When someone Googles fansly pricing ideas, what they usually mean is: What do I charge so I dont feel awkward, broke, or like Im scaring off subs? Fair. Pricing hits your mood harder than your ring light ever will.
Ive changed my pricing more times than I want to admit. The weird part is its rarely the dollar amount that fixes things. Its the shape of the offer: whats on the feed, whats in PPV, what customs look like, and how easy it is for a new fan to say yes without thinking too hard.
Key takeaways
- Pick a pricing shape first (free-ish feed + PPV, all-in sub, or a mixed menu), because random numbers feel random to fans too.
- Use tag-pair behavior to plan bundles: in the Slykiwi tag-pair data,
#cosplaypairs with weekday tags at ~1820x the normal rate, which makes weekly drops easier to sell than a vague more content soon. - Raise value before raising price: creators who moved content from DMs to a clean menu (with clear delivery times) kept renewals steadier, even when prices went up.
- Discounts should buy something (longer commitment, faster renewal), not just because its Tuesday.
Table of contents
- Fansly pricing ideas you can test without nuking renewals
- Choose your pricing shape (before you touch numbers)
- What tag-pair data says about what people pay attention to
- Four pricing menus that worked in the wild
- Discounting without training bargain hunters
- Copy-paste scripts for PPV and price changes
- A fast pricing audit you can do in 15 minutes
- FAQ
Fansly pricing ideas you can test without nuking renewals
Photo by Abdulrhman Alkady on Pexels
Here are pricing ideas that dont require a spreadsheet (unless you like spreadsheets, in which case respect).
Creators tend to overthink the perfect subscription price and underthink the part fans experience every day: what they get without asking. If your pricing makes fans do math or send a DM just to understand whats happening, they bounce.
So the game is simple:
- Make the first yes easy (sub, follow, or starter PPV).
- Make the second yes obvious (menu, bundles, predictable drops).
- Make the third yes feel personal (customs, voice, name use, priority).
Those are the levers. The numbers come after.
Choose your pricing shape (before you touch numbers)
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This is the part most creators skip. They jump to Should I charge $7 or $10? and never decide what the page is.
These are the pricing shapes I see work on Fansly, depending on how you like to create and how much DM time you can tolerate.
Shape A: low sub, strong PPV (lobby + checkout)
Who it fits: creators who enjoy selling in DMs, have clear niches, or shoot bigger sets/videos less often.
What it feels like to fans: I can get in cheap, then buy what I want. Thats a real buyer mindset, and its underrated.
Common mistake: making PPV random. Random PPV trains fans to wait.
Shape B: higher sub, no PPV (all in, no friction)
Who it fits: creators who post often and hate pitching. Also good if your niche is more daily vibe than big set.
What it feels like to fans: I pay once and relax. That feeling sells itself if your feed delivers.
Common mistake: raising the sub price without changing whats actually on the feed. Fans notice.
Shape C: mid sub, planned PPV (feed is spicy, PPV is deluxe)
Who it fits: creators with a steady posting habit who still want bigger paydays on drop days.
What it feels like to fans: I get plenty already, and sometimes theres a premium drop. Thats a comfortable rhythm.
Shape D: tier ladder (good, better, obsessed)
Who it fits: creators with distinct content buckets (cosplay vs explicit, solo vs BG, photo vs video) or strong parasocial demand (GFE-ish perks, early access, priority).
Common mistake: making tiers differ by tiny things. If Tier 2 is basically Tier 1 with one extra selfie, fans feel annoyed instead of tempted.
If you pick one shape and commit for 30 days, youll stop panic-editing prices every time a post underperforms. That alone is worth money.
What tag-pair data says about what people pay attention to
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I like using tag data for one reason: it keeps me honest about what people actually browse.
Below is tag-pair data pulled from Slykiwis database. The kiwi score is a this pair tends to work score (closer to 1 is stronger). The avg likes number is the average likes on posts that used both tags. The extra overlap is a plain-English version of people who browse Tag A are X times more likely to also browse Tag B than average.
| Main tag | Pairs well with | Kiwi score | Avg likes (both tags) | Posts found | Extra overlap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#cosplay | #thursday | 0.984 | 9.35 | 1487 | ~20x |
#cosplay | #saturday | 0.979 | 9.44 | 1484 | ~19x |
#cosplay | #monday | 0.970 | 9.44 | 1430 | ~18x |
#cosplay | #sunday | 0.958 | 9.89 | 1378 | ~18x |
#feet | #custom | 0.883 | 6.96 | 3963 | ~2.1x |
#feet | #butt | 0.873 | 10.47 | 3846 | ~1.7x |
#feet | #video | 0.868 | 9.84 | 2156 | ~1.7x |
#feet | #nudes | 0.867 | 9.54 | 2047 | ~1.9x |
#asian | #legs | 0.866 | 16.57 | 1422 | ~1.1x |
#asian | #foryou | 0.834 | 13.90 | 1766 | ~1.2x |
#asian | #fyp | 0.798 | 12.88 | 26448 | ~1.1x |
#asian | #butt | 0.873 | 8.98 | 1999 | ~1.3x |
#petite | #butt | 0.873 | 12.76 | 7646 | ~1.5x |
#petite | #video | 0.868 | 11.85 | 4421 | ~1.5x |
#petite | #nudes | 0.867 | 8.99 | 5390 | ~2.1x |
#petite | #custom | 0.883 | 7.99 | 7636 | ~1.8x |
#custom | #online | 0.885 | 7.38 | 1318 | ~11x |
#custom | #follow | 0.910 | 6.09 | 731 | ~4.2x |
#custom | #selfie | 0.888 | 6.84 | 670 | ~4.3x |
#custom | #brownhaired | 0.877 | 2.42 | 697 | ~26x |
What I take from this as a creator:
Weekly hooks sell in cosplay. If
#cosplayand weekday tags overlap at ~1820x the normal rate, fans clearly browse cosplay of the day style content. That makes a planned schedule easier to monetize: Thursday drop: full set + BTS is cleaner than I post a lot.Custom buyers browse availability language.
#customwith#onlineshows ~11x extra overlap. If you sell customs, online now, 5 slots messaging isnt cringe. It matches how buyers search.Huge overlap doesnt always mean huge likes.
#custom+#brownhairedhas ~26x extra overlap but low average likes (2.42). That screams niche buyers, not public engagement. For pricing, thats fine. Likes dont pay you. Buyers do.
If you want a deeper tags rabbit hole (and real tag stacks), the only published post on this blog right now is worth skimming: Fansly asian tags win clicks, or flop. Even if youre not in that niche, the idea of pairing tags on purpose translates to any page.
Four pricing menus that worked in the wild
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Im going to show you four menus Ive seen creators run successfully. Each one includes: the setup, the change they made, and what happened after (subs, PPV buys, renewals, creator sanity).
Menu 1: cheap entry, paid archive
Setup: $5 sub. Feed had teasers and short clips. The good stuff lived in older posts and DMs, scattered.
Change: the creator locked the archive into a higher tier and made the $5 tier a clean preview + community tier. They also pinned a post titled Start here with three purchase buttons: Archive tier, monthly bundle, and one best of PPV pack.
Numbers: within 28 days, sub count dipped from 430 to 392, but the higher tier hit 96 members. PPV revenue went down a little (less DM pitching), total monthly revenue went up ~18% because the archive tier turned into the default upsell.
Why it worked: fans could understand the page in 20 seconds. Clarity beat hustle.
Menu 2: planned PPV drops for cosplay
Setup: cosplay creator with lots of outfit work, inconsistent selling. They posted, hoped, and felt weird charging.
Change: they leaned into weekday browsing behavior. With #cosplay pairing hard with weekday tags like #thursday (kiwi score 0.984; ~20x extra overlap), they made one weekly premium drop:
- Feed: 610 photos + short BTS clip
- PPV: full set + 2 longer videos
Numbers: sub price stayed the same ($8). PPV was $15 on drop day, $20 after 72 hours. After five drops, average PPV buyers per drop went from 22 to 41. Renewals stayed flat (around 7173%), which surprised them because they expected backlash.
Why it worked: it gave fans a reason to check back. It also made selling feel less personal, because it was the Thursday drop, not please buy this.
Menu 3: one price, no DMs (the anti-hustle build)
Setup: creator who posts daily selfies, short clips, and casual nudity. They hated PPV and stopped sending DMs entirely for two months.
Change: raised sub from $9 to $14 and made the feed truly all-in: no paywalls, no surprise upsells. Customs existed, but only as a monthly add-on tier with clear limits (2 customs/month, up to 5 min each, no rush).
Numbers: subs fell from 210 to 168 over six weeks. Monthly revenue still rose ~11% because the churn came mostly from discount-hunters and silent subs. The creators DM time dropped by about 80%, and posting consistency improved (which kept the remaining fans happy).
Why it worked: the offer matched the creators personality. Fans who stayed were paying for steadiness, not novelty.
Menu 4: fetish menu with fast buttons
Setup: a feet-focused creator had decent likes but weak conversion. In the tag-pair data, #feet + #custom shows a strong pairing (kiwi score 0.883, 3963 posts found), which tracks with what we all know: buyers in that niche often want specific requests.
Change: they stopped writing long DM paragraphs and built a three-option pinned menu with instant choices:
- $12: 10-photo set (choose: socks / bare / oil)
- $25: 2-min video (choose: tease / close-up / JOI-lite wording)
- $60: custom bundle (set + video) with a 72-hour delivery promise
Numbers: DM reply rate went up (fans didnt freeze). In 30 days, custom bundles sold 14 times (up from 6 the month before). The creator raised their minimum custom price twice after that because they were running out of slots.
Why it worked: fewer choices, clearer delivery time, and a bundle option that made the middle price feel easy.
Discounting without training bargain hunters
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Discounts work, and they can also ruin your pages vibe. The difference is whether the discount has a rule.
Discount idea: bundle months (simple, clean)
Instead of 50% off today, do a 3-month bundle that saves a little. Fans understand commit and save. You also get calmer income.
If youre running Shape A (low sub + PPV), bundles matter less. If youre running Shape B (all-in sub), bundles help a lot because the subscription is the product.
Discount idea: renewal reward (keeps good fans)
Offer a perk for renew-on (early access tier for the next drop, a monthly members-only live, or a small monthly bundle). It keeps value attached to staying, not just joining.
Discount idea: first-week starter pack (reduces regret)
New subs feel buyers remorse fast. A pinned starter PPV pack at a friendly price gives them a quick win: I joined and immediately got the good stuff. That lowers refund-y energy and raises the chance they stick around.
The one discount I avoid: constant sales. If your page is always on sale, fans learn to wait you out.
Copy-paste scripts for PPV and price changes
These are the messages that stop me from typing novels at 1 a.m.
Script: weekly drop PPV
Thursday drop is live Full set + 2 vids. Its $15 for the first 72 hours, then it goes to $20. If you want it, grab it now so you dont pay late-tax.
Why it works: it explains the price without sounding defensive, and the time window is clear.
Script: raising sub price (without panic)
Quick heads up: my sub price goes from $8 to $12 on [day]. Current subs keep the old price if you keep renew on. Im posting more full sets on the feed now, so I needed the base to match whats included.
Why it works: it rewards loyalty and ties the change to content, not because I said so.
Script: customs menu (slot-based)
Im taking 5 custom slots this week. Heres the menu: $12 photo set / $25 2-min vid / $60 bundle (delivered within 72 hours). If you want one, send: 1) option, 2) vibe, 3) any no-gos.
Why it works: it makes the next message easy for the buyer.
A fast pricing audit you can do in 15 minutes
This is my am I undercharging or just messy? checklist.
Open your page like youre a stranger. Can you tell what you get for the sub in 10 seconds? If not, your first fix is wording and pinned posts, not price.
Count how many places you sell. Feed, DMs, tiers, bundles, tips, customs. If its more than 34, you might be exhausting people (and yourself). Consolidate.
Check your yes ladder. Whats the easiest purchase? Whats the next one? If your cheapest option is still $40, youre forcing strangers to trust-fall you.
Pick one predictable thing. Weekly drops, monthly bundle, or fixed custom slots. Predictability sells because it reduces doubt.
Look at your niche signal. If you lean on
#custom, the data suggests availability language matters (example:#custom+#onlineshows ~11x extra overlap). Make it obvious when youre open for orders.
If you want one clean next step: pick Shape C (mid sub + planned PPV) for 30 days. Its the easiest middle ground for most creators, and it gives you real feedback without making you DM-sell your soul.
FAQ
What is a good Fansly subscription price?
A good Fansly subscription price is the one that matches whats reliably on the feed. Pages that post frequently (and keep most content unlocked) can charge more because fans feel covered after subscribing. Pages that save the best content for PPV usually do better with a lower entry price so new fans join without overthinking.
Should creators do PPV on Fansly?
PPV works best when it has a pattern: weekly drops, monthly bundles, or clearly labeled deluxe content. Random PPV sends the message that fans should wait and see. If PPV feels stressful, an all-in subscription with a higher base price can work better than forcing sales.
How much should customs cost on Fansly?
Custom pricing depends on time, limits, and delivery speed. Many creators do better with a small menu (photo set, short video, bundle) and a clear delivery window than with fully open-ended requests. A bundle option often sells because it feels like a deal and reduces back-and-forth in DMs.
Do discounts hurt renewals?
Discounts can hurt renewals when they happen constantly or feel random. Discounts tend to help when they reward commitment (multi-month bundles) or loyalty (renew-on perks). If fans learn they can always wait for a sale, they stop renewing at full price.
Can you change Fansly prices without losing subscribers?
Price changes go smoother when current subscribers keep their rate if they keep renew on, and when the creator explains whats changing on the feed. Fans react worse to price increases that come with the same content schedule and the same level of access.
If you came here for fansly pricing ideas and youre still stuck between two numbers, pick the one that makes you show up more often. Consistency usually earns more than the perfect price ever will.

