New York OnlyFans Creators by Borough, City and Scene

Written by the FanFind editorial team

Updated: June 10, 2026

New York City spent $87.2 million on OnlyFans in 2025, more than any other city on earth. Manhattan alone accounted for $38 million of that total, 2.3 times the city average and 2.7 times the New York state average. The city grew at 6.23 percent year on year, faster than Los Angeles and the national average. In absolute dollars, no city on any continent comes close.

The boroughs contribute to that total in ways that are worth understanding if you're looking for a specific kind of creator. Brooklyn's character is genuinely distinct from Manhattan's. The Bronx produces creators whose identities are rooted in that borough in ways that don't surface in any other US city's data. The multicultural demographics of Queens and the working-class creative culture of each borough shape a creator market that is diverse in a way that reflects what New York actually is rather than what it looks like in a tourism brochure.

New York City's spending weight

Manhattan's $38 million is the single largest borough figure, but the full borough breakdown tells a more complete story. Queens spent $15.9 million, Brooklyn $14.6 million, the Bronx $6.3 million and Staten Island $3.1 million, with an additional $23.8 million attributed to the city but not pinned to a specific borough through OnlyGuider's methodology. New York state as a whole spent $167.1 million in 2025, meaning roughly $80 million sits outside the five boroughs across Long Island, Yonkers and the rest of upstate.

The per-capita figure for Manhattan, at approximately $230,000 per 10,000 residents, reflects a combination of high disposable income, a digitally native population, and proximity to an entertainment and media industry that has normalised platform spending in a way that does not exist to the same degree in any other neighbourhood in the country.

New York by area

OnlyGuider published full borough-level and upstate city-level spending data for 2025. The table includes confirmed totals alongside per-capita figures where available. The per-capita column is where the real story is: Buffalo outspends every NYC borough except Manhattan on a residents-per-subscriber basis, ranking 14th nationally.

Area 2025 total Per 10,000 residents National per-capita rank
Manhattan$38M~$230K est.Top 20 nationally
Queens$15.9M~$69K est.
Brooklyn$14.6M~$54K est.
Buffalo$6.8M$244K#14 nationally
Bronx$6.3M~$43K est.
Rochester, NY$3.2M$155K#32 nationally
Staten Island$3.1M~$63K est.
Syracuse$2.3M$160K#29 nationally
Yonkers$1.8M$59K#156 nationally

Long Island and Albany have no published city-level breakdown. New York state total is $167.1M; the roughly $80M not accounted for in the table above sits across Long Island, Albany and the rest of upstate.

Buffalo's $244K per 10,000 residents places it above Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx and Staten Island by a wide margin. Bills and Sabres city, post-industrial working class, and among the country's most intense per-capita OnlyFans markets.

New York's highest-engagement pages

Creator Borough/Location Known for OF likes Price
VictoriaNYCSolo content, @asian.candy, 834K Instagram1.3MFREE
Emarr BNYC"Pretty Girl Fat Like A City Girl," 1.2M Instagram767K$3.24
RouxNYC"NYC CEO of oversharing," @nouxroux715K$11.25
Justine MirditaNYCAlbanian/Puerto Rican, 1.6M Instagram614KFREE
Asa AkiraNYCAVN Hall of Fame, Japanese-American, 2.1M Instagram545K$12.99
RyanNYCSolo content, @quadzilla86428K$5
Aniela VerbinNYC@yellz0, @milkymansion, TikTok crossover383K$11
Kiara MiaNew YorkSolo content, platform-native358KFREE
Nathan BroskiNYCMale creator, 324K OF vs 2.3K Instagram324K$6.35
MyaBrooklyn"Brooklyn NY," curvy, 1.4M Instagram319K$10
Bo AbrlicNYCFree page, 2.9M Instagram299KFREE
ChelaBronxVet tech, wildlife rehabber, falconer, 2.9M Instagram290K$5

Victoria's 1.3 million page likes on a free subscription is the largest OF audience of any confirmed New York creator in this data. No city or borough is specified in her Feedspot record beyond New York City.

Manhattan

Manhattan's creator market is shaped by its proximity to every industry that generates celebrity, notoriety and existing audiences: fashion, music, publishing, film, television, comedy and the adult entertainment industry proper. Creators here arrive with larger Instagram followings and more professional infrastructure than in most US cities, and the subscriber base is dense enough and wealthy enough to absorb premium pricing.

Asa Akira has 2.1 million Instagram followers and 545,700 OF likes at $12.99. She is Japanese-American, born in Manhattan, and is among the most globally recognised adult performers of the past two decades. She is in the AVN Hall of Fame. Her NYC identity is not incidental: she is one of the few creators in any US market whose origin story and professional career are both rooted in the same city where she continues to operate. Her bio is two words: "Ambassador. NYC."

Roux, @nouxroux, has 715,200 OF likes at $11.25 and 312,400 Instagram followers. Her bio reads "NYC CEO of oversharing. Welcome to my little corner of the internet where I don't hold back." The self-aware New York media voice, the podcast vocabulary and oversharing-as-brand identity, is a specific Manhattan cultural product. Justine Mirdita has 1.6 million Instagram followers and 614,900 OF likes on a free page. Her bio lists Albanian and Puerto Rican heritage, two immigrant communities with strong New York roots, and her content identity is shaped by both.

Aniela Verbin, @yellz0, has 799,900 Instagram followers and 383,400 OF likes at $11. She is a member of @milkymansion, a collective that has produced several major crossover creators and represents the managed, multi-platform New York creator operation: TikTok, Instagram, OF and brand partnerships running in parallel.

The boroughs

Mya's bio reads "Hiii, I'm Mya, a curvy 5'5. Mya, Brooklyn NY." She has 1.4 million Instagram followers and 319,900 OF likes at $10. The Brooklyn identity is in the bio, the flag is in the bio, the borough pride is the brand. Jada Redd, @starnbarbie, describes herself as a "Bajan Brooklynite," Barbadian and Brooklynite in the same breath, a specifically Brooklyn immigrant identity that does not exist in any other borough.

Chela is listed in the Feedspot data as located in the Bronx. She has 2.9 million Instagram followers and 290,400 OF likes at $5. Her bio: "Vet tech, Wildlife rehabber, Falconer." She is a licensed falconer who rehabilitates wildlife and works as a veterinary technician, and she has built 2.9 million Instagram followers from that combination of professional identities before opening an OF page. Falconry in the Bronx is not a category that exists elsewhere in any creator database. Replace the Bronx with any other city and the context collapses entirely.

Upstate New York

Upstate New York is not a single market. It is a collection of post-industrial mid-sized cities with genuinely different characters that produce different creator profiles and different search patterns from the five boroughs.

Rochester, New York, not Rochester, Minnesota, which generates its own separate OF searches, spent $3.2 million in 2025, ranking 32nd nationally by per-capita spending at $155,000 per 10,000 residents. A mid-size post-industrial city of around 200,000 people, it carries the legacy of Kodak, Xerox and Bausch and Lomb, a photographic and optical industry heritage that left behind a city with a strong creative and arts culture even as the manufacturing economy declined. The upstate Rochester creator market skews heavily independent: no agency infrastructure, self-managed pages, pricing that reflects the local cost of living rather than Manhattan premium rates.

Buffalo sits at the western end of the state on Lake Erie and the Canadian border. Its residents spent $6.8 million on OnlyFans in 2025, placing it 14th nationally by per-capita spending at $244,000 per 10,000 residents. That puts Buffalo ahead of Queens, Brooklyn, the Bronx and Staten Island on a per-capita basis, and in the same range as Manhattan. The per-capita intensity is consistent with its creator market character: direct, unpretentious and priced for local audiences, but backed by a subscriber base that is genuinely, statistically engaged.

Syracuse spent $2.3 million in 2025, ranking 29th nationally per capita at $160,000 per 10,000 residents, higher than Rochester despite lower total spending, reflecting its denser population relative to its size. It is a university city in central New York with a large student creator population driven by Syracuse University and surrounding colleges. The student market there cycles with enrollment and operates differently from either the NYC celebrity crossover or the western NY working-class independent creator.

Albany is the state capital, a government and higher education town with a smaller creator footprint than the other upstate cities but steady demand from a professional workforce that is resident rather than tourist.

Long Island, which runs east from the city through Nassau and Suffolk counties, is neither NYC nor upstate. Its creator market draws from the suburban professional population in the western counties and the summer wealth concentration in the Hamptons and the North Fork further east. Long Island is worth searching as a distinct term because residents there specifically identify with it rather than with the city.

What New York produces

The city's size means every niche has enough critical mass to sustain serious creators, but what distinguishes New York is who those creators are. The entertainment industry pipeline produces celebrities with pre-built audiences. The immigrant communities of Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx produce creators whose ethnic and cultural identities are genuine rather than performed. And the professional class produces creators whose day jobs are part of the brand rather than hidden from it.

Claire Northfield has 292,800 OF likes on a free page with 56,000 Instagram followers. Her bio lists: "Commercial ASEL, AMEL, AGI, CFI, CFII, sUAS. Lesson plans & study notes." She is a licensed commercial pilot and certified flight instructor who sells aviation study materials alongside OF content. The dual identity attracted mainstream media coverage that drove subscriber discovery through both aviation and adult content audiences, and her free page has nearly 300,000 likes.

Nathan Broski, @broskithebull, has 324,700 OF likes at $6.35 and 2,300 Instagram followers, a ratio of one Instagram follower for every 141 OF page likes. His bio says "Award winning international. This is my insta profile where I'm actually wearing clothes." Every subscriber found him through the platform itself. New York is large enough to sustain a male creator at that scale with almost no external presence.

Emarr B has 767,700 OF likes at $3.24 and 1.2 million Instagram followers. Her bio says "Pretty Girl Fat Like A City Girl." The "city girl" phrasing is New York specific: it carries cultural weight tied to specific New York music and social media scenes that do not translate to other US cities without losing meaning.

The borough spread is real. A subscriber searching specifically for a Bronx creator is looking for something genuinely different from a Manhattan or Brooklyn search, and the data supports all three returning distinct results.

Common questions

Manhattan's $38 million in 2025 OnlyFans spending is the highest attributed to a single sub-city geographic unit in the OnlyGuider dataset, which covers 300-plus cities globally. At 2.3 times the city average and 2.7 times the statewide average, it is not just New York's leader but a genuine outlier relative to any comparable dense urban area.

The Feedspot data confirms borough-specific creator identities. Chela is explicitly a Bronx creator with a Bronx-specific professional identity. Mya identifies as Brooklyn in her bio. Jada Redd's "Bajan Brooklynite" is a Brooklyn immigrant identity. The demographics of each borough produce different backgrounds, niches and price points in ways that are not interchangeable.

Rochester, Buffalo, Syracuse and Albany each produce active creator communities that are distinct from the NYC metro. Rochester attracts the most consistent upstate OF searches. All four skew toward independent, self-managed creators priced for local audiences rather than at metropolitan premium rates. Long Island is a separate suburban market east of the city.

Borough, upstate or state

Borough matters here more than in any other US market. Manhattan searches return a high concentration of professional-operation creators with large existing social audiences. Brooklyn returns a more multicultural working-class creative mix. The Bronx is a smaller but distinct market. Queens has a significant Asian and Latino creator community worth searching specifically.

Rochester NY, Buffalo, Syracuse and Albany are all worth searching by city rather than filtering through the state page.

The creators FanFind features are verified and organised by category. The national USA finder covers all New York markets alongside the rest of the country.

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