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What to Post on OnlyFans: A Plan for Your First 30 Days

A blank page is the hardest part of starting. This is a simple plan for what to post in your first month: how to split content between the free feed, your paywall, and PPV, and a weekly rhythm you can actually keep.

The hardest part of OnlyFans is not the first post, it is the next 89. Most new creators upload three teasers, get quiet, and quit before the algorithm and their subscribers ever learn what they offer. The fix is a system, not inspiration. This is a 30-day content plan built around three buckets (free feed, paywall, and PPV), a repeatable weekly rhythm, and batch shooting so you spend a few hours filming and a few weeks publishing. Follow it and by day 30 you will have a feed that converts visitors into subscribers, a backlog so you never panic-post, and real data on what your audience actually pays for.

The three content buckets, explained

Every piece of content you make lives in one of three places, and each does a different job. Confusing them is the most common reason a page underperforms. Your free feed is your shop window: it has to be good enough to convince a browser to subscribe, but it is never your best material. Your paywall feed (what subscribers see for their monthly fee) is the bulk of your library and the reason they stay. PPV (pay-per-view) is the upsell: locked content and mass messages sold on top of the subscription, where the real money lives. A useful rule of thumb on a paid page: 70 to 80 percent of monthly revenue comes from PPV and tips, not the subscription itself.

BucketWhere it livesJobWhat goes hereHow explicit
Free feedPublic-facing or free-page wallConvert lookers to subscribersTeasers, lifestyle, polls, behind the scenes, faces, personalitySuggestive, never the full thing
Paywall feedInside a paid subscriptionJustify the monthly fee, retainFull sets, daily check-ins, requests, themed dropsYour standard explicit level
PPVLocked posts and mass DMsMaximize revenue per fanPremium videos, customs, bundles, GFE messagesYour most explicit / highest effort

If you run a free page (free to subscribe, monetized through PPV), the logic shifts: the wall is essentially one big teaser feed and every dollar comes from messages and tips. If you run a paid page ($4 to $15 a month is the normal range), the wall is the product. New creators often do well starting free because it removes the friction of the first decision, then a fan is in your DMs where you actually sell. Decide which model you are running before you plan content, and price it deliberately rather than guessing.

Free feed: 15 ideas that convert

Your free content is marketing, so treat it like marketing. The goal of every free post is a single click: subscribe, or open a DM. Show the vibe, hide the goods. Strong free-feed material:

  • Mirror selfie with the caption doing the work (try the caption formulas instead of guessing)
  • A 9 to 15 second teaser clip that cuts right before the payoff
  • Outfit reveal: fully dressed in frame one, swipe to lingerie
  • A poll: "lace or cotton tonight?" gives fans a reason to interact
  • Behind the scenes from a shoot (bloopers humanize you and build trust)
  • "Currently posting on my page" with a blurred preview tile
  • A face post: people subscribe to people, not just bodies
  • Morning check-in selfie, coffee, casual, relatable
  • A countdown to a content drop ("new set goes live at 8pm")
  • Gym, beach, or pool content where the setting carries it
  • A "rate my..." prompt that pushes fans toward tipping
  • Throwback or "first time I tried..." storytelling post
  • A tip-menu reveal so fans know exactly what they can buy
  • Fan-favorite recap: "you all loved this one, full version is inside"
  • A direct ask: "subscribe for 50% off this week, link below"

Notice the pattern: most of these end with a next step. A free feed of pretty pictures and no calls to action converts almost nobody. If you are unsure what level of explicitness belongs on a public profile, keep it suggestive and let the paywall hold the explicit material. For deeper category-by-category prompts, the content ideas guide goes wide.

Paywall feed: what subscribers pay to see

The paywall is where you earn the renewal. A subscriber who logs in and finds three posts from last month does not rebill. Your wall should feel alive and personal, like you actually show up. The mix that retains:

  • Daily presence: a quick selfie, voice note, or "good morning" so the page feels lived-in
  • Full sets: the complete version of teasers you posted free, 8 to 20 photos
  • Themed drops: a clear concept (schoolgirl, latex, shower, roleplay) so fans anticipate
  • Request fulfillment: "you asked for X, here it is" makes fans feel heard and seen
  • Long-form video: 3 to 10 minute clips that justify the subscription on their own
  • Personality content: rants, day-in-the-life, opinions; parasocial connection is the moat

Subscribers churn for two reasons: they stop seeing new content, or they stop feeling a connection. The wall fixes the first, your DMs fix the second. Aim to publish to the wall daily even when the post is small. A consistent small post beats a sporadic great one because the algorithm and the fan both reward showing up. Keep a few "evergreen" full sets in reserve so a slow week never reads as an empty page.

PPV: where the money actually is

PPV is content you lock at a price, sent as a mass message or posted with a paywall on top of the subscription. This is the single biggest lever on your income, and most creators underuse it. Concrete PPV products:

  • A full premium video ($15 to $40 depending on length and how warm the fan is)
  • A bundle: "5 of my best sets, normally $60, today $25"
  • The unedited / explicit version of a free teaser
  • Customs and personalized clips (price these high, they are labor)
  • A GFE-style story sequence dripped over a few messages
  • "First to unlock gets a free custom" to create urgency on a drop

Pricing discipline matters. OnlyFans takes a 20 percent cut (you keep 80 percent), the minimum PPV price is $3, and payouts release once you clear roughly the $20 minimum. So a $25 PPV unlocked by 30 fans is $750 gross, $600 to you, from a single message. Write the message well: a teaser image, one or two lines of tension, and a clear price. See mass message examples for scripts that convert, and the tip menu builder to set your standing rates so fans always have something to buy.

A weekly plan you can repeat

Stop deciding what to post each morning. A fixed weekly skeleton removes the decision fatigue that kills consistency. Here is a balanced week that hits all three buckets without burning you out. Adjust the explicit details to your brand, but keep the rhythm.

DayFree feedPaywallPPV / DM
MonTeaser clip + captionFull set from the teaser"Welcome back" mass message
TuePoll (outfit / theme)Daily selfie + voice noteTip-menu reminder
WedBehind the scenesThemed drop teaserPremium video PPV ($15-25)
ThuFace / personality postThemed drop full setReply to DMs, sell customs
Fri"New content tonight" tileLong-form videoWeekend bundle PPV
SatLifestyle / casualRequest fulfillment postLate-night flirty mass DM
SunRecap + subscribe offerLight check-in selfie"Catch up on what you missed" bundle

Two non-negotiables in this week: at least one PPV touch every day, and a paywall post every day even if it is small. Everything else flexes. Once this is muscle memory you can layer on more PPV without changing the frame.

Your first 30 days, week by week

The month has a job for each week. Do not try to do everything in week one. The point is to build a foundation, then learn, then scale.

WeekFocusWhat to shipGoal by Sunday
1: FoundationSet up and seed the pageBio, 3-5 free welcome posts, a welcome DM, first tip menu, 2 full sets on the wallPage does not look empty; first welcome message live
2: RhythmHit the weekly plan every dayDaily wall post, daily free teaser, first 2-3 PPV sends7 straight days posting; first PPV sale
3: LearnRead your data, double downRepeat your top free post's style, test 2 PPV prices, run a pollKnow your best-converting free post and best PPV price
4: ScalePush PPV and retentionA bundle drop, a custom offer, a re-sub campaign to expired fansA full content backlog + a repeatable week

Week 1 is mostly setup, so get the page itself right before you chase volume: a strong bio and a clear subscription price do more for conversion than ten extra posts. If you are still on day zero, the start guide covers account setup and verification. By the end of week 4 you should not be inventing content daily, you should be running a machine.

Batch shooting: one session, a month of posts

Filming daily is the fastest road to burnout. Batch instead: dedicate one focused session (2 to 4 hours) to shoot multiple concepts, then drip the output over two to four weeks. A single afternoon with three outfit changes and two locations can easily yield 100-plus photos and a handful of clips, which is most of a month. A simple batch checklist:

  • Plan 4 to 6 distinct "looks" before you start (outfit + theme + location)
  • Shoot each look in three tiers: SFW teaser, suggestive, explicit. Same look, three buckets.
  • Capture vertical clips for teasers and horizontal or vertical for long-form, depending on platform
  • Grab a few faceless / no-context shots for evergreen reuse
  • Name and tag files immediately ("latex_teaser_01", "latex_full_set") so scheduling is fast
  • Always overshoot: extra frames become your "slow week" reserve

The mental shift is separating creating from publishing. You create in concentrated bursts and you publish on a calendar. Schedule posts in advance where the platform allows so a bad day never breaks your streak. Build a 7-to-10-day buffer and the daily pressure disappears entirely.

Cadence: how often, and when

Frequency beats perfection. The platform surfaces active creators, and fans forget pages that go quiet. Practical targets for a new page:

  • Free feed: 1 to 2 posts a day. This is your acquisition engine, keep it fed.
  • Paywall: at least 1 post a day. Small counts; presence is the point.
  • PPV / mass DM: 3 to 7 a week. Start lower, increase as your list grows and you learn what sells.

Timing: most spending happens evenings and late night in your fans' time zones, with a noticeable weekend lift. Test your own data rather than trusting generic "best time" charts. The one rule that always holds: consistency outranks any specific clock. A page posting daily at the "wrong" time beats a page posting brilliantly twice a month. Promotion compounds this. Driving outside traffic to a fed, active page is what turns the plan into growth, so pair this with a real promotion strategy.

The mistakes that kill new pages

Almost every page that stalls in month one makes the same handful of errors. Avoid these and you are ahead of most:

  • Empty wall, full ambition. Launching with two posts and expecting subs. Seed 5-plus pieces before you promote.
  • No PPV. Relying on the subscription fee alone leaves 70-plus percent of your potential income on the table.
  • No DMs. Never messaging subscribers. The connection in the inbox is what drives renewals and tips.
  • Posting everything explicit for free. If the free feed shows the whole thing, there is no reason to pay.
  • Inconsistency. Three posts on Monday, silence till Friday. The algorithm and fans both punish gaps.
  • No system. Deciding content daily, running out of ideas by week two, then disappearing.
  • Underpricing PPV. $3 sends train fans to expect cheap. Anchor higher and bundle.

Most of these trace back to one root cause: no plan. A creator with a mediocre body of content and an iron weekly system will out-earn a stunning creator who posts on impulse, almost every time.

Make it feel like one creator, not a random folder

Thirty days of posts only compound if they feel like they come from the same person with a clear identity. Pick a lane and a look: a consistent editing style, recurring themes, a tone of voice that runs through your captions and DMs. This is your branding, and it is why a fan chooses you over the thousands of pages competing for the same attention. Even your handle is part of the package, so do not treat your username as an afterthought. Cohesion is what turns a one-time subscriber into someone who tips, unlocks, and renews because they feel like they know you.

Want this run for you?

This plan works, but executing it daily (shooting, scheduling, writing PPV, managing DMs, chasing re-subs) is a full-time job on top of creating. That is exactly what we do. If you would rather create and let a team handle the content calendar, PPV strategy, and inbox, see our OnlyFans management service or apply here to see if your page is a fit. We are transparent about splits and selective about who we take on.

Frequently asked questions

How many posts should I have before I promote my page?
At minimum 5 free-feed posts plus 2 to 3 full sets on the paywall, so a new visitor sees an active page rather than an empty one. A page with two posts converts almost no one. Seed first, then drive traffic.
Should I run a free page or a paid page as a beginner?
Free pages lower the barrier to the first decision and put fans in your DMs where PPV sells, which is why many new creators start there. Paid pages ($4 to $15 a month) give a baseline income and signal value. Both work; the difference is whether your money comes from subscriptions or messages.
How explicit should my free feed be?
Suggestive, never the full thing. The free feed exists to make someone want what is behind the paywall. If the public posts show everything, you have removed the reason to subscribe or unlock.
How much should I charge for PPV?
The minimum is $3, but anchor higher: $15 to $40 for premium videos, more for customs. OnlyFans keeps 20 percent so you net 80. Test two prices in week three and bundle multiple sets to raise the average unlock value.
How do I avoid running out of content ideas?
Batch shoot. One 2-to-4-hour session with 4 to 6 looks shot in three tiers (teaser, suggestive, explicit) gives you most of a month. Separate creating from publishing, build a buffer of 7 to 10 days, and post on a calendar instead of inspiration.
How often should I send mass messages?
Start at 3 to 7 a week and grow as your list and confidence do. Each one should offer something specific: a PPV, a bundle, a tip-menu reminder, or a flirty late-night check-in. Daily generic messages train fans to ignore you; valuable, varied messages train them to open.

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.

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