How To Remove OnlyFans Leaks in 2026

As an OnlyFans creator, your most valuable asset is exclusivity. Whether fans cross the paywall depends more on exclusivity than marketing. Very few people will pay for content they can get for free. That's why removing OnlyFans leaks quickly and effectively is crucial. Especially when over 2 million people search for leaked OnlyFans content every single month.
Remove OnlyFans Leaks from Google
The simplest step any creator can take is to deindex their leaks from Google. Once your leaks are no longer visible in search results, they become much less discoverable. Users would then have to go out of their way to search directly on leak sites, a hurdle most people won't bother to overcome.
Use Google’s DMCA form

Open Google's official DMCA form on their website.
Fill out the form. The most important fields are “copyrighted work” (describe that this is exclusive OnlyFans content), “authorised example of the work” (link to your page), and “Location of infringing material” (all links to leak sites). Important: For the last field, it doesn’t matter whether the links all come from the same domain or from multiple domains.
This means you can report multiple leaks from different sites at the same time.

In addition to Google, consider removing results from Yandex and Bing as well. This will help ensure you’re protected even on typical piracy-avoidance platforms and in the international market in general.
Cleaning leaks from the source
Removing content from Google is only half the job. The content is still live on the leak site itself. Anyone who visits the site directly can still see it. To actually get rid of it you need to contact the site that hosts it.
Find the site's contact information
Most leak sites have an abuse email or a DMCA/copyright form hidden somewhere on their page. Check the footer, the sidebar the "Contact" page, or the "Legal" page.

Send a DMCA takedown notice
Send the following template to the site's abuse email or fill it into their DMCA form:
Subject: DMCA Takedown Notice
To whom it may concern,
I am writing to request the immediate removal of copyrighted content hosted on your platform without my authorization.
I am the original creator and sole copyright holder of the content in question. The material is exclusively published on my page at [YOUR ONLYFANS/FANSLY LINK].
The following URLs on your platform contain unauthorized copies of my copyrighted work:
[LEAK URL 1] [LEAK URL 2] [LEAK URL 3]
I have a good faith belief that the use of this material is not authorized by me, my agent, or the law. I declare under penalty of perjury that the information in this notice is accurate and that I am the copyright owner.
I request that you remove or disable access to this material immediately.
[YOUR NAME OR STAGE NAME]
[YOUR EMAIL]
[DATE]
What if the site doesn't respond?
Many leak sites ignore DMCA notices. If you don't hear back within a few days, you can escalate.
Do a WHOIS lookup at https://www.whois.com/whois/ for the leak site's domain. This will show you the hosting provider and domain registrar. Send the same DMCA notice to their abuse contacts.

These companies have their own abuse policies and are often more responsive than the site operators themselves. Hosting providers in particular can take down content or even suspend the site's account if they receive valid DMCA complaints.
The scale of the problem
To put this into perspective: over 2 million people search for leaked OnlyFans content every month.

Source: Mangools.com
That number has been growing consistently since 2020 and shows no signs of slowing down. Every one of those searches is a potential subscriber choosing free content over your paywall.
If you want to know where your content is currently being shared, you can request a free leak report at agoradmca.com/report.
Frequently Asked Questions

Michel Agora is the founder of Agora DMCA and a specialist in digital rights enforcement. He works directly with content creators to find and remove leaked content across piracy sites, search engines, Telegram, and Discord. He advocates for creator privacy, security, and digital rights. His approach is practical and technology-driven, not theoretical.