You Found This Because You Need Help

My OnlyFans Was Leaked

Take a breath. This happens to more creators than you'd think, and it's fixable. Here's what to do right now.

What To Do Right Now

These are the immediate steps, in order of priority

1

Don't Panic—And Don't Engage

Right now

Don't comment on the leaked content, don't message the leaker, don't post about it on social media. Any engagement can make things worse and complicate legal action later.

2

Document Everything

First 30 minutes

Screenshot every URL where your content appears. Save the links, note the dates, capture usernames if visible. This evidence is crucial for takedowns and any legal action.

3

Start Filing Takedowns

First hour

Begin with the biggest platforms first—Google, Reddit, the major tube sites. They have established DMCA processes and usually comply within days.

4

File With Google

Same day

Even before sites remove content, file with Google to get URLs out of search results. This stops new people from finding your content by searching your name.

5

Consider Professional Help

When ready

If content is on dozens of sites, or you don't have time to file takedowns yourself, a removal service can handle everything while you focus on other things.

Questions You Probably Have

Can I actually get this removed?

Yes. Most mainstream websites comply with DMCA takedowns within days. Smaller or offshore sites take longer, but even they can usually be pressured through their hosting providers or payment processors. Google delisting makes content much harder to find even if some sites refuse to remove.

Will people I know find out?

The faster you act, the less likely. Most leaks don't go viral—they stay in niche forums and obscure sites. Getting content removed quickly and delisted from Google significantly reduces the chance of discovery.

Should I delete my OnlyFans?

That's up to you, but it won't remove already-leaked content. Some creators continue; others don't. Either way, the priority is removing what's already out there.

Can I find out who leaked it?

Sometimes. Watermarking, metadata analysis, and timing can help identify the source. If you want to pursue legal action, this matters. We have a full guide on tracing leakers.

Is this my fault?

No. You created content for a platform with terms of service that prohibit sharing. Subscribers who leak are violating those terms—and often breaking the law.

Your Options

Handle It Yourself

It's completely possible to file your own DMCA takedowns. Our free guides walk you through everything.

  • Free (just your time)
  • You maintain full control
  • Learn the process
  • Can be time-consuming
  • Requires follow-up

Let Us Handle It

We file all the takedowns, handle follow-ups, and monitor for re-uploads. You don't have to think about it.

  • Professional DMCA filing
  • Google/Bing delisting
  • Tracking & follow-up
  • Re-upload monitoring
  • Anonymous—your name hidden

Time Matters

The longer leaked content stays up, the more it spreads. Acting quickly limits the damage.