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Checked directly, July 2026

Instafeet: what happened to it, and where to sell feet pics instead

Thousands of people a month still search for Instafeet. The platform no longer runs on its own, and the domain now loads a FeetFinder signup page. Here is exactly what we found when we checked, what it means for your account, and the alternatives worth handing your ID to.

โœ“ Verified on the live site โœ“ Seller side, not buyer side โœ“ No affiliate hype

Last updated July 2026

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Gone
As an independent platform
FeetFinder
What the domain serves now
$4.99
The plan you actually sign up for
July 2026
When we last checked

The short answer

Instafeet no longer operates as its own feet content marketplace. FeetFinder acquired it, and the domain now says so in a banner at the top of the page: "Feetfinder has acquired Instafeet.com". As of July 2026, instafeet.com carries FeetFinder's branding, loads its images from FeetFinder's own servers, and signs you up as a FeetFinder seller at $4.99 a month or $14.99 a year after ID verification. If you go to Instafeet today, you are joining FeetFinder.

The domain answers the question itself, which is more than any review of it does: FeetFinder acquired Instafeet.com. What neither company has ever published is the detail that matters to a former seller, namely what happened to existing accounts, balances and followings. What we can tell you is what the site does right now, because we loaded it and read it. Every review still describing Instafeet's own $9.99 subscription and 10% commission is describing a platform that is not there, and most of those pages carry an affiliate link. If you are choosing where to sell, skip to where to sell feet pics.

What we found

What Instafeet is now, line by line

Checked against the live domain on 9 July 2026. Platforms change, so confirm before you pay anything.

What you are looking for Status What that means for you
The Instafeet people remember No longer operating as its own platform A standalone feet-content marketplace with its own seller subscription, its own buyer base and its own approval queue. Sellers described slow approvals and thin buyer traffic even at its peak.
What instafeet.com loads today A FeetFinder signup page Checked 9 July 2026: the page title reads "Instafeet - FeetFinder", the logos and images load from FeetFinder's own media servers, and the signup form enrolls you as a FeetFinder seller at $4.99 a month or $14.99 a year after ID verification.
Your old Instafeet account Not portable There is no published migration path, no announced transfer of balances, and no statement from either company explaining what happened to seller accounts. If you had money or a following there, treat neither as recoverable and rebuild elsewhere.
The "Instafeet application" Now a FeetFinder application Searches for an Instafeet application still send thousands of people a month to that domain. What you are actually applying to is FeetFinder, under FeetFinder's terms and FeetFinder's fees. That is worth knowing before you upload a government ID.

What happened to Instafeet?

Instafeet was one of the first dedicated feet content marketplaces, and for a while it was the name people knew. Sellers signed up, paid a monthly subscription, waited out an approval queue that people routinely described as slow, and listed photo sets. Even in its better years the complaint was consistent: the buyer traffic was thin relative to what the subscription cost.

At some point the domain stopped serving Instafeet. Bloggers noticed the site going down and coming back wearing FeetFinder's branding, and for years they speculated about a buyout without confirmation. The domain itself has since settled it: the page now carries a banner reading "Feetfinder has acquired Instafeet.com". What remains genuinely unconfirmed is the part those posts never asked about, which is what became of existing seller accounts and balances. So we fetched the page rather than recycle the guesswork.

Here is what the live domain returns in July 2026. The HTML title is "Instafeet - FeetFinder". The favicon and the social preview image are pulled from FeetFinder's media servers. The seller copy quotes FeetFinder's plan: $4.99 per month or $14.99 per year for new sellers, after ID verification. There is no independent Instafeet product behind that address. That is the finding, and it is the only part of this story anyone can actually verify.

If you had an Instafeet account with a balance or a following, the honest advice is to treat both as gone. No migration was announced, no transfer of balances was published, and there is no support channel to appeal to. That is the risk of building on someone else's marketplace, and it is a good argument for owning the page your buyers subscribe to. Our guide to running a feet OnlyFans page covers the side of this you control.

How much does Instafeet cost in 2026?

The signup form at that address charges FeetFinder's prices: $4.99 a month or $14.99 for the year, after your government ID clears verification. FeetFinder then takes a service fee from each sale, roughly 10% to 15% depending on which plan you are on. So the total cost of selling is the plan plus the fee, and the plan is charged in the months you sell nothing.

You will still find pages quoting Instafeet's own pricing: $9.99 a month plus a 10% commission on sales is the most common version, though $14.99 shows up too, and older reviews claim a basic tier at $4.99 with a $40 lifetime option. Those numbers never agreed with each other, and they describe a product that is no longer sold. Do not budget from them. Our FeetFinder review has the current plan-by-plan fee table and the break-even math, since FeetFinder is what you are actually buying.

One thing worth sitting with before you pay any marketplace: a monthly plan is a fixed cost against variable income. A seller clearing $40 in a slow month pays the plan and the service fee out of that $40. That math is fine when sales are steady and awful when they are not, which is exactly why knowing what feet pics realistically sell for matters more than picking the platform.

Where to go instead

Instafeet alternatives, compared honestly

Including where each one loses. Prices checked July 2026 and subject to change.

Platform What it costs a seller Buyer traffic Best for
FeetFinder $4.99 or $14.99 a month, plus roughly 10% to 15% per sale The largest dedicated feet buyer base Anyone who wants buyers already searching for feet content and does not mind a monthly plan
Feetify Free to join. A paid premium tier exists but the price is not published on the site Smaller, but real Testing the water without a monthly bill, or listing in parallel with a bigger marketplace
FunWithFeet A paid seller subscription plus a service fee. Reputable 2026 sources disagree on the exact figures Smaller than FeetFinder Sellers who want a second storefront and will verify the current price before paying
OnlyFans No monthly plan. The platform keeps 20% None handed to you. You bring them Turning buyers you already found into monthly subscribers who pay again
Fansly No monthly plan. The platform keeps 20% None handed to you Tiered subscriptions and a free follow level, if you want to run a funnel

We have looked at the smaller marketplaces individually: Feetify, which is free to list on, and FunWithFeet, where reputable sources still disagree about the current fees. The full field is in FeetFinder alternatives, and if you are choosing between a marketplace and a subscription page, FeetFinder vs OnlyFans is the comparison to read.

The real lesson from Instafeet

A marketplace rents you an audience. When it closes, is sold, or quietly redirects to a competitor, the audience does not come with you. Sellers who spent two years building a profile there have nothing to show for it, because they never owned the relationship with the people who bought from them.

The sellers who survive platform churn do one thing differently. They use a marketplace to be discovered, then move the buyers who spend onto a page they control, where the same person subscribes every month and buys customs. If FeetFinder went the way of Instafeet tomorrow, those sellers would keep their income and their list. That is not a hypothetical: it just happened to an entire platform's worth of people.

Moving buyers off a marketplace is not complicated, but it takes promotion, pricing discipline and someone answering messages fast enough to close. If that sounds like a second job, that is because it is one, and it is the exact job we do.

Why FansPromo

Own the audience, not the profile

Platforms come and go. Buyers who subscribe to you stay yours.

We bring the buyers

Marketplaces only show you to people already inside them. We promote where feet buyers actually gather, on Reddit, X, TikTok and Instagram, in the way each platform allows, and send that traffic to a page you own.

Chatters who close

Most of the income in this niche is in the messages: customs, bundles, tips, pay-per-view. Our trained chatters answer every buyer around the clock, negotiate and close, so you are not on your phone at midnight.

Priced to earn

New sellers price at $3 and burn out. We set your subscription, bundle and custom rates where they convert in your niche, so casual buyers can afford you and serious ones have room to spend.

You keep your login and payouts

We work through team access, never your primary password. The account, the content and the payout method stay in your name, and you keep the large majority of what you earn.

No upfront fees, ever

Nothing to apply, nothing to onboard, no monthly plan charged in a slow month. We take a share of what you actually earn, so we only make money once you do.

Anonymity taken seriously

Faceless works in this niche. We watermark your content, geo-block where you ask, and file DMCA takedowns when something leaks, so your name and your content stay yours.

Frequently asked questions

Instafeet, answered

Not as its own platform. FeetFinder acquired Instafeet.com, and the domain states it at the top of the page. As of July 2026 it serves FeetFinder branding and signs you up as a FeetFinder seller. You can still reach the domain, but what you reach is FeetFinder. If someone tells you they sell on Instafeet today, they are selling on FeetFinder.

FeetFinder acquired it. The Instafeet domain now carries a banner reading "Feetfinder has acquired Instafeet.com" and sends every visitor into a FeetFinder seller signup. Instafeet stopped operating independently, and no separate Instafeet marketplace, login or payout system remains. The outcome is verifiable on the domain itself: the site is FeetFinder now.

Instafeet was a real platform that paid sellers, though it was widely criticized for slow approvals and limited buyer traffic. The site at that address today is FeetFinder, which is itself legitimate: it has operated since 2019, ID verifies both sides, and pays sellers out. So the domain is not a scam, but you are not signing up for the platform you searched for.

The signup at instafeet.com today charges FeetFinder's seller pricing: $4.99 a month, or $14.99 for a year, after ID verification. Older reviews quoting a $9.99 or $14.99 monthly Instafeet subscription plus a 10% commission describe a platform that no longer exists, and those numbers were never consistent across sources even then. Confirm the price on the page before you pay.

They started as separate, competing platforms. Today the Instafeet domain serves FeetFinder's signup page, uses FeetFinder's media servers and enrolls new sellers under FeetFinder's plan. For any practical purpose in 2026, going to Instafeet means going to FeetFinder. The two brands are not historically the same company.

The Instafeet application is now a FeetFinder application. You submit a government ID for age verification, choose a seller plan, and build a profile. Before you upload identity documents anywhere, understand that you are joining FeetFinder, and read the fee terms, because the monthly plan is charged whether you sell anything that month or not.

The platform behind that domain, FeetFinder, is safe to sell on when you keep every transaction inside it. It verifies IDs on both sides and stands between you and a chargeback. The danger has never been the marketplace: it is the buyer who asks to pay by gift card or a payment app to skip the fee. That is a scam every time, on every platform.

FeetFinder has the most buyers. Feetify is free to join and useful for testing. FunWithFeet is a smaller paid marketplace. OnlyFans and Fansly charge no monthly plan and take 20%, but hand you no buyers at all, so they work best once you have found some. Most sellers who earn well use one marketplace to be found and one subscription page to keep the buyers who spend.

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Send a free, confidential application and we build the page your buyers subscribe to, then promote it, price it and answer every message for you. A reply within 24 hours, no fees, and your login and payouts stay yours.

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Keep reading

Review

FeetFinder review

The platform behind the Instafeet domain: real 2026 fees, whether it is legit, and who earns on it.

Comparison

FeetFinder alternatives

Six platforms compared on fees, buyer traffic and payouts, including where each one loses.

Pillar guide

How to sell feet pics

The full guide: platforms, prices, safety, staying anonymous, and turning buyers into income.

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