What to put on your menu, how much to charge, and a full example price list. Want it sold for you? Apply and our chatters pitch your menu in the DMs around the clock, where the tips actually close.
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A tip menu is a simple price list of the content and services you offer, with a set tip amount next to each item. A fan reads it, sends the matching tip, and gets the reward. It works like a menu at a restaurant: clear items, clear prices, no haggling. Pinned to the top of your profile, it tells every subscriber exactly how to spend more with you, which is most of the reason a good menu earns so much more than hoping fans guess what they can buy.
Below are nine menu ideas that sell, a full example price list you can copy and adjust, how to price each item, how to make and pin your menu, and the habits that separate a menu that earns from one that gets ignored. If you are still mapping out where your income comes from, start with how to make money on OnlyFans, then come back and build the menu that captures it.
Nine items fans actually tip for, from cheap impulse buys to premium customs. Pick five to eight, lead with your best sellers, and grow the menu as demand proves it.
Spicier sets that never hit your timeline, sold as a single tip. A set of ten or so photos is the easiest first menu item because you already shoot in batches, so the marginal cost is near zero and the margin is almost all profit.
Clips priced by length, usually around a dollar a minute as a baseline that you raise for effort. A two to five minute clip is a reliable mid-tier item that fans understand and buy without much hesitation.
Made to a fan's specific request, which takes real setup, filming and editing time, so they sit at the top of the menu. Price these well above pre-made content because you are selling your time, not just a file.
Live one-to-one chat sold per session or per block of time. Many creators anchor sexting around $100 an hour, then offer shorter blocks. This is the item that turns a quiet evening into your best night of the week.
Short audio messages, JOI scripts or ASMR-style clips. Cheap to make, fast to deliver, and they work for faceless creators who would rather not show on camera. A strong low-priced impulse item.
Written, audio or video ratings of a fan, usually $5 to $10. Low effort, high volume, and a friendly entry point that gets a first-time tipper to spend a few dollars before they buy anything bigger.
A photo or clip where you say a fan's name, wish them a happy birthday, or add a personal touch. The name itself is the product, so charge a premium add-on of $20 to $50 on top of the base item.
Where you offer them, signed prints or worn items are premium menu lines fans will pay well for. Keep these honest about shipping and only list what you actually deliver.
Group several items at a small discount, for example three photo sets for $50 instead of $60. Bundles raise the average order value and give a fan an easy reason to spend more in one go instead of buying once and leaving.
A sample menu to start from. These are typical mid-market prices, not rules. Set yours a little low at first, see what sells, then raise the winners.
Notice the ladder: a cheap entry line that earns a fan’s first yes, mid-tier videos and sessions, and customs at the top where your time is worth the most. For the deeper pricing logic across your whole page, see how much to charge on OnlyFans.
The right number is the one fans pay without flinching while still rewarding your effort. Four rules to get there.
List a few items at friendly prices, watch what sells, and raise the winners once fans are buying. It is far easier to nudge a price up than to walk one back, so let real demand set your numbers.
Pre-made content is cheap to deliver and should be priced low to move volume. Customs and live sexting cost you setup, filming, editing and attention, so they sit at the top of the menu. Charge for the effort, not only the pixels.
OnlyFans keeps 20% of every tip, so you net 80%. Round prices like $25 and $50 are easy for fans to act on and easy for you to track, and they read as confident rather than fiddly.
A $10 entry item, a $25 to $40 middle, and a premium custom give every fan a way in at their own level. The cheap line earns the first yes; the ladder lifts the spenders up from there.
The setup takes ten minutes. The craft is keeping it short, making it visible, and refreshing it as you learn what sells. Here is the full sequence.
Choose only what you are comfortable offering and can actually deliver. Start with your proven sellers and a clear ladder: one cheap entry item, a couple of mid-tier lines, and a premium custom at the top.
Price by effort, not just by file. Keep numbers round and clean so they are easy to act on, and remember OnlyFans keeps 20%, so you net 80% of every tip.
Lay the menu out in a free tool like Canva, or write it as plain text. Keep each line to a short phrase plus a price. A clean, readable menu sells better than a cramped one.
Pin the menu so it is the first thing a new subscriber sees. Add a short version or a link to your welcome message, and mention it inside posts and DMs so nobody misses it.
Track which items sell. Raise the winners, retire the lines nobody buys, and rotate in seasonal or themed items. A menu is a living price list, not a one-time post.
They are not the same thing, and the best creators use both together. A tip menu is the pinned price list a fan reads and acts on by sending a tip. Pay-per-view is a specific locked photo set or video, sent as a feed post or a direct message, that a fan pays to unlock. The menu is the catalog; the PPV is the locked product.
In practice the two connect: a fan reads your menu, tips for the item they want, and you deliver it as a pay-per-view message. The menu advertises and sets the price, the PPV carries the goods. To get the locked content itself right, browse OnlyFans PPV ideas, and for the made-to-order lines at the top of your menu, see how to sell OnlyFans customs.
Same items, very different results. Four habits separate a menu that prints tips from one that just sits there.
A menu nobody can find earns nothing. Pin it to the top of your profile so it is the first thing a new subscriber sees, and reference it in your posts and DMs. Visibility, not the prices, is what most often decides whether a menu sells.
Your subscription should already deliver. The menu is the upsell on top, framed as fun bonuses a fan chooses, not a page where everything good is locked behind yet another payment. Greedy menus kill renewals.
Five to eight clear lines beat a wall of thirty options. Too much choice stalls the buy. Lead with your best sellers, keep each line one short phrase plus a price, and retire items that never move.
A pinned menu is passive. The money comes when a fan messages and a person guides them to the right item, suggests the bundle, and closes warmly. The menu sets the prices; the conversation makes the sale.
Need fresh items to stock the menu with? Browse OnlyFans content ideas for sets and clips that keep your menu full.
A well-built tip menu sets the prices, but a pinned image cannot read the room. The tips close when a fan messages and a real person guides them to the right item, suggests the bundle over the single, offers tonight’s special, and follows up warmly the next day. That happens at 11pm on a Tuesday and again on Saturday morning, and a solo creator cannot be in the inbox every one of those hours on top of shooting content and promoting the page.
That is the gap an agency fills. We build and refine your menu, run professional chatting in fluent English around the clock, pitch the right item to the right fan, and keep the tips coming while you focus on creating. You make the content and keep the large majority of the earnings; we handle the daily messaging and the promotion that fills the inbox in the first place. If you want to weigh it up, here is how to spot a good OnlyFans agency.
We run the chatting and promotion that turn a menu into tips, and we are paid only as a share of what you earn.
We help you choose the items, set the ladder of prices, and design a menu that reads clean and sells, then refresh it as we learn what your fans actually tip for.
A dedicated team works your inbox around the clock in fluent English, pitching the right menu item to each fan and closing tips overnight that a solo creator would miss.
We move fans up the ladder from a single item to a bundle, suggest the next purchase at the right moment, and run timed specials that raise the average order value.
We promote on X, Reddit, TikTok and Instagram every day, so there are always new fans landing on your profile to read the menu and tip.
You stay in control of the account and your earnings, with regular payouts and full transparency on every number.
Stage name, geo-blocking and DMCA takedowns if you want them, so earning never means risking your identity.
Want the full earnings picture? See how much OnlyFans models make.
An OnlyFans tip menu is a price list of the content and services you offer, with a set tip amount next to each one. It works like a menu in a restaurant: a fan sees the item and the price, sends that tip, and gets the reward. Menus usually cover things like photo sets, short videos, custom content, sexting, voice notes and ratings, and they are pinned to the top of your profile so every subscriber can find them.
Decide on five to eight items you are comfortable offering, set a price for each, and lay them out as a simple list. Many creators design the menu as an image in a free tool like Canva, then pin it to the top of their profile so it is the first thing fans see. You can also paste the menu as text in a pinned post and mention it in your welcome message and DMs. Start small and add lines as demand proves them.
Price by effort and tier. Low-effort items like a text rating or a single photo set often sit at $5 to $15, short videos and voice notes around $15 to $40, and live sexting near $100 an hour with shorter blocks priced down from there. Customs cost you the most time, so they belong at the top, often from $50 or $10 a minute. Start a little low, see what sells, then raise the winners.
Lead with your proven sellers and a clear ladder of prices: an entry item under $15, a mid-tier video or session in the $20 to $40 range, and a premium custom at the top. Common lines include exclusive photo sets, short clips, custom photos and videos, sexting, erotic voice notes, ratings, name shout-outs and bundles. Keep it short, list only what you actually deliver, and retire anything that never moves.
Tipping itself is free to send, but the tip is a real payment that comes out of the fan's card, so they are spending money when they tip. OnlyFans takes a 20% commission on tips just like subscriptions and pay-per-view, so you keep 80% of every tip before taxes. There is a minimum and maximum tip amount set by the platform, which is why most menu items are priced in clean, round dollar figures.
Pin it to the top of your profile so it is the first thing a new subscriber sees when they land on your page. You can also include a short version or a link in your welcome message and reference it inside posts and DMs. Avoid stuffing the whole menu into your bio, where space is tight and better used to hook the subscriber. Visible and easy to find beats hidden every time.
A tip menu is a pinned price list a fan reads and acts on by sending a tip for the item they want. Pay-per-view is a specific locked photo set or video, sent as a feed post or a direct message, that a fan pays to unlock. They work together: the menu advertises what you offer and sets the prices, and you often deliver the item itself as a PPV message once the fan tips. One is the catalog, the other is the locked product.
Make the menu impossible to miss by pinning it and mentioning it often, then give fans a reason to act: bundles that feel like a deal, tip-to-unlock games, limited-time specials, and a warm one-to-one conversation that points them to the right item. Tips climb when a real person works the inbox, builds rapport, and suggests the next purchase, rather than leaving a passive menu to sell on its own.
You make the content; we bring the traffic and pitch your tip menu in the inbox where the tips actually close. Apply free, no fees and no obligation, with a reply within 24 hours.
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