Selling feet pics is one of the simplest ways to start earning from content, and you never have to show your face. This is the honest 2026 guide: where to sell safely, what to charge, how to stay private, and how to turn one-off sales into income that actually adds up. Or apply below and we build the recurring side for you.
Send a free, confidential application. We help feet creators build a paid page where the same buyers subscribe and keep buying, then run daily promotion and 24/7 chatting so your income grows every week. We reply within 24 hours, no fees to apply.
Yes, and it is a real market with steady demand. Selling photos of your own feet is legal in all 50 US states, takes no special skill, and needs nothing more than a phone and decent light. There is a large base of foot buyers who pay for fresh content, themed sets, and custom requests, and most of them never expect to see your face.
It is also one of the most private ways to earn online. Feet pics are the original faceless content, so you can build a brand and a paying audience without ever showing who you are. That makes it a common first step for people who want to test the waters of selling pictures of yourself before deciding whether to go further. If anonymity is your main concern, our guide to faceless OnlyFans covers staying private in detail.
Here is the honest part most guides skip. The money is easy to start but hard to scale on one-off sales alone. A single photo sells once. The sellers who earn real money build a repeat audience, which is exactly what the rest of this page is about: where to sell, what to charge, how to stay safe, and how to turn a one-time sale into a buyer who comes back every week.
Pick a platform that protects you. Dedicated feet sites are the safest start; a paid page is where the income compounds.
The most popular dedicated feet marketplace and the easiest start for a beginner with no audience. It has a built-in base of verified buyers, ID verification on both sides, and secure payments. A basic seller plan runs about $4.99 a month or $14.99 a year, and the platform takes a 20% commission, with weekly payouts once you clear the minimum.
A fast-growing feet-only site with a large buyer database, the option to sell exclusive content, and the freedom to set your own prices. Like other dedicated platforms, it handles payments and verification so you are not exchanging money or files through risky direct messages.
The highest-ceiling option, because instead of one-off sales you build a page where the same foot fans subscribe and keep buying. You keep 80% and can sell subscriptions, pay-per-view sets, custom clips, and a tip menu to the same audience every week. This is where feet sellers go from pocket money to real recurring income.
Smaller feet-specific marketplaces that work as extra storefronts once you have a portfolio. Listing on more than one site widens your buyer pool, but each is still a one-sale-at-a-time model rather than a recurring subscription base.
X and Reddit allow adult content and links, so creators use them to post teaser shots and drive foot fans to a paid page or marketplace. Promotion is what fills any of these platforms, since none of them surface you to buyers on their own.
Selling straight through Instagram, Snapchat, or a payment app with no platform in the middle is where almost every scam happens. Use a site that verifies buyers, holds payment, and lets you block bad actors. The small commission buys you real protection.
Whichever you choose, you still have to bring the buyers. None of these platforms shows you to fans automatically, so promotion does the heavy lifting. See how to promote a creator page for the channels that actually drive paying traffic.
You can be set up in an afternoon. Get these six steps right and you launch with a profile that looks active and trustworthy instead of empty.
Choose a dedicated feet site or an OnlyFans page, and sign up under a stage name with a separate email. Never use your real name. This single habit is the foundation of staying anonymous.
Reputable platforms verify that you are 18 or older. This protects you and keeps your account in good standing. Your ID is used for verification only and is never shown to buyers.
Shoot 12 to 20 clean, well-lit photos before you open. A few angles, a couple of themes, and good lighting make your profile look established on day one, which is what turns browsers into buyers.
Start around $5 to $15 a photo and $10 to $25 a bundle. Price to get your first reviews, not to get rich on day one. You will raise prices once you have demand and a reputation.
Add a watermark to any preview so it cannot be resold, and only send full-resolution files after payment clears on the platform. Keep your face, tattoos, and recognizable backgrounds out of frame.
Post teaser shots on X and Reddit and link to your page. This is the step that actually brings buyers. A page with no promotion stays quiet no matter how good the photos are.
Pricing trips up most beginners. Charge too little and you signal low quality and attract the buyers who haggle and cause problems. Charge too much with no reviews and nobody bites. The fix is to start in a sensible beginner range, earn reviews, then raise prices steadily.
Customs are where the real margin is, because the buyer is paying for exactly what they asked for and you can charge a premium for it. The same logic powers a paid page: instead of selling one photo once, you sell sets, customs, and a tip menu to the same fans on repeat. Our guides to selling customs and pricing a creator page go deeper on getting paid what your content is worth.
Honest numbers beat hype. Most new sellers make $100 to $500 in their first month while they build a portfolio and a few reviews. Steady sellers commonly land between $200 and $2,000 a month, and the top earners who treat it like a business and sell repeat content reach $5,000 to $10,000 or more.
What separates the two ends is not better feet. It is two things: promotion that brings a steady stream of new buyers, and a repeat-buyer model so you are not starting from zero every sale. A one-off marketplace sale earns once. A subscriber on a paid page buys a set this week, a custom next week, and tips on top. That is why the highest feet earners eventually run a paid page, and it is the exact gap an agency exists to close. For the wider picture on creator income, see how much OnlyFans models make.
This is the part that makes feet content appealing, and it is completely normal. The platforms do not require your face, and a lot of foot buyers actively prefer feet-only content with no face at all. You can build a recognizable brand, gather loyal buyers, and earn well while staying private from coworkers, family, and anyone who knows you.
Staying anonymous comes down to habits, not luck. Use a stage name and a dedicated email, keep your face, tattoos, and any identifying background out of frame, and never share personal details with a buyer. If you want to grow beyond a marketplace, the same privacy playbook applies to a paid page: geo-block your home area, watermark your work, and act fast on anyone reposting it. The guide to faceless OnlyFans walks through every privacy setting in detail.
The market has its share of time-wasters and scammers. These four habits cut almost all of the risk.
The most common scam is a "buyer" who wants a free sample to prove your quality, then vanishes or resells it. Real buyers pay. A simple reply works: you do not send free samples, but your portfolio shows the quality. Then block anyone who keeps pushing.
Direct sales over Instagram, Snapchat, or Telegram have no payment protection and attract chargebacks, fake screenshots, and hackers. Keep the sale on a platform that verifies buyers and holds the money until the deal is done.
Use a stage name, a separate email, and a username that is not tied to your real identity. Only ever share what a transaction needs. Never send anything with your face, an ID, or a recognizable tattoo, room, or address in the frame.
Watermark previews so they cannot be resold under someone else name, and send full-resolution files only after payment clears. Reverse image search your own work now and then to catch anyone reposting it.
Yes. The IRS treats money from selling feet pics as self-employment income. If you earn $400 or more in a year, you are required to report it and pay self-employment tax on top of regular income tax. You do not have to spell out that you sell feet pictures; a general business category like digital content creation or online photography sales is enough for your return.
The practical move is to track your income from day one and set aside roughly a quarter to a third of it for taxes, especially once you cross a few thousand dollars a year. This is not tax advice, and a CPA is worth it once you are earning consistently. For a full US breakdown of write-offs and quarterly payments, see our guide to creator taxes.
Marketplaces are a great way to start, but they cap out. You find a buyer, you make one sale, and then you go find another buyer. The sellers who break past a few hundred dollars a month do one thing differently: they turn buyers into subscribers. A paid page lets the same foot fans pay a monthly fee, unlock pay-per-view sets, order customs, and tip from a menu, week after week, so your income builds on itself instead of resetting with every sale.
That is the work FansPromo runs for feet creators. We help you set up a private, anonymous paid page, then handle the two things that actually grow it: daily promotion across the platforms that allow adult links, and a 24/7 chatting team that answers buyers, runs your tip menu, and sells customs in the inbox. You shoot the content and stay in full control of your account; we build the recurring machine around it. If you are weighing where to put your effort, our breakdown of how to make money on a creator page shows where the income really comes from. Creators also use a directory like the OnlyFinds creator directory to get discovered by new fans once their page is live.
We run the parts that turn a beginner seller into a creator with steady, recurring income, and we are paid only as a share of what you earn.
We help you build a paid page under a stage name, with geo-blocking and watermarking, so you earn while staying invisible to anyone who knows you.
We post teasers and drive foot fans to your page every day across the platforms that allow adult links, so a steady stream of new buyers keeps arriving.
Most income is made in the messages. Our chatting team answers buyers around the clock, runs your tip menu, and closes custom requests while you sleep.
We turn one-time buyers into subscribers who pay monthly and keep buying sets, customs, and tips, so your income compounds instead of resetting.
We watermark your work, monitor for reposts, and file takedowns, so your feet content stays yours and is not resold for free.
You stay the owner of your account and keep the large majority of your earnings. We grow your page; we never take it over.
New to all of this? Start with OnlyFans for beginners.
Yes. Selling photos of your own feet is legal in all 50 US states. Feet are not classed as an explicit body part, so the sale is treated like selling any other digital content, as long as you are 18 or older and the photos are of you. The income is taxable, which is the main legal obligation to keep in mind.
Most new sellers make $100 to $500 in their first month, and steady sellers commonly earn $200 to $2,000 a month. Top sellers who build a real audience and sell repeat content reach $5,000 to $10,000 or more. Per image, prices run from about $5 to $100. Earnings depend far more on promotion and repeat buyers than on the photos themselves.
As a beginner, charge around $5 to $15 for a single photo and $10 to $25 for a small bundle, then raise prices as you gain reviews and demand. Short videos start higher, roughly $10 to $25, and customs command a premium: $15 to $50 a photo and $30 to $100 or more per custom video. Never price at rock bottom, since it signals low quality and draws problem buyers.
For a beginner with no following, FeetFinder is the easiest start thanks to its verified buyer base and built-in safety. For the highest long-term income, OnlyFans wins because the same fans subscribe and keep buying instead of paying once. Many creators list on a feet marketplace to find buyers, then move loyal ones to an OnlyFans page for recurring sales.
No. Selling feet pics anonymously is the norm, and most sellers never show their face. The platforms do not require it, and many foot buyers prefer feet-only content anyway. A stage name, a separate email, and keeping your face, tattoos, and background out of frame let you earn while staying private from people you know.
Sell only on platforms that verify buyers, hold payment, and let you block scammers, never through social media DMs. Refuse free-sample requests, get paid before you send full-resolution files, watermark previews, and never share personal details. The dedicated feet sites exist specifically to protect sellers, which is worth their small commission.
Yes. The IRS treats feet-pic income as self-employment income. If you earn $400 or more in a year you must report it and pay self-employment tax. You do not have to describe the product as feet pictures; a general category like digital content creation or online photography sales is fine. Track your income and set aside roughly a quarter of it for taxes.
Pick a dedicated platform like FeetFinder or an OnlyFans page, sign up under a stage name, and verify your age. Take 12 to 20 clean, well-lit photos to launch with so your profile looks active, set beginner prices, and add a watermark to previews. Then promote on platforms that allow adult links, like X and Reddit, since no site sends you buyers on its own.
You shoot the content and stay anonymous; we build the page, run the promotion, and handle the chatting that turns one-off buyers into subscribers. Apply free, no fees and no obligation, with a reply within 24 hours.
Apply nowCaptions, bios, DM scripts, tip menus, pricing and more, generated in seconds. No card needed.