What it takes to make six figures a month on OnlyFans, according to Tiffany Wisconsin

Staying consistent is key.
 By 
Anna Iovine
 on 
tiffany wisconsin surrounded by social media hearts in front of computer displaying onlyfans site
Credit: Ian Moore / Mashable Composite; J Studios / DigitalVision / Serhii Prystupa / Moment / Getty

Posting content on OnlyFans is far from easy money, as several creators told Mashable last year, and the average creator only raked in around $1,300 in 2023. That being said, there are high earners on the platform — like Tiffany Wisconsin, who only started shooting adult content five years ago. 

Wisconsin (who goes by either Tiffany Wisconsin or Wisconsin Tiffany) typically earns upwards of $100,000 per month on OnlyFans (and supplied a screenshot of her November 2025 earnings to Mashable as proof). Wisconsin spoke to Mashable about what it takes to earn this much, including seeking help and staying consistent.

Upselling on OnlyFans

Wisconsin started posting solo bikini photos on OnlyFans in 2021, and in 2023 began shooting explicit content (meaning, having sex with other people on camera — and Wisconsin sometimes has sex with multiple people for a video, called a "gang bang"). But even though Wisconsin films hardcore porn, she believes that shooting solo content can produce a lot of cash. 


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"I think it's all up to how you're selling your content, because you could do solo stuff," she said in an interview with Mashable. "As long as you know how to sell it, if you can upsell."

Wisconsin creates personalized content for an upcharge, which can involve degrading her fans, sexting, and sending spicy Snapchats. "I do a lot of upselling, and that will make a huge difference."

The importance of social media

OnlyFans famously lacks a search function, though, resulting in a lack of discoverability on the platform. So Wisconsin, like many adult content creators, posts on mainstream social media platforms to promote herself.

"Rage bait seems to work the best for me," Wisconsin said, referring to content designed to elicit anger. While not everyone is into it, she finds that it performs well. "I figured out what makes people react, and then it gets subscribers."

Sometimes she doesn't like doing rage bait, because people believe that's how she really is — but it's just for views, and it generates money for her. An example is a caption on an Instagram Reel where Wisconsin wrote that a man went broke because of her, and he put her in will. 

"I just made it up," she said, "and I got so many views and so many subscribers," she said, and even got into a porn niche: financial domination, when customers get aroused by the idea of Wisconsin taking all their money.

"I didn't even intentionally do that," she said, but she decided to keep doing it. "I was like, 'Well, these guys are gonna give me money. I might as well just keep doing that then.'"

Social media also gave way to her main niche: older men (her bios declare that she has "granddaddy issues"). She fell into the category after posting a TikTok about older men to see the reaction. It gained a huge number of views. Men were nice to her and started buying her things. 

"I was like, 'Wow, I like this.' I'm gonna just keep marketing towards older men," she said. "It just comes so easy to me now, because people know I'm the girl that films with older men."

"Even when I was doing solo content, I was marketing towards older men," Wisconsin continued. "So a majority of my subscribers are older men."

She posts daily on multiple social media accounts (Instagram, X, TikTok, and others), but she doesn't actively monitor them throughout the day.

"I used to do that a long time ago, being like, 'Oh, is it going to get views or not?' But now, I don't do that, and when I don't do that, [the video] always seems to get views," she said.

And asked whether she's ever been shadowbanned (or deprioritized or hidden on mainstream social platforms, which those platforms typically deny), Wisconsin said, "A lot of times, if people are shadowbanned, it's not that they're shadowbanned, it's because they're not posting content that the internet wants to push out." 

Wisconsin always stays up to date on algorithm changes, and that makes a difference, she said. 

Creators who believe they're shadowbanned might not understand their content isn't interesting, Wisconsin said. "I've done the same thing where I thought it was, and then today…I look back, and…it's not like, 'Oh my gosh… I want to watch this again.'"

Tiffany Wisconsin's top OnlyFans tips

Treat OnlyFans like a business, Wisconsin said. 

She's been working with an assistant for about a year, who handles her bookings, checks emails, and the like. "I really do think it's important to have extra help," she said. Other adult content creators Mashable has spoken to about what making porn requires (besides naked bodies) also said they rely on other people, like social media managers.

To earn a substantial income on OnlyFans, Wisconsin advises being consistent, having a plan, and not undervaluing yourself.

"A lot of girls undervalue themselves," she said. "They don't charge enough for their content."

"If you think about going to the store and you see something that's not as much, and then you're wondering, like, 'why is it not as much? It must not be as good,'" she explained. 

Women may think that if they charge less, more people will buy their content, but Wisconsin said it actually might turn them away because they'll wonder why it's not priced higher.

Even if you don't make six figures a month, you might be able to break above the yearly $1,300 average.

Topics Porn

anna iovine, a white woman with curly chin-length brown hair, smiles at the camera
Anna Iovine
Associate Editor, Features

Anna Iovine is the associate editor of features at Mashable. Previously, as the sex and relationships reporter, she covered topics ranging from dating apps to pelvic pain. Before Mashable, Anna was a social editor at VICE and freelanced for publications such as Slate and the Columbia Journalism Review. Follow her on Bluesky.

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