About this review. Lena Voss covers the creator economy and feet content platforms. This OnlyFeet review is based on direct examination of the live platform, its published seller agreement and terms, its public Trustpilot profile, and a long real-seller discussion thread on Reddit, all reviewed in June 2026. Where sources conflict, we say so rather than picking the friendliest figure. We did not accept platform marketing claims at face value.
How We Researched OnlyFeet
This review is built from primary sources rather than marketing copy. We examined the live OnlyFeet site at onlyfeet.us.com in June 2026, read the platform's published seller agreement and terms, checked its public Trustpilot profile, and went through a long real-seller discussion thread on Reddit covering 2024 to 2026.
Where the platform's own pages conflict with each other or with its legal terms, we flag it directly. When claims come from sellers, we attribute them to the dated public threads in which they appear.
What is Onlyfeet [onlyfeet.us.com]
OnlyFeet is a dedicated feet content marketplace operating at onlyfeet.us.com. The operator listed in the site footer is LORDLY SASU, based in Paris, France, and payments are processed through CCBill and Segpay, appearing on card statements as CCBill Lordly or SEGPAYEU.COM Lordly. Sellers create a profile, list photos and videos at their own prices, and earn from purchases, tips, and optional subscriptions. Buyers browse profiles and pay per listing.
A critical operational nuance for creators is the distinction between OnlyFeet's granular, individual-listing model and the collection-based model used by category leaders like FeetFinder. On OnlyFeet, sellers must separately upload, title, watermark, and price every single standalone photo or video clip. While this provides micro-control over individual asset pricing, it introduces exhausting administrative overhead when managing a large content library.
OnlyFeet also operates entirely as a web browser site with no native iOS or Android mobile app. For creators who shoot, edit, upload, and communicate with buyers entirely from a smartphone, navigating a browser interface creates significant daily friction.
One point of confusion worth clearing up first. The plain domain onlyfeetus.com is an unrelated blank placeholder page. The real platform operates at the .us.com address, onlyfeet.us.com, which is where the seller complaints detailed below are concentrated. Always confirm you are on the correct web address before entering personal details.
Is OnlyFeet Legit or a Scam
Two different questions hide within the word "scam".
OnlyFeet clears the first test but runs into severe trouble on the second.
On the legal side, OnlyFeet is an incorporated entity that processes transactions and pays sellers who reach the required payout threshold. On the trust side, public signals are alarming.
Trustpilot has placed an official "breach of guidelines" warning banner on the OnlyFeet profile, disabled its public rating score, and confirmed the removal of numerous fake reviews.
See the screenshot of the official Trustpilot website to check how they are considering Onlyfeet.

The most damning evidence comes from the sheer volume of creators describing an identical, highly suspicious onboarding loop. Within seconds or minutes of a new, zero-follower profile going live, the creator receives a notification stating they have received a $10 to $15 tip.
However, to open the message, view the sender, or cash out the funds, the platform prompts the seller to pay a $9.99 monthly subscription fee. Once the subscription is paid, the "buyer" goes completely silent, and the messages often vanish entirely.
As one verified creator reported on Trustpilot in June 2026:
"I got a message that I had got a tip, and then when I tried to go cash out the tip, I was directed to pay for a subscription. Then the subscription has not made sense because I don't have a following."
The live site compounds these trust issues.
The homepage features a rotating "live transactions" ticker that shows a constant stream of buyers sending tips and custom offers, alongside a wall of high-dollar-earning testimonials. Yet during our live technical examination, the platform's own active-user widget showed zero buyers online.
Furthermore, OnlyFeet advertises a self-hosted 4.5-star rating from 297 reviews directly on its homepage—a claim that cannot be independently audited and starkly contradicts Trustpilot's active disciplinary warning.
OnlyFeet Fees and Payout
This is where careful sellers need to do the math, because the platform tells two directly conflicting stories. The OnlyFeet homepage repeatedly promises no hidden fees and the industry's best payout rates, and it specifically claims that creators "keep 100 percent of what buyers pay."
However, OnlyFeet's legally binding seller agreement clearly documents a mandatory platform fee of $9.99 per month plus a 20 percent service fee deducted from all buyer payments. Neither statement can be true simultaneously, and the legal seller agreement is the document that dictates your charges.
Fee Contradiction: Marketing Copy vs. Legal Terms
The monthly fee is charged upfront and applies regardless of whether you make a single sale. Because this fixed fee does not scale with revenue, it severely penalizes new creators.
If you generate $100 in monthly sales, the 20 percent commission ($20) plus the $9.99 monthly charge brings your total platform cost to roughly 30 percent.
If you only sell $50 worth of content, the flat fee pushes your effective platform cut to a staggering 40 percent. Low-volume experimentation is exactly where most beginning creators sit during their first few months.
Payout timing is also communicated inconsistently across the site. One section advertises daily payouts, another states bank transfers take 5 to 7 business days, and a featured testimonial claims payouts arrive in 30 minutes. Treat the conservative 5- to 7-business-day window as the realistic standard.
If you test the platform, take screenshots of the live checkout terms and your account ledger, and treat the actual net deposit that hits your bank account as the only verifiable metric.
Safety and Verification
OnlyFeet requires seller ID verification at onboarding and offers watermarking and private galleries, which are real protections when they work. The site also claims that both sellers and buyers are ID verified. That claim is hard to square with the seller's reports of unvetted instant tippers and with third-party analysis indicating that buyers are not required to complete identity verification before they browse or message. If buyer verification were as strict as advertised, the automated-tip pattern would be harder to explain.
The seller-reported risks cluster around money and messaging rather than data theft.
According to Reddit discussions in this OnlyFeet review, some sellers report difficulties obtaining refunds after purchasing a subscription, slow or unresponsive customer support, and concerns about providing bank details to receive payouts.
If you do try OnlyFeet, keep every transaction documented, never send content before payment clears, and treat an instant tip from a brand-new contact as a warning sign rather than a win.
OnlyFeet Pros and Cons