Canada spent $354.8 million on OnlyFans in 2025, placing it third globally behind the United States and the United Kingdom. That total grew 5.17 percent year on year, outpacing both the US and UK, making Canada one of the fastest-growing large markets on the platform. Canadians spent $88,711 per 10,000 residents, placing the country second in the world by per-capita spending, tied with Australia and behind only Finland. The country has 175,000 active creators, roughly 45,761 per million in population, one of the highest creation rates of any country.
Three professional athletes appear in the Feedspot data for Canada. A former professional ice hockey goalie. An Olympic pole vaulter who won bronze. A Winter Olympian speed skater whose handle is @SPEED_SKATER. Canada is the only English-speaking country in this data where the national sport, ice hockey, has produced an OF creator with over a million followers.
Canada's spending position
Toronto is Canada's largest city for OnlyFans spending, with residents spending nearly $32 million in 2025, more than all other Canadian cities combined. Vancouver's per-capita figure makes it one of the world's most engaged markets relative to population, according to OnlyGuider's CEO. That combination places two Canadian cities at different ends of the same story: Toronto leads in absolute dollars and creator volume, Vancouver leads in how deeply its population engages with the platform.
Canada's 5.17 percent year-on-year growth distinguishes it from the other mature English-speaking markets. The US, UK and Australia all grew at 1 to 2 percent. Canada's rate suggests a market still expanding its subscriber base rather than plateauing, which explains why a country of 38 million ranks third globally in total spending rather than much further down the list.
The median price among Canadian creators in this data is $12.99, the highest median subscription price of any English-speaking market in the data. Free pages represent around 24 percent of the confirmed creator pool, a rate between Australia's 5 percent and the UK's higher proportion. Canada prices at a premium relative to its English-speaking peers.
Canada's national leaderboard
| Creator | City | Known for | OF likes | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bels | Canada | Solo content, @urfavbellabby | 4.3M | $11.11 |
| Caireen Kinley | Vancouver/BC | Outdoor Canadian GFE, platform-native | 3.3M | FREE |
| Renee Winter | Canada/Toronto | Two-page creator, comedian/actress | 2.9M free + 800K paid | FREE / $3 |
| Jen Brett | Canada | "Your fav lil nugget canadian," 1.3M Instagram | 2.3M | $13.99 |
| Isla Moon | Canada | Fishing host @reel.rivals.tv | 1.5M | $12.99 |
| Mikayla Demaiter | Canada | Former professional ice hockey goalie, 3.1M Instagram | 1.2M | FREE |
| Effy | Canada | Twitch partner and content creator | 1.2M | $9.99 |
| Louisa Khovanski | Toronto | "Writing my digital novel," 5.1M Instagram | 882K | $15.99 |
| Jesse Switch | Toronto | Solo content, "Howdy Partner" | 812K | $12 |
| Angellica Good | Montreal | Trans creator, MTL, @tsangellica | 520K | FREE |
| Freckled Spirit | Alberta | Solo content, platform-native | 243K | $10.99 |
| Alexandra Ianculescu | Calgary | Winter Olympian speed skater, @SPEED_SKATER | 196K | $10.69 |
Bels, @urfavbellabby, at 4.3 million page likes is the largest OF audience associated with a confirmed Canadian creator in the data. No city is listed in Feedspot's records. The same is true of Jen Brett, Isla Moon, Effy and several others in the multi-million range. Canada's biggest pages are national in identity rather than city-identified.
Toronto
Toronto's $32 million makes it Canada's undisputed spending leader, and its creator market reflects that dominance. The city's creator list is the most demographically varied of any Canadian city, which is consistent with Toronto being one of the world's most diverse cities by the number of languages spoken, with over 200 in daily use.
Louisa Khovanski has 5.1 million Instagram followers and 882,000 OF page likes at $15.99. Her bio reads "Toronto, writing my digital novel." She is simultaneously the most socially connected creator in the Toronto list and one of the most followed Canadians on OF by absolute engagement. Jesse Switch, @jesseswitchsyke, has 812,000 OF likes at $12 and a bio that says "Howdy Partner." A Western-coded identity from Canada's largest and most cosmopolitan city is the kind of unexpected combination that only appears in markets with enough creator volume to produce genuinely strange outliers.
Renee Winter runs two OF pages simultaneously. Her free page, @redheadwinterfree, has 2.9 million likes and a bio that reads "Single mom with a sense of humor. Yes, I'm the fish girl." Her paid page, @imredheadwinter, has 800,000 likes at three dollars and describes her as "Comedian and actress. Freshly single." The two bios are not just different prices but different personas, and both have enormous audiences. The self-deprecating Canadian humour in "the fish girl" persona runs through both in a way that is distinct from the outdoor lifestyle brand in Vancouver or the Francophone arts identity in Montreal.
Alysha Newman has 717,000 Instagram followers and 233,000 OF page likes at $12.99. Her bio leads with: "Raise the Bar, Wherever you go. Olympic Bronze Medalist. CWG Gold. 3xOlympian. 5xAll-American. Record Holder." She is a Canadian Olympic athlete competing in pole vault who opened an OF page. She is still competing.
Rahaf Mohammed, @rahafcaofficial, has 512,000 Instagram followers, 87,600 OF likes and charges $29.99. Her bio says "Toronto. Published author of REBEL available on Amazon!" In 2019, she was a Saudi woman who barricaded herself in a Bangkok hotel room, live-tweeted her situation seeking asylum, and became a globally covered news story. She reached Canada via the UNHCR refugee process. She is now a Toronto resident, human rights advocate, published author and OF creator. No other creator in this data carries anything like that origin story.
Liberty Valentine, @imlibbyv, describes herself as "your trans raver party girl from Toronto, Canada. I quit my corporate marketing job to do OnlyFans." She has 123,800 OF likes at $19.45. Toronto's trans creator community has visible depth across the data, with Liberty Valentine the most prominent example of the specific Toronto version: urban, professional-background, party-adjacent, explicitly local.
Vancouver
Caireen Kinley has 3.3 million OnlyFans page likes on a free subscription with 8,400 Instagram followers. She has posted 15,200 times, produced 14,000 photos and 3,000 videos. Her bio: "I'm Caireen, your favourite Canadian girl next door. I loveee exploring fetishes with my fans! When I'm not on here, I'm busy being a mom, hanging out with my dogs, working out and being outside like a true West Coast girl. I love hiking, mountain biking, skiing and camping!" She built 3.3 million in OF engagement by describing a life that is specifically and recognisably British Columbian: Pacific outdoor lifestyle, mountains, dogs, wine snobbery. Her Instagram following is smaller than many micro-influencers. Every subscriber found her through the platform itself.
Bianca, @pinuppixietm, with 855,000 Instagram followers and 160,000 OF likes at $7.99, describes herself as a "Cybernetic x Vintage Icon," an alt-fashion digital aesthetic with no outdoor component. She is the counterpart to Caireen within the same city: large social following converted to a smaller OF audience, versus no social presence and a massive platform-native one. Both exist in Vancouver because the city is large enough and diverse enough to sustain both models.
Meetii Kalher has 437,700 Instagram followers and 23,200 OF likes at $30. Her bio says "I am your Indo-Canadian Punjabi Girl Meetii Kalher." Vancouver's large South Asian community produces creators who market that identity explicitly in the same way Toronto's diversity does broadly and Montreal's French-Canadian community does linguistically. Piper Blush describes herself as "Art Model, Muse, Content Creator. French-Canadian" and is Vancouver-based. The French-Canadian identity travels: both Piper Blush and Vanessa Jolie, "Your French Canadian sweetheart. Vancouver based," are explicitly Francophone creators who live in BC rather than Quebec.
Montreal
Montreal is the only major Francophone city outside France where a visible OnlyFans creator community produces content in French. It is also the only Canadian city in this data where that identity is the product rather than a demographic footnote. Kiaira Morand's bio reads "22 ans | Montréal | Une Québécoise qui te fait rire et…," meaning a Quebecoise who makes you laugh. Samuel Po's OF handle is @frenchcanadian. These are not incidental labels. They are the brand.
Angellica Good, @tsangellica, has 520,600 OF page likes on a free subscription with 266,400 Instagram followers and describes herself as "Real Life Barbie. 100% Princess. Canada. MTL." She is trans and is Montreal's most engaged creator by OF audience. Evie Love, @lovelyeviexoxo, a trans woman whose OF is also free, has 606,500 likes nationally. Canada's trans creator community appears across multiple cities but Montreal's contribution is notable: Angellica Good's 520,000 free audience built in a market with a smaller total population than Toronto reflects how the city's creative and LGBTQ communities overlap.
Malik Delgaty is a male adult performer confirmed in Montreal with 263,500 OF likes at $19.99 and 361,900 Instagram followers. He is one of the few male creators with substantial OF engagement in the Canada data, and his Montreal location connects to the city's adult film production history, which predates the OF era.
Montreal's winter is a genuine creative force. The city runs culture underground from November through April: the laneways, the basement bars, the studio apartments with their distinctive indoor light. Multiple Montreal creators produce content that reflects this: more carefully lit, more interior-focused, more influenced by arts and fashion than by outdoor lifestyle. That is a real contrast to Vancouver's Pacific aesthetics and Toronto's commercial scale. Helene Boudreau, with 210,800 OF likes at $20 and 390,000 Instagram followers, describes herself as "The yearbook girl. World traveler." The bilingual cultural crossover between English and French runs through the Montreal market in ways that produce content with a specific character.
Alberta
Alexandra Ianculescu's OF handle is @SPEED_SKATER. She is a Winter Olympian who competed in speed skating and is now an Olympic Sport Broadcaster. She is based in Calgary and has 503,500 Instagram followers with 196,800 OF likes at $10.69. That handle predates whatever expectation you might bring to an Alberta-based creator search, and it is the most specific example of how the Canadian athlete-to-OF pipeline works: the sport in the handle, the credentials in the bio, the audience built from both.
Calgary's oil wealth creates a premium subscriber base that the city's creator market prices accordingly. The average household income in Calgary is among the highest of any Canadian city, and Alberta's energy sector economy brings a young professional workforce with disposable income. Creators here price at or above the Canadian median with less reliance on free pages than Montreal or national creators.
Edmonton, ninety minutes north, runs a different dynamic. The University of Alberta anchors a large student population, and Fort McMurray's oil sands operations produce a subscriber base that is heavily male, seasonally employed, and with high disposable income relative to the city's cost of living. Edmonton creators target this subscriber type more directly than creators in other Canadian cities. Freckled Spirit is an Alberta-based creator with 243,300 OF likes at $10.99 and 3,400 Instagram followers, one of the more extreme platform-native ratios in the Alberta data.
The Canadian identity on OnlyFans
Canada has three OF creators who were professional athletes before they opened pages: Mikayla Demaiter, a former goalie in the PHF, the main Canadian professional women's hockey league, with 3.1 million Instagram followers and 1.2 million OF likes; Alysha Newman, a three-time Olympian and Olympic bronze medalist in pole vault; and Alexandra Ianculescu, a Winter Olympian in speed skating whose handle is @SPEED_SKATER. That is more Olympians and professional athletes than any comparable English-speaking market. Canada's sports culture, its professional women's hockey league, and its Olympic programme have all produced visible crossovers to the platform.
Mikayla Demaiter's bio says "hockey goalie canadian." Three words, in that order. Ice hockey is Canada's national sport in a way that has no direct equivalent in other English-speaking markets, and a former professional goalie describing herself as a hockey goalie first is a specifically Canadian act of self-definition.
Elsewhere in the data, the Canadian identity gets expressed as self-deprecating humour, Renee Winter's "fish girl" free page, as outdoor lifestyle, Caireen's hiking-skiing-camping West Coast brand, and as explicit national labelling. Clarus Polaris's bio notes that "maple syrup belongs on bacon" as a declaration of nationality, alongside her cosplay and neurodivergent creator identity. The flag appears in hundreds of Canadian creator bios, in the same way British creators use the Union Jack, but the accompanying content ranges from very Canadian, Caireen's mountains and dogs, to very urban, Toronto's entertainment industry crossovers, to culturally multilingual, Montreal's French-first creators. Canada's OF identity is less unified than the UK's or Australia's partly because the country itself is less culturally monolithic.
Common questions
Canada's high per-capita figure reflects strong digital payment infrastructure, high English-language platform literacy, and a population concentrated in large cities with above-average incomes. The country also has a younger demographic profile in its major urban centres than comparable European markets, and those cities, Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal, drive spending disproportionately relative to their share of the national population. The 5.17 percent year-on-year growth suggests the market is still building rather than mature.
All three are confirmed in Feedspot data: Mikayla Demaiter, a former professional ice hockey goalie, Alysha Newman, a three-time Olympian and Olympic bronze medalist in pole vault from Toronto, and Alexandra Ianculescu, a Winter Olympian speed skater from Calgary. All three retain their sporting identities as part of their creator brand.
A meaningful proportion of Montreal creators produce content in French, which is a specific draw for French-speaking subscribers across Quebec, the rest of Canada, and France. No other major city in North America produces a comparable volume of French-language OF content. Creators like Kiaira Morand post explicitly in French. Samuel Po's handle is @frenchcanadian. The identity is the product, not just the location.
Where the Canadian market is
Toronto has the highest volume and widest niche spread of any Canadian city, making it the default starting point for most Canadian searches. Vancouver is worth searching by city for the outdoor Pacific lifestyle brand, and by niche for its Asian creator community. Montreal is the right destination for Francophone content and for the arts-influenced underground character that the city's creator market reflects. Calgary and Edmonton both respond to their city names specifically, with different price points and subscriber dynamics worth understanding before subscribing.
The national Canadian page covers creators who identify broadly as Canadian without a confirmed city, and includes some of the largest audiences in the data, among them Bels at 4.3 million, Jen Brett at 2.3 million and Mikayla Demaiter at 1.2 million.
The creators FanFind features are verified and organised by category. The Canada finder covers the full national market.
