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OnlyFans Makes Hundreds of Millions but Still Struggles With Banks and Payment Providers

8th May 2026
OnlyFans reportedly generated hundreds of millions of dollars in profit last year, yet the platform continues to face banking and payment-access challenges that many mainstream technology businesses rarely encounter. That contradiction is becoming one of the biggest compliance and regulatory questions surrounding the creator economy. The issue gained fresh attention after reports that Australian billionaire James Packer is among the investors backing Architect Capital’s proposed minority investment in OnlyFans at a valuation of about $3.1 billion, while the company is also reportedly exploring financial services opportunities for creators who continue struggling to access mainstream banking products. The wider significance of the deal is not really about celebrity investors or the valuation itself. It is about the uncomfortable position creator platforms now occupy inside the global financial system. OnlyFans operates legally across multiple jurisdictions and generates extraordinary levels of revenue, yet the platform still sits inside a category many banks, payment providers and institutional investors continue treating as higher risk than conventional digital businesses. That creates a situation where a company can be commercially successful while still encountering friction across core parts of the financial infrastructure needed to operate at scale. According to reports surrounding the investment process, some financial institutions were hesitant to participate in transactions involving OnlyFans because of reputational and compliance concerns. The company reportedly hired investment bank Moelis & Co. to assist with sale discussions after at least one other bank was reportedly reluctant to represent the business. That hesitation matters because it illustrates how concerns around regulatory scrutiny and reputational exposure can still shape access to institutional finance even for highly profitable digital platforms. Payment infrastructure has also reportedly become more restrictive for parts of the creator economy associated with adult content. Reports this year suggested Visa introduced stricter fraud and chargeback standards affecting some adult-content platforms, while transaction fees for X-rated businesses can reportedly range between 5 and 10 per cent, materially above the rates often charged to mainstream e-commerce companies. For a platform built around direct creator payments and subscription income, those differences can have a significant impact on profitability, cash flow and operational stability. The legal and compliance concerns behind those decisions are not difficult to understand. Banks and payment providers are not simply evaluating audience size or revenue growth when deciding whether to work with digital platforms. They are also assessing anti-money laundering exposure, sanctions compliance, fraud monitoring obligations, age-verification systems, suspicious transaction reporting requirements and the possibility of future regulatory scrutiny if compliance controls fail. Adult-content platforms sit directly inside several of those categories, which means financial institutions often apply far more aggressive risk-management frameworks to them than they would to conventional technology businesses. That creates pressure on both sides of the relationship. Financial institutions that continue servicing higher-risk sectors can face regulatory consequences if controls break down, while institutions that refuse services increasingly face criticism over “debanking” lawful businesses. Platforms themselves remain exposed to sudden policy changes, frozen payments, rising processing costs and evolving compliance standards that can directly affect long-term growth and financial stability. The proposed Architect Capital transaction also suggests some investors increasingly believe the future value of creator platforms may extend far beyond subscriptions or entertainment content alone. Reports indicate the company is exploring financial services and creator-focused payment tools aimed at users who still struggle obtaining traditional banking access. That reflects a broader shift across the digital economy, where technology platforms are gradually moving closer to functioning as financial intermediaries rather than simply media or social businesses. That evolution could eventually create an entirely new layer of regulatory exposure. Once creator platforms begin operating closer to fintech providers or payment intermediaries, they can face additional obligations involving know-your-customer systems, consumer protection requirements, transaction monitoring rules and cross-border compliance frameworks. Regulators globally have already tightened oversight of fintech businesses operating outside traditional banking structures, and creator platforms moving into that space would likely face many of the same compliance and reporting expectations. The deeper issue highlighted by the OnlyFans deal is that the creator economy increasingly depends on financial infrastructure built around traditional risk models that were never really designed for decentralised digital labour markets. Platforms generating enormous revenues and millions of users can still face operational friction because banking systems, compliance structures and reputational-risk frameworks have not fully adapted to the way online creators now earn money across multiple jurisdictions simultaneously.

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