Where Your OnlyFans Content Actually Gets Leaked
The specific sites, forums, and platforms where leaked content spreads—and exactly how to find if you're on them.
Your content didn't just "end up" somewhere random. There's a predictable ecosystem of sites where leaked OnlyFans, Fansly, and subscription content spreads. Knowing where to look is the first step to getting it removed.
The Main Leak Ecosystem
Leaked content typically flows through a specific pipeline. Understanding this helps you find—and remove—your content faster.
1. Aggregator Forums
These are the source. Forums where users share and request leaked content. The major ones include dedicated boards on general piracy forums and creator-specific sites. We won't name them directly (no free advertising), but they typically have names referencing "simps," file sharing, or are named after the platforms they target.
How to find yourself: Search your username, stage name, or any unique identifiers you use. Many forums have search functions, but Google with site:forumname.com "your username" works better.
2. Free Tube Sites
Content from forums gets re-uploaded to tube sites for ad revenue. These include both mainstream adult sites and smaller, shadier ones hosted offshore. The major legitimate sites (Pornhub, xVideos, xHamster) actually have DMCA processes and will remove content. The smaller offshore ones are harder but not impossible.
How to find yourself: Search your username and stage name directly on these sites. Also try Google: "your username" site:sitename.com
3. File Hosting & Mega Links
Bulk content gets uploaded to file hosts (Mega, Google Drive, etc.) and shared via links on forums, Discord, and Telegram. The files themselves are often zips or folders with hundreds of images/videos.
How to find yourself: This is harder. Search forums for your username + "mega" or "drive" or "download." You'll find the links being shared even if you can't access the files directly.
4. Social Platforms
Reddit has countless subreddits dedicated to leaked content. Twitter/X has accounts that post previews with links to full content. Discord servers share content privately. Telegram channels are the fastest-growing vector.
How to find yourself: Search Reddit directly. For Twitter, search your username. Discord and Telegram require more work—you'll often find invite links on forums.
The Google Problem
Here's what most creators miss: even if you get content removed from a site, Google may still show it in search results for weeks or months. The cached version, thumbnails, and links persist.
After any takedown, you need to separately request Google remove the URLs from search results. This is a different process than getting the actual content removed. For detailed guidance on this process, see RemoveFromGoogle.com.
How to Actually Search for Your Leaked Content
Google Dorking
Use these search operators:
"your username" leaked— basic search"your username" onlyfans -site:onlyfans.com— finds mentions excluding the official site"your username" mega OR drive OR download— finds file sharing linkssite:reddit.com "your username"— Reddit specifically
Reverse Image Search
Take a few of your most distinctive images (that you know have leaked) and run them through:
- Google Images (click the camera icon)
- TinEye (tineye.com)
- Yandex Images (often finds results Google misses)
Set Up Alerts
Create Google Alerts for your username and stage name. You'll get emailed when new pages appear. It's not perfect, but it catches a lot.
What To Do When You Find Something
Document everything first. Screenshot the page, save the URL, note the date. Then:
- DMCA the hosting provider — Most sites are on Cloudflare or standard hosts. Find the host via WHOIS and submit a DMCA.
- DMCA the site directly — Many sites have their own takedown forms buried in their terms/contact pages.
- Report to Google — Submit the URLs to Google's removal tool to get them out of search results.
- Report to platforms — Reddit, Twitter, Discord all have reporting systems. Use them.
This is time-consuming. That's why removal services exist. But if you want to handle it yourself, it's absolutely doable—you just need to be systematic about it.
Need Help?
If you've found your content on multiple sites and don't have time to file dozens of takedowns yourself, we can handle it. Get a free assessment of your situation.
Request Free Assessment →About the Author
Marcus covers the intersection of technology and privacy, with a focus on AI-generated content and emerging threats. He helps readers understand their options when facing online harassment.