How to spot a fake OnlyFans agency

Carrd landing page, Telegram-only contact, no registered company... Here are the red flags.

Fake agencies are everywhere

Since OnlyFans blew up, so-called management agencies have been popping up left and right. Every week, creators get DMs on Instagram or Twitter. “We can triple your income.” “We handle everything for you.”

The issue is that most of these outfits are not real businesses. No company registration, no office, no identifiable team. Just a web page and a Telegram account.

We looked into several of these agencies. Here are the concrete warning signs.

The website is a throwaway landing page

First thing to check: the website. If it is a single page on Carrd, Wix, or Linktree, that should raise questions. A real business invests in a website. It has legal information, an about page, clear contact details.

A landing page with three text blocks and a Google Forms embed is not a professional site. It is a trap for creators who do not know better.

Telegram-only contact

This might be the most common red flag. The agency has no professional email. No phone number. Everything goes through Telegram or Discord.

Why? Because those channels are anonymous. If something goes wrong, you cannot trace the person behind the account. No address, no real name, nothing.

A legitimate business has at minimum an email address on its own domain. Something like contact@agencyname.com. Not a @gmail.

No registered company

Ask for the company registration number. If they dodge the question or tell you “it is being processed,” that tells you everything.

Without a registered entity, any contract you sign is worth nothing. You have no legal recourse if the agency disappears with your earnings or your content.

The contract is vague or nonexistent

We have read contracts that are circulating right now among creators. One stood out. The commission is never clearly stated. The document mentions “significant compensation” without naming a percentage. The agency’s obligations are fuzzy. But yours are very detailed.

A proper contract includes an exact percentage, the duration, termination conditions, and what the agency actually does. If any of these is missing, do not sign.

They want your password

This is the absolute line. If an agency asks for your OnlyFans password, refuse. Full stop.

OnlyFans explicitly forbids sharing login credentials. If your account gets compromised through a shared password, you are the one who loses everything. The agency does not care. They will move on to the next creator.

Nobody should have access to your account. Nobody.

The promises are over the top

“We will make you a top 1%.” “You will earn $10,000 a month within your first month.”

If it were that easy, everyone would do it. Agencies that promise specific numbers without knowing your situation, niche, or audience are lying. There is no magic formula. It takes work, consistency, and time.

You can do all of it yourself

Here is the truth these agencies do not want you to hear: everything they offer, you can do on your own. Setting up your profile, managing subscribers, promoting your account, setting prices. It is work, yes. But it is your work, and you keep 100% of what you earn.

Free tools exist. Guides exist. You do not need a ghost agency taking half your revenue for one Telegram message a week.

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