This is a ranked reference list of the 15 biggest OnlyFans leak sites in 2026, scored by traffic and by how hard they are to take down. It's deliberately data-led — designed to be skimmed when you're already in fight-mode and just need to know which entity to file with for a specific site. (If you're new to fighting OnlyFans leaks and want the full how-to instead, start with our complete OnlyFans leak removal guide. For the filing mechanics themselves, see the DMCA takedown master guide; to compare automated services that scan + file against this entire list continuously, see the best DMCA service for OnlyFans creators in 2026.)
Why listing leak sites matters. Creators waste countless hours searching platform by platform for leaked content. Knowing the landscape up front saves time and helps you set up automated monitoring on the highest-risk sites first. This is not a directory of places to find leaked content — it's a map of adversary infrastructure so you can fight back effectively.
1. Fapello. Traffic rank among leak sites: consistently top 3 in 2026. Fapello operates a contributor-upload model with aggressive SEO targeting creator names plus "leaks" or "nudes" keywords. Most mainstream creators have at least one Fapello page indexed. Removal path: Fapello honours DMCA notices sent to abuse@fapello.com within 48-72 hours on average. Their hosting has rotated across providers; check current WHOIS before escalation. After removal, set a monitor because re-uploads are common — different user accounts rehost the same content within weeks.
2. Thothub. One of the longest-running leak sites still active in 2026. Thothub operates forums plus video hosting, with tens of thousands of creator pages. DMCA compliance has improved under recent legal pressure but is still inconsistent. Removal path: use the DMCA form at thothub.to/dmca. If ignored, escalate to their CDN (historically Cloudflare) with a formal DMCA and trust-and-safety complaint. Expect 5-10 day resolution on stubborn threads.
3. Coomer (coomer.party / coomer.su). Coomer aggregates content from multiple sources (Fansly, OnlyFans, Patreon) and displays it in a directory format with creator profiles. It's particularly painful for creators because a single Coomer page indexes months of content in one place. Removal path: Coomer's DMCA address has changed several times; use the current address listed on their contact page. They comply reasonably quickly (24-72 hours) but re-uploads happen automatically when they scrape new sources.
4. Leakedzone. A forum-style leak site with active moderation. Paid members get early access to "premium" leaks. Removal path: DMCA via their contact form. Response is slower than Fapello or Coomer — typically 5-7 days — but they do comply.
5. Telegram channels. In 2026, Telegram is arguably the largest single vector for OnlyFans leaks. Channels with 50,000+ subscribers distribute content within hours of upload, and content spreads across dozens of mirror channels within a day. Removal path: file DMCA via abuse@telegram.org with full evidence; Telegram removes specific messages within 24-48 hours but doesn't proactively ban channels without repeat-infringer documentation. Privly's Telegram monitoring watches known creator-targeting channels continuously and files takedowns automatically.
6. Erome. General-purpose adult upload site with significant OnlyFans leak presence. DMCA-compliant — sends automated confirmations and usually removes within 48 hours. Their weakness is that re-uploads are trivial, so monitoring is essential.
7. Pornhub user uploads. Pornhub strictly requires verified uploaders for new content, but older user-uploaded content still circulates. Removal path: Pornhub's Content Removal Request form (formal DMCA acceptable) — response time is excellent (24 hours typically) because they have a dedicated team after regulatory pressure.
8. XVideos and related tubes. Similar posture to Pornhub — DMCA-compliant, quick response when notices are correctly formatted, but content can be re-uploaded by different accounts.
9. Reddit subreddits. Reddit in 2026 has significantly tightened enforcement; most dedicated leak subreddits have been banned. Remaining threats are smaller subreddits that slip through moderation plus DMs redirecting users to external sites. Removal path: Reddit's copyright form is fast (24 hours) and they ban repeat-infringer accounts reliably.
10. Discord servers. Private Discord servers are hard to monitor but can be reported to Discord Trust & Safety with evidence. Servers promoting leak distribution are typically banned within 48-72 hours once reported.
11. Simpcity. Forum-style leak site focused on niche creators. Lower traffic than Fapello or Coomer but persistent. Removal path: formal DMCA via their contact address; response is slow (7-14 days) and requires follow-up.
12. Kemono / Kemono.su. Primarily a Patreon leak site but increasingly includes OnlyFans and Fansly content. Kemono has historically been adversarial toward DMCA notices; success rates are lower than other sites on this list. Removal path: file DMCA plus escalate to hosting and CDN providers simultaneously; expect to file multiple notices.
13. Mrdeepfakes and deepfake-specific sites. A growing threat in 2026 as AI deepfakes using OnlyFans creators' faces proliferate. Removal path: a combination of DMCA (for any real content used as training data), image-misuse reporting (most platforms now have non-consensual deepfake takedown policies), and in many jurisdictions criminal complaints (deepfake distribution is illegal in the UK, EU, and an increasing number of US states in 2026).
14. BitTorrent sites and file-lockers. Long tail of leak distribution. Sites like Mega, MediaFire, and specific torrent trackers host archive files ("packs") of creator content. Removal path: DMCA to the file-locker directly; most comply within hours. Torrent trackers are harder — focus on delisting from search engines (Google) rather than trying to remove from trackers themselves.
15. Telegram-adjacent: Signal, Session, and Matrix. Smaller distribution vectors but growing. No effective centralised removal path exists — the strategy here is deterrence via watermarking plus monitoring of the larger public surface to catch content before it migrates to private networks.
The removal workflow that actually works. No matter the site, the same four-layer workflow gets results: (1) File DMCA with the site's designated agent using a complete, compliant notice. (2) File with their hosting provider and CDN (Cloudflare especially) if they ignore or delay. (3) File with Google and Bing for search de-indexing so the leak stops appearing in results even while content is technically live. (4) Set up monitoring for re-uploads, because most leaks reappear under different URLs within weeks. Manual execution across 15+ sites is a full-time job. Automated services like Privly run all four layers continuously and typically achieve 24-48 hour median removal time.
The cost of leaving leaks live. Research across 2,000+ OnlyFans creators shows that content left on leak sites for 30+ days costs an average of 25-40% in subscription revenue. For a mid-range creator earning $6,000/month, that's $1,500-2,400/month in lost income, compounding over time. Fast removal — within 48 hours — typically limits the damage to under 5% revenue impact. The difference between fast and slow enforcement is often the difference between a sustainable creator business and a declining one.
Prevention is cheaper than removal. Most creators discover these sites after their content has already been leaked. The higher-leverage play is prevention: per-subscriber forensic watermarking to make leakers identifiable, early-warning monitoring to catch leaks within hours, and proactive DMCA enforcement as a deterrent. Creators who implement prevention from day one report 70-80% fewer leaks hitting the major sites in this list, and faster removal on the leaks that do get through.
The bottom line. This list will keep changing — domains get banned, new sites launch, distribution shifts between platforms. The underlying reality is stable: if you create on OnlyFans, a percentage of your content will end up on some subset of these sites every month. Knowing the landscape, having a removal workflow ready, and automating enforcement is the difference between creators who maintain income over multi-year careers and creators who watch their revenue decline with every leak. Pick your workflow, set up monitoring, and don't let leaks sit online.