Generate structured messages you can send to OnlyFans support when your paid or private content is leaked or shared outside the platform.
When your paid posts or private content escape the paywall, it is not just a random annoyance. Leaks can reduce future sales, undermine the trust of paying fans, and make it harder to control who sees your work. For many creators, that means lost income, increased anxiety, and more risk around privacy in the offline world.
OnlyFans support cannot remove every single copy that appears on other sites, but clear, well-documented reports help them understand what is happening around your account. They can advise you on best practices, watch for suspicious activity, and point you toward the right processes for DMCA takedowns and ongoing protection.
This tool focuses on the first part of that process: sending a calm, structured message that explains what leaked, where you found it, and what support should know. It is designed so you can act quickly in a stressful moment, without having to write everything from scratch.
Account identifiers: Always share your @username and a contact email you actively use. If you run multiple pages, be clear about which account the leaked content belongs to so support does not have to guess.
Where the leaks appear: Copy and paste full URLs, not just site names. Screenshots can help you personally track leaks, but written links and short descriptions are easier for support teams to work with and log.
Basic context: Briefly explain what kind of content escaped the paywall and how you noticed. The goal is not to write a long diary entry, but to give enough detail that a support agent can quickly understand the situation without back-and-forth emails.
Impact and safety notes: If the leak is connected to stalking, doxxing, or offline harassment, say so in a measured way. You do not need to share every personal detail, but flagging safety issues gives your report urgency and helps teams triage correctly.
Leak reports to OnlyFans are usually about account-level support: checking for suspicious logins, giving guidance, or helping you navigate their processes. DMCA notices, by contrast, are aimed at the platforms or hosts that are actually serving the pirated files or streams.
Many creators use both approaches. You might send DMCA notices to individual sites that are hosting stolen videos, while also notifying OnlyFans so they are aware of the leak pattern and can look for unusual activity or repeat problems on your account. This generator is built for the OnlyFans side of that communication.
Over time, keeping a simple log of which leak URLs you reported, when you contacted support, and what replies you received can make future incidents easier to manage. You can reuse and adapt your favourite version of this template whenever new leaks appear.
In a stressful moment it is easy to send very short or very emotional messages such as "my OnlyFans got leaked, help". While your feelings are valid, support teams still need basic details: the account involved, links to the leaks, and what kind of help you are asking for.
Another common mistake is forgetting that support agents are people who see many cases a day. Clear, respectful, and specific reports are much easier for them to act on than accusations with no links or context. You do not have to be formal, but a structured template gives you a better chance of a useful reply.
Finally, avoid sharing passwords or private identity documents in plain text inside your first message. If deeper verification is necessary, follow the official upload or document-sharing process suggested directly by OnlyFans, rather than sending sensitive files in unencrypted channels.
This generator is intended as a practical communication aid for creators, not as professional legal advice. Every country, contract, and platform policy can be different, and serious cases of piracy, blackmail, or doxxing may require help from a lawyer or local support services.
You remain in control of what you share. If a field in the template feels too revealing for your situation, adapt or remove it before you send the message. It is better to stay safe and comfortable while still giving support enough information to understand the problem.
For ongoing leak issues, combining clear support communication, DMCA takedowns, and better security habits can slowly reduce the spread of stolen content. Use this tool as a starting point, then evolve your own standard messages as you learn what works best for your audience, risk level, and boundaries.
Build tip menus with price suggestions for cam sites
Create pre-sized banner templates for OnlyFans profiles
Plan content funnels from free to PPV to custom to high-ticket
Generate compelling sales captions for OnlyFans posts
Compare platform fees for OnlyFans, Fansly, and alternatives
Generate welcome messages for new subscriber onboarding
Generate welcome DMs for new subscribers
Crop and resize profile pictures to perfect circular format