
If youâre balancing deadlines, teaching swim sessions, and trying not to spiral when you compare yourself to louder creators, the best âOnlyFans menuâ is the one that makes decisions for you when youâre tired.
Iâm MaTitie (Top10Fans). This is a practical, low-drama way to build a menu thatâs clear for fans, safe for your time, and designed to produce steadier incomeâwithout relying on constant reinvention.
What an âOnlyFans menuâ actually is (and why it matters now)
Your menu is your offer system: whatâs included in the subscription, what costs extra, and what you donât do. Itâs not just a price listâitâs your boundaries, workflow, and sales funnel in one place.
Why tighten this up now?
- OnlyFans is operating like a mature business, not a scrappy app. Reports about major payouts and corporate performance (RTĂ, 22 Aug 2025) are a signal that the platform is optimising for revenue and retention, which puts pressure on creators to be clearer and more consistent.
- Leadership comms around strategy and hiring (Zee News, 21 Dec 2025) underline that the platform is focused on execution and scale. Translation for you: systems beat vibes.
- Seasonal spend patterns are real (New York Post, 20 Dec 2025). You donât need to copy anyoneâs lifestyleâjust recognise that buyers respond to timely, well-packaged offers.
A good menu helps you:
- stop underpricing your effort
- reduce messy DMs
- sell without feeling pushy
- protect your study time and energy
The core mistake: mixing âcontentâ with âaccessâ
Most creators build a menu like this:
- âpics $Xâ
- âvideo $Yâ
- âcustom $Zâ
Thatâs a fast way to attract bargain hunters and end up doing admin all day.
Instead, separate your menu into two columns in your head:
- Content products (repeatable, scalable)
- PPV drops
- bundles
- themed sets
- vault sales
- Access products (time-intensive, limited)
- DMs and chat intensity
- rating requests
- customs
- calls (if you do them)
- priority response
Your goal is to earn most of your money from content products, and treat access products like a premium add-on with strict limits.
The simplest winning structure (3 layers)
Layer 1: Subscription = consistent baseline
Set your subscription so it matches what you can post even during exam weeks.
A sustainable promise looks like:
- 3â4 feed posts per week (mix of photos + short clips)
- 1â2 longer posts per fortnight
- light, friendly DMs (not 24/7 chat)
If youâre currently over-delivering, donât âannounce lessâ emotionallyâjust reframe:
- âIâm standardising my schedule so you get consistent drops.â
Practical pricing logic (not hype):
- If your subscription is low, youâll need heavy PPV to hit goals.
- If your subscription is higher, you can use PPV more selectively (better for burnout).
Pick one of these positions and commit for 30 days:
- Lower sub + frequent PPV (high sales activity)
- Mid sub + moderate PPV (balanced)
- Higher sub + fewer, premium PPV (brand-led)
Stop switching weekly. Thatâs what makes you feel like youâre âbehindâ.
Layer 2: PPV = your profit engine
PPV isnât punishment. Itâs how you get paid for high-effort drops without turning your whole page into a full-time job.
Build PPV like products:
- clear title
- clear length (e.g., â8 minâ, â12 photosâ)
- clear vibe/theme
- clear price
- optional bundle offer
A stable PPV cadence (creator-friendly):
- 1 strong PPV per week, or
- 2 smaller PPVs per week (one âentryâ, one âpremiumâ)
If youâre studying, Iâd rather see 1 strong PPV weekly than frantic daily messages.
Layer 3: Add-ons = controlled time, premium price
Add-ons are where boundaries matter mostâespecially if your risk awareness is low and you tend to say yes to feel liked.
Your menu should include:
- what you offer
- what you donât offer
- response windows
- rush fees
- cancellation/refund stance (simple, polite)
Think of add-ons as âappointmentsâ, not âfavoursâ.
Build your menu around your real life (school + swim instructing)
Hereâs a structure that respects your schedule and reduces the comparison spiral.
Step 1: Define your weekly capacity (numbers, not feelings)
Write this down:
- Available shoot time per week: ___ hours
- Available editing time per week: ___ hours
- Available admin/DM time per day: ___ minutes
If you teach swims and study, a realistic starting point might be:
- 2 hours shoot
- 2 hours edit
- 20 minutes admin per day
Your menu must fit inside those constraints. Otherwise, youâll either ghost fans (guilt) or overwork (burnout).
Step 2: Turn capacity into âunitsâ
Example units:
- 1 photo set = 45 minutes total
- 1 short clip = 60â90 minutes total
- 1 premium PPV = 2â3 hours total
- 1 custom = 2â4 hours total (plus mental load)
Now decide:
- how many units can you produce weekly?
- which units make the best return?
This is the confidence move: youâre not âless creative than othersâ; youâre running a tighter operation.
A menu template you can copy (and adjust)
Use this as a base. Keep it simple enough that fans understand it in 10 seconds.
Subscription includes
- X feed posts per week
- Y short clips per week/fortnight
- occasional polls/behind-the-scenes
- chat: âI reply when Iâm onlineâ (donât promise more than you can deliver)
Weekly drops (PPV)
- 1 premium drop per week
- occasional bundle offers for new subs
Bundles (vault)
- âStarter bundleâ (best value, low decision friction)
- âTop 3 bundleâ (your best sellers)
- âTheme bundleâ (seasonal or niche)
Custom requests (limited)
- price starts at $___ (state what drives price: length, complexity, rush)
- delivery window: ___ days
- rush fee: $___
- boundaries: a short, calm line on what you donât do
Messaging add-ons (optional, only if you want)
- Priority replies (set hours/days)
- Voice notes (limited quantity)
- GFE-style chat (only if you can do it without draining yourself)
If you donât want to offer an access item, donât. A menu is also permission to say no.
Pricing: a practical approach that stops undercharging
Pricing is not about what other creators charge. Itâs about:
- your time cost
- your repeatability
- your buyer types
- your brand comfort
Use the â3x ruleâ for customs
If a custom takes 2 hours total (shoot + edit + admin), price it as if it takes 6 hours. Why?
- youâll redo takes
- youâll message back and forth
- youâll lose time switching tasks
- youâll carry the mental load
This single rule protects you from the classic trap: âI did a custom and made less than a casual shift.â
Bundle discounting without devaluing
Discount bundles by reducing your admin burden, not your worth.
Example logic:
- Single PPV: full price
- 3-pack bundle: modest discount
- 5-pack bundle: better discount
Youâre rewarding commitment and saving yourself time.
Donât discount your subscription constantly
Frequent discounts train fans to wait. If you want promos, do:
- limited windows (48â72 hours)
- clear reason (birthday week, end-of-semester, holiday special)
- add a bonus instead of slashing price (extra set, extra PPV)
Seasonal âgiftâ narratives show up in media every December (New York Post, 20 Dec 2025). You can use the timing without copying anyone elseâs spending: make it about a tidy offer, not about flexing.
How to write the menu so it converts (and reduces awkward DMs)
Your menu should read like:
- confident
- brief
- specific
Avoid:
- apologising (âsorry, Iâm busyâ)
- over-explaining
- negotiating in public
Strong menu wording patterns
- âHereâs what I offerâ
- âHereâs whatâs includedâ
- âHereâs my turnaround timeâ
- âIf youâre unsure, tell me your budget and the vibeâ
One line that saves you hours
Add this at the end:
- âIf you donât see it on my menu, itâs not available.â
Thatâs not rude. Thatâs clarity.
Menu placement: where it should live (so fans actually see it)
Put your menu in three places:
- Pinned post on your page
- Welcome message for new subs (short version + âreply MENUâ)
- Highlights (if you promote on other socials)
In DMs, donât re-type prices. Send one saved message with the menu summary.
If you want a clean, searchable âmenu landing pageâ outside the platform, you can host a simple creator page and keep links tidy. If you use Top10Fans, keep it minimal and creator-safe: Top10Fans creator page.
The confidence problem: comparison makes your menu messy
When you compare yourself to other creators, you usually change one of these:
- post frequency
- pricing
- boundaries
Then you feel inconsistent, and your buyers feel uncertain.
A steadier approach:
- Pick one menu structure.
- Run it for 30 days.
- Track only 5 numbers.
The 5 numbers to track weekly
- New subs
- Renew rate (or: how many stayed)
- PPV conversion (buyers / viewers)
- Average order value (AOV)
- Time spent (hours)
If AOV is low, you donât need to âwork harderâ. You need better packaging:
- clearer tiers
- bundles
- fewer choices
- stronger PPV titles and previews
âNews-levelâ takeaway: the platform is scalingâso you need systems
When outlets report on big payouts and business performance (RTĂ, 22 Aug 2025), itâs not gossip; itâs a reminder: platforms reward consistent revenue patterns. When leadership talks execution and talent strategy (Zee News, 21 Dec 2025), it reinforces the same idea.
For you, âsystemsâ means:
- one menu
- one weekly cadence
- one monthly theme plan
- one boundary set you donât break when youâre stressed
Thatâs how you grow without feeling like youâre losing yourself to the algorithm.
A 14-day action plan (no overwhelm)
Days 1â2: Audit
- List what you currently offer.
- Mark each item: scalable (content) vs time-heavy (access).
- Cut or limit two time-heavy items immediately.
Days 3â4: Build the menu (one page)
- Subscription includes (3â5 bullets)
- PPV cadence (1â2 bullets)
- Bundles (3 options)
- Customs (starting price + turnaround + rush)
- Boundaries (short)
Days 5â7: Implement placement
- Pin the menu
- Update welcome message
- Create 2 saved DM replies:
- âMENUâ
- âCUSTOMS INFOâ
Days 8â14: Sell one product properly
Pick one premium PPV.
- Build a clean teaser (what it is, how long, why itâs good).
- Offer a 24-hour bundle upgrade (optional).
- Track conversion and questions you receive (those questions tell you what your menu wording is missing).
After 14 days, adjust wordingânot your whole pricing philosophy.
The one rule I want you to keep
Your menu should protect your time first, then maximise revenue second.
Thatâs how you stay consistent through study crunch weeks, keep your swim-instructor life stable, and build confidence from evidence instead of comparison.
If you want to expand beyond Australia and attract global traffic without drowning in admin, you can lightly consider: join the Top10Fans global marketing network.
đ Further reading (from the latest coverage)
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đž Naughty & nice: OnlyFans star Alix Lynx reveals high-end gifts men buy her for Christmas
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