FeetFinder is the bigger, more established marketplace with far more buyers, and Premium sellers keep 90%. FunWithFeet is cheaper to sit on and less crowded, but smaller. If you are choosing one platform to actually make sales, choose FeetFinder. Everything below shows our work.
Last updated July 2026
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FeetFinder wins for most sellers on the only thing that turns a listing into money: buyers. It has run since 2019, has a much larger audience, verifies both sellers and buyers, and pays weekly to a US bank. FunWithFeet is legit and often cheaper upfront on its multi-month plan, but it is newer, smaller, and its published fees disagree across current reviews. Fewer buyers is the complaint that follows it everywhere.
One catch to lead with: FeetFinder's homepage advertises "earn 90% on all sales", but its own on-page calculator shows Standard sellers at 85% and only Premium at 90%. So the flat 90% is misleading for Basic sellers. For the full picture on each, read our FeetFinder review and our FunWithFeet review, then come back and compare.
| FeetFinder | FunWithFeet | |
|---|---|---|
| Commission per sale | Tiered. Basic and Standard sellers keep 85% (pay 15%), Premium sellers keep 90% (pay 10%). The homepage advertises "earn 90% on all sales", but FeetFinder's own on-page earnings calculator shows Standard at 85%, so the flat 90% only applies to Premium | Most commonly reported at 15%, so sellers keep about 85%. Some current reviews report 10%. Older articles claiming zero commission are out of date |
| Seller subscription | Basic $4.99/mo, $14.99/yr or $40 lifetime. Premium $14.99/mo, $49.99/yr or $80 lifetime. Buyers pay $0 to browse and buy | Commonly reported at $9.99 for three months or $14.99 for six months, roughly $2.50 a month. Some 2026 reviews report a $14.99 monthly plan instead |
| Payouts | Weekly, to a US bank via Segpay US (Paxum for international sellers). The bank descriptor is SEGPAY.COM | Sale lands in an on-platform wallet, which you withdraw to your bank. Paid in USD, received in your local currency |
| Minimum payout | A roughly $30 minimum is reported by third parties only. FeetFinder does not state a minimum on its own pages, so treat it as unconfirmed | Not publicly published. Confirm the current threshold in the platform's own withdrawal terms before you rely on it |
| Buyer traffic and discovery | Larger and more established. Running since 2019, with a dedicated mobile app and more buyers already searching for feet content | Smaller and newer (around 2021). Fewer buyers is the most consistent seller complaint, but also fewer rival sellers to compete with |
| ID verification | Verifies both sellers and buyers, 18+ required. ID goes to the platform for age checks, never to buyers | Verifies seller identity and age, 18+ required. You give a legal name for payment, but never have to show your face |
| Best for | Sellers who want the biggest buyer pool and the clearest path to actual sales, and will promote off-platform on top | Sellers who already drive their own traffic and want a cheap second listing on a less crowded site |
Checked July 2026. FeetFinder's plans are published; FunWithFeet's seller fees are reported differently by different current reviews, so read the price on its signup screen before you pay. That is the only number that binds anyone.
FeetFinder wins on buyers, payouts and the higher Premium cut. FunWithFeet wins on upfront cost and a less crowded field. Both of those are real, and which matters depends on whether you already have your own traffic.
Start with the number FeetFinder puts in its own marketing, because it is not quite the number you get. The homepage says sellers "earn 90% on all sales." Its own on-page earnings calculator tells a more precise story: Standard sellers keep 85% and pay a 15% service fee, while Premium sellers keep 90% and pay 10%. So the commission is tiered, not flat, and the flat 90% headline is misleading for anyone on the Basic or Standard tier, which is where most sellers start.
The tier you land on comes from the seller plan you pay for. Basic runs $4.99 a month, $14.99 a year, or $40 for a lifetime license. Premium runs $14.99 a month, $49.99 a year, or $80 lifetime. Premium's only real benefit is the 5-point lower fee, so it pays off only once you are clearing enough sales for that saving to beat the higher plan cost, roughly a couple of hundred dollars a month. Buyers pay nothing to browse or buy, which keeps the buyer pool wide. Our FeetFinder cost breakdown runs the plan-versus-fee math in full.
FunWithFeet charges differently, and here the public record genuinely disagrees. The seller subscription is most commonly reported as $9.99 for three months or $14.99 for six months, which works out to roughly $2.50 a month, cheaper than FeetFinder's monthly Basic plan. But some current 2026 reviews report a $14.99 monthly plan instead, which is a completely different cost. On top of the subscription, FunWithFeet takes a commission per sale, most commonly reported at 15% (so you keep about 85%), with some sources saying 10%. Older articles claiming FunWithFeet takes no commission are out of date. Because reputable sources contradict each other, confirm the price on the signup screen rather than trusting any single review, including ours.
Line the cuts up and they are close on paper. A FunWithFeet seller keeps about 85%, the same as a FeetFinder Basic seller, and a FeetFinder Premium seller keeps 90%. The percentage is not what separates these platforms. Buyer volume is.
FeetFinder pays weekly. US sellers are paid to a bank account through Segpay US, international sellers through Paxum, and the charge shows on statements with a SEGPAY.COM descriptor. A minimum payout of around $30 gets quoted a lot, but that figure comes from third-party write-ups, not FeetFinder's own pages, so treat it as reported rather than confirmed and check your account for the current threshold.
FunWithFeet uses a wallet. When a buyer pays, the money lands in your on-platform balance, and you withdraw from there to your bank. Payments are taken in USD and you receive them in your local currency. FunWithFeet does not publicly publish a minimum withdrawal or a fixed payout schedule, so read its own withdrawal terms before you count on a specific date or amount. Neither platform withholds tax, which matters because you are a self-employed US independent contractor on both and owe your own self-employment tax on every dollar either one sends you.
On a marketplace you are not paid for a good listing. You are paid when a buyer sees it, wants it, and checks out. That makes traffic the single most important difference between these two, and it is the one place they are not close. FeetFinder has run since 2019, has a dedicated mobile app, and carries a much larger pool of buyers already searching for feet content. FunWithFeet has run since around 2021 and is materially smaller, which is the complaint that shows up in nearly every honest seller review of it.
There is a fair counterpoint for FunWithFeet, and it is the only real argument in its favor: a smaller pond has fewer fish, but it also has fewer people fishing. If you already drive your own traffic from Reddit and X to a specific listing, a less crowded marketplace can convert that traffic without burying you under thousands of rival sellers. The catch is that this advantage only exists if you bring the buyers yourself. If you are relying on the platform to supply them, the bigger one wins every time, even at a slightly higher fee. Our roundup of the best app to sell feet pics and our list of FeetFinder alternatives compare the wider field on the same terms.
FunWithFeet is legit. It verifies seller identity and age, it processes real payments, and sellers who make sales get paid. When people call it a scam, they are almost always describing one of two things, and neither is fraud by the platform. The first is disappointment: a seller pays the subscription, uploads a few photos, and earns nothing, because the platform sold them a listing, not an audience. The second is the ordinary feet-selling scam that happens in private messages on every site, where a buyer offers over your rate, insists on a gift card or payment app, and vanishes. The defense is the same everywhere: keep every transaction on-platform and never send content before the money clears.
The same is true of FeetFinder, which verifies both sellers and buyers, holds payment through its own processor, and has paid sellers since 2019. So legitimacy does not separate them. Both are legal for US adults 18 and over to use, both are real, and both pay. The question that actually decides your income is which one puts more paying buyers in front of your listing.
FeetFinder is for the seller who wants the largest buyer pool and the clearest route to real sales, and is willing to promote off-platform on top. It is also for anyone who wants published plans, weekly bank payouts, and buyer-side ID checks. Start on the Basic plan, prove your content sells, and only move to Premium once the 5-point fee saving actually beats the higher plan cost. Our FeetFinder income breakdown by seller tier shows what the platform realistically pays at each level.
FunWithFeet is for the seller who already has traffic and wants a cheap, low-effort second listing on a quieter site. In that position the subscription is a rounding error and any sale it produces is upside. It is a poor choice as a first and only platform, because a new seller with no promotion will very likely pay the subscription, earn less than it cost, and wrongly conclude that selling feet pics does not work. Start where the buyers already are, then add the smaller listing once you have content that has proven it sells.
You do not have to pick one. Neither platform is exclusive, and running both is a sensible setup: sell where the buyers are on FeetFinder, and add FunWithFeet as cheap extra surface area. Keep the same persona name and the same crop rules on each, take payment only on-platform, and never let a buyer talk you into a private payment app to "skip the fee." Migrating a listing is mostly re-uploading your existing sets and re-writing your titles, so the second platform costs you an afternoon and a small subscription, not a rebuild.
There is a bigger point hiding under the comparison, though. Both of these are marketplaces, and a marketplace sale happens once. The buyer pays, takes the set, and is gone. The sellers who turn this into an income rather than a hobby move their best buyers onto a page they own, where the same person pays every month and buys customs on top. FeetFinder and FunWithFeet are for finding buyers. Keeping them is a separate job, and it is the part that compounds.
A marketplace subscription is supposed to buy you traffic, and then leaves you to find your own. We do the part neither of them does: we promote where feet buyers already gather, price your listings and bundles, and put trained chatters on your messages around the clock. No upfront fees, we only earn once you do, and you keep your login, your payouts and the large majority of what you make.
Apply to FansPromo freeYes. FunWithFeet is a real, operating feet marketplace, not a scam. It has run since around 2021, verifies seller identity and age, and pays sellers who make sales into a wallet they withdraw to a bank. The honest knock against it is size, not fraud: fewer buyers than FeetFinder and an upfront subscription that bills through quiet months.
For most sellers, FeetFinder, on the one metric that decides income: buyers. It has run since 2019 and carries far more buyer traffic, so a good listing actually gets seen. FunWithFeet is cheaper to sit on and less crowded with rival sellers, which is a real edge if you already bring your own audience.
Per sale the headline cut is close: FeetFinder Premium sellers keep 90% and Basic keep 85%, while FunWithFeet is most often reported at 85%. But FeetFinder usually pays more in real dollars because it has more buyers, and volume beats a single percentage point. FunWithFeet also bills its subscription whether or not you sell.
On the multi-month plan, often yes upfront. FunWithFeet is commonly reported at $9.99 for three months or $14.99 for six, roughly $2.50 a month, versus FeetFinder's $4.99 monthly Basic plan. But cheaper access is worthless without buyers. Confirm the price at signup, because some 2026 reviews report a $14.99 monthly FunWithFeet plan instead.
Yes. Neither is exclusive, and running both is a common setup. Sell where the buyers are, which is FeetFinder, then add FunWithFeet as a cheap second listing for extra surface area. Use the same crop rules and persona on each, take payment only on-platform, and never let a buyer pull you into a private payment app.
Send a free, confidential application and we promote your page, price your content and answer every buyer, on FeetFinder, FunWithFeet or both. A reply within 24 hours, no fees to apply, and you keep your login and payouts.
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