agency Before Signing
- Ask for references. Talk to 2-3 current creators they represent. Ask: do they pay on time? Are they responsive? Did they actually grow your numbers?
- Read the contract twice. Have a friend (or, ideally, an adult-industry lawyer) read it once.
- Confirm the commission split is written down clearly. "We'll figure that out later" is the most expensive sentence in the industry.
- Confirm your exit terms. 30-day notice with no penalty is reasonable. Anything more punitive is a trap.
- Confirm IP ownership. They get promotional rights — you keep ownership of your content.
Bottom Line
A good adult creator agency is a multiplier — they take 20% and help you make 3× more, so you net more even after the cut. (Curious about the numbers? See how much OnlyFans creators make.) A bad agency is just a tax on your work. The difference is in the contract, the references, and the philosophy.
Curious what a creator-first agency looks like? Read about NaughtyAlliance or check out the how-it-works page.