Monetization

Dick Rating Guide: How to Offer Ratings as a Creator

Dick ratings are a simple, high-margin service a creator can sell on repeat: a fan pays, sends a photo, and gets a personalized rating back. Here is how to offer them, price them, and set the boundaries that keep it safe.

Dick ratings are one of the highest-margin products on OnlyFans: a fan sends a photo, you reply with an honest, flirty assessment, and you charge for it. There is no shoot, no editing, no costume. It is your opinion, packaged and priced. Done well, a rating takes three to five minutes and sells for $15 to $50, which is a better hourly rate than almost anything else on a page.

It is also a service that quietly goes wrong if you treat it casually. The same low-friction nature that makes it profitable makes it a magnet for free-content fishing, age problems, and unsolicited photos you never agreed to receive. This guide covers how the service actually works, how to price the tiers, the exact format that keeps fans coming back, and the boundaries and safety rules that keep you out of trouble.

What a dick rating actually is

A dick rating is a paid review. The fan pays first, sends a photo or short clip, and you respond with a verdict: usually a score out of 10 plus a few sentences of personalized commentary. The product is not nudity from you (you send nothing explicit), it is attention and judgment. That distinction matters, because it means the cost to deliver is near zero and the entire fee is margin minus the platform cut.

The economics line up with everything else on the platform. OnlyFans keeps 20% and pays you 80%, so a $30 rating nets you $24 before tax. There is no shipping, no file to produce, nothing to leak. The only input is a few minutes of your time and a willingness to write something that feels personal rather than copy-pasted.

How the transaction works, step by step

The non-negotiable rule is the same one that governs every custom request: money first, delivery second. The flow that protects you:

  • Advertise it on your tip menu. List ratings as a named item with a price, so fans know it exists and what it costs before they ask.
  • Collect payment up front. The fan sends the fee as a tip or buys it as pay-per-view through OnlyFans. No payment, no rating, no exceptions.
  • Set the terms in one line. Reply: "Perfect, send your pic and I'll have your full rating back within the hour." This confirms what they paid for and sets a delivery expectation.
  • Deliver the rating. Send your score and commentary as a text message, a voice note, or a short clip, depending on the tier they bought.
  • Upsell on the way out. Close with a soft next step ("want the video version next time?") so a one-off becomes a repeat buyer.

Never start writing a rating on a promise of "I'll tip after." The fish-for-free play here is simple: a fan sends a photo, gets your attention and a free reaction, and pays nothing. Treat the photo arriving before payment as a fan who skipped the queue, not a sale.

Formats: text, voice, and video

The same rating sold in three formats commands three very different prices, because effort and intimacy scale with the format. Build all three and let fans pick.

FormatWhat they getTypical priceYour effort
Text ratingA score out of 10 plus 3 to 5 sentences of written commentary$15 to $253 minutes, typed
Voice-note ratingA 30 to 60 second audio reaction in your voice$25 to $405 minutes, one take
Video ratingA short clip of you reacting on camera, face optional$40 to $7510 minutes, light edit
Ranked ratingYou compare theirs against an unnamed "leaderboard" and place it+$10 add-on1 minute extra

Voice notes are the sweet spot. They feel intimate and personal, they are nearly impossible to fake or mass-produce, and they take one take to record. Many creators find voice ratings convert better than text because the fan hears genuine reaction rather than reading words that could have been sent to anyone.

Pricing and tiers that work

Do not pick a number out of the air. Anchor the cheapest tier low enough to be an impulse buy, then build clear upgrades above it so the higher tiers look like the better deal. A structure that sells:

TierIncludesPrice
Quick ratingScore out of 10 plus a one-line verdict (text)$15
Full ratingScore plus detailed written breakdown$25
Voice ratingPersonalized 60-second audio reaction$35
Video ratingOn-camera reaction clip$60
Rating + replyRating plus a back-and-forth so they can ask follow-ups$45

Two pricing tactics that lift revenue without much extra work. First, run a "rating drop" on a slow night: "Ratings half-price for the next hour only." Scarcity converts the fans who have been on the fence. Second, sell a punch card: "Buy 3 ratings, get the 4th as a free voice note." It turns a single curiosity buy into a habit. Sanity-check your numbers against your page with the pricing optimizer, and put these items on your menu with the tip menu builder.

How to write a rating that gets reordered

The fastest way to kill repeat business is to send a generic, copy-paste verdict. Fans buy a rating because they want to feel seen. Specificity is the whole product. A weak rating reads "8/10, looks great." A strong one notices something only that photo could prompt.

A reusable structure that still feels personal: open with the score, give one specific observation, add a compliment with a touch of cheeky honesty, then a forward-looking line. Copy-paste starting points you can personalize:

  • "Okay, solid 8.5. Nice thickness and the way you're holding it tells me you know exactly what you've got. Only thing keeping it off a 9 is I want to see it a little harder for me next time."
  • "9/10 and that's a real 9, I don't hand those out. Great length, clean grooming, and honestly the confidence in this pic does half the work. You should be very proud of this one."
  • "7/10 with a lot of upside. The lighting's doing you no favours, baby. Send me a brighter one and I genuinely think you jump two points. The potential is there."

Notice none of these are cruel. A rating that humiliates earns a refund request and a fan who never comes back. The tone that sells is honest but warm, a little teasing, with a clear hook to buy again. The same voice that works in your captions works here.

Turning one rating into a regular buyer

A rating is a foot in the door. The fan has now paid you, shown you something private, and gotten attention back. That is the exact moment to deepen the relationship, not end it. Practical upsells that follow naturally from a rating:

  • Format upgrade. "That was the text version. The voice rating is so much hotter, want me to do yours next time for $35?"
  • The leaderboard. "You landed top 5 this week out of everyone who's sent me one. Tip $10 and I'll tell you who you beat." Competitive fans love a ranking.
  • The follow-up package. Bundle a rating with a sexting session or a custom clip at a small discount versus buying them separately.
  • The standing offer. "Send me a new one any time you want it re-rated, $20 for returning favourites." Frame it as a loyalty perk.

Most page revenue comes from one-to-one messaging, and ratings are a perfect on-ramp to it. If you cannot be in the DMs around the clock to catch these moments, a professional chatting service can run the upsell scripts to your boundaries while you sleep. See the patterns in our mass message examples.

How to let fans know you offer it

Ratings only sell if fans know the service exists. Bake it into your funnel rather than waiting for someone to ask:

  • Pin it to your bio. A line like "Dick ratings open, full menu in DMs, voice and video available" tells every new subscriber on day one. Build it out with our bio guide.
  • Mass-message a rating night. "RATINGS ARE OPEN tonight only. Tip $15 and send your pic, I'm rating every single one personally." A time box drives action.
  • Tease it on free platforms. A "rate you out of 10" hook on Reddit or short-form video is one of the easiest cold offers to convert, because it is cheap and low-commitment. Our promotion guide covers the channels that work.

Boundaries: decide before, not during

The casual feel of ratings makes it easy to drift into things you never intended to offer. Set your limits in writing before a fan ever pushes them, because a buyer waving more money is the worst time to be deciding your boundaries on the fly.

  • Decide what you send back. A rating is your words, not your nudity. If you do not include explicit content from you, say so up front so the fan is not expecting it.
  • Cap the back-and-forth. A rating is one delivery. If a fan wants ongoing replies, that is the "rating + reply" tier or a sexting session, both paid. Otherwise one rating becomes an hour of free chat.
  • Hold your tone line. Some fans pay specifically to be degraded or humiliated. That is a legitimate niche, but only offer it if you are genuinely comfortable, and price it as its own item. Never get pressured into a tone that makes you uncomfortable because someone tipped extra.
  • Refuse identity bait. "Say my full name and show your ID so I know it's really you" is a doxxing attempt dressed as a request. No.
  • You can say no after paying. If a photo crosses a line, refund it through the platform and decline. Keeping a payment is never worth doing something you do not want to do.

Safety, age, and unsolicited photos

This is the part that carries real risk, and it deserves more than a shrug. A few rules are non-negotiable:

  • Age is absolute. Never rate, reference, or imply anyone underage, and never engage with a photo where age is unclear. OnlyFans subscribers are verified adults, which is one more reason to keep the entire transaction on-platform and never accept photos sent to an off-platform DM. If anything about a submission feels off, refund it and stop.
  • Keep it on OnlyFans. Doing ratings through Snapchat, Telegram, or Instagram DMs strips away payment protection, age verification, and any record that you set terms. On-platform, the fan paid, the photo arrived in your verified inbox, and the boundary is documented.
  • Unsolicited photos are not your fault, but manage them. Fans will sometimes send a photo without paying, hoping for a free reaction. Do not engage with the image. A canned reply works: "I rate through my paid menu only, babe. Tip $15 and I'll give you the real thing." This converts some of them and trains the rest.
  • Protect your own privacy. If you deliver video ratings, the face-optional point matters. Watch your background, mirrors, and reflections exactly as you would for any other content. Distinctive tattoos and a recognizable room are how anonymity gets broken.
  • Protect your delivered content. Voice and video ratings are content fans can leak or resell. Watermark video where you can, and if leaks become a problem, a DMCA takedown service can pull them down at scale.

Treat the income like income

Ratings money is self-employment income, same as everything else you earn, and OnlyFans withholds nothing. The 80% you receive is gross, not take-home. Move 25 to 30% of every payout into a separate account the moment it lands so the tax bill is already sitting there at year end. Because ratings have almost no production cost, nearly the entire fee is taxable profit, which makes the set-aside discipline even more important than it is for content you spent money producing.

Mistakes that leave money on the table

  • Reacting to a photo before payment clears, then never getting tipped.
  • Sending a generic "8/10 nice" that reads like a form letter and kills the reorder.
  • Only offering text when voice and video would triple the price for five more minutes of work.
  • Letting a paid rating turn into an hour of unpaid back-and-forth chat.
  • Running the service through Snapchat or Telegram and losing payment and age protection.
  • Never advertising it, so fans who would happily pay never know it exists.
  • Spending every payout and forgetting that nearly all of it is taxable profit.

If you would rather have the menu, pricing, upsell scripts, and DM coverage set up and run for you, you can apply for management, or read first how our OnlyFans management handles the day-to-day so ratings and every other revenue stream actually get sold.

Frequently asked questions

How much should I charge for a dick rating?
Start a text rating around $15 to $25, voice notes at $25 to $40, and on-camera video ratings at $40 to $75. Anchor the cheapest tier low enough to be an impulse buy, then make the upgrades clearly worth more. Since there is almost no production cost, the price is mostly profit after the 20% platform fee.
Do I have to send any explicit content of myself?
No. A rating is your opinion, not your nudity. You send a score and commentary by text, voice, or video. If you do not include explicit content from yourself, state that up front so the fan knows what they are buying and you avoid a refund request.
What if a fan sends a photo before paying?
Do not react to it. Send a canned line redirecting them to your paid menu, for example "I only rate through my menu, tip $15 and I'll give you the real thing." Reacting for free trains fans to skip payment and invites unpaid photo fishing.
Is offering dick ratings against OnlyFans rules?
No. Rating content sent by verified adult subscribers is a normal paid interaction on the platform. The hard line is age: never rate or engage with any photo where the subject's age is unclear, and keep the whole transaction on-platform where subscribers are age-verified.
How do I make ratings feel personal instead of copy-paste?
Include one specific observation only that photo could prompt, pair an honest verdict with a warm, teasing tone, and end with a hook to buy again. Voice notes feel the most personal because the fan hears genuine reaction, which is why they often convert better than text.
Can I get repeat buyers from a one-off rating?
Yes, and that is the real value. Close every rating with a soft upsell: a format upgrade, a weekly leaderboard, a re-rate offer for returning fans, or a bundle with sexting or a custom. A rating is a low-friction first purchase that opens the door to higher-value sales in the DMs.

Want a team running this for you?

Analoxia manages OnlyFans pages end to end: strategy, content direction, DMs, and promotion, on a public 50/50 split with no lock-in. Apply and get a free profile audit first.

Apply for a free audit See full management