Oklahoma OnlyFans Creators by City, Search Demand and Scene

Written by the FanFind editorial team

Updated: June 11, 2026

Tulsa generates six times more Oklahoma city-specific OnlyFans searches than Oklahoma City despite being the smaller of the two cities. Oklahoma City has 14 confirmed creators with 1.79 million combined OF page likes. Tulsa has 4 confirmed creators with 20,000 combined likes. The search pattern and the creator data point in opposite directions, and both are real.

The explanation is specific: Tulsa's creators embed city identity in their handles and bios. Oklahoma City's creators embed personal identity, professional roles and niche content. A subscriber searching for Tulsa finds the city name because the creators put it there. A subscriber searching Oklahoma City finds little because OKC creators don't use the city name that way: they use "Okie," "OKC," and their own handles as anchors.

Oklahoma's market

No Oklahoma city-level spending data has been published. The national average in 2025 was $77,334 per 10,000 residents. Oklahoma's oil and gas economy, military presence at Fort Sill and Tinker Air Force Base, and large state university populations at OU in Norman and OSU in Stillwater provide the economic substrate for the platform, but no published figures confirm the state's position in the national ranking. Tinker Air Force Base in Midwest City, adjacent to OKC, is one of the largest Air Force logistics and maintenance operations in the country, employing approximately 27,000 military and civilian personnel, a concentrated professional workforce that contributes to OKC's subscriber base in ways that don't generate city-specific searches.

The state has one specific characteristic that distinguishes its creator market from most: Oklahoma has 39 federally recognised Native American tribal nations headquartered within its borders, one of the highest concentrations in the country outside California and Alaska. Oklahoma means "land of the red people" in Choctaw. The Native American population here is approximately twice the national percentage, and that heritage shapes the cultural backdrop of the creator market in ways that are specific to this state.

Oklahoma's leading pages

Creator Location Known for OF likes Price
Chantel CookOklahoma CityMarried couple page, @thekinkycooks752K$20
Yamilleth FernandezOklahoma CityLatina, free page, 239K Instagram705KFREE
Rechelle MarieOklahoma CityOKC confirmed, free page94KFREE
Rikki BellOklahomaSolo content, 148K Instagram77K$10
Caitlyn BabyOklahoma CitySolo content, 120K Instagram51K$10
Big BlammerrOklahoma CitySolo content, @big.blammerr50K$11.99
Janay LaChelleOklahoma CityChemist, Army veteran, OKC Thunder40K$3
Karisma SmithOklahoma CityTrans creator, anime, size 12 feet22K$12
AloraOklahoma CityOver 40, Midwest Sweetheart15K$10
AllenOklahoma CityGay bear, interior designer, @oklahomaallen197514K$4.99
Landen BraggOklahoma CityMale, 800K TikTok, @kidbragg10KFREE
Anna FayeOklahoma CityStomach cancer survivor, 8th account10K$14.99

Chantel Cook and her spouse run Oklahoma's most-followed OF page as a couple, pricing at $20 and building 752,000 likes on a shared account. Yamilleth Fernandez's free page with 705,500 likes and a three-word bio is the state's second most-followed and markets through volume and accessibility rather than persona elaboration.

Rechelle Marie is confirmed OKC with 94,900 likes on a free page and 12,300 Instagram followers. Her platform-native ratio of roughly 8 to 1 reflects a creator whose audience grew primarily on-platform. She is Oklahoma's third most-followed creator and the highest-engagement free page after Yamilleth Fernandez. Rikki Bell has 77,700 OF likes at $10 with 148,500 Instagram followers, the largest Instagram following of any Oklahoma creator in the data relative to her OF engagement, indicating a social-first audience that converts at high but not extreme rates. Big Blammerr has 50,200 OF likes at $11.99 with 1,500 Instagram followers, a 33-to-1 platform-native ratio, confirmed OKC. Her bio says "Twitter @ 34k + Followers. Call me Da Da." Her audience built across Twitter and OF with almost no Instagram presence.

Oklahoma City

Oklahoma City's creator list runs across professional identities that are specifically Oklahoman in the way they combine.

Janay LaChelle has 40,200 OF likes at $3 with 104,600 Instagram followers. Her bio: "I deserve the world so I'm going to give it to myself. Hustler, Chemist. OKC THUNDER. Army Veteran." She is a professional chemist and an Army veteran who puts the OKC Thunder emoji sequence and championship trophy in her biography. The Thunder's presence in OKC functions as a civic identity marker in the same way that dominant sports franchises do in single-team cities: embedded in daily life rather than just sports consumption, and apparently natural to list alongside a science career and military service.

Heidi Jo Gilbert has 9,600 OF likes at $4.99 with 5,300 Instagram followers. Her bio: "Dreamworks Head of Story (The Wild Robot & Puss in Boots: The Last Wish), CalArts 07, Story Artist, Animator & high-fiver of Tom Brady." She is the Head of Story for two major DreamWorks Animation films, The Wild Robot, 2024, and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, 2022, is a CalArts graduate from 2007, and has an OF page from Oklahoma City. No creator in any state's confirmed data holds a more senior position at a major entertainment company. She prices at $4.99, among the more accessible price points in the OKC list.

Allen is confirmed Oklahoma City and describes himself as "a country boy born and raised in Oklahoma." He is an interior designer who has modelled for bear magazines and bear calendars. His handle is @oklahomaallen1975. He has 14,600 OF likes at $4.99. The gay bear subculture has a visible presence in OKC's creator data in a way that reflects the city's LGBTQ community, large enough to sustain its own creator tier.

Landen Bragg, @kidbragg, has 800,000 TikTok followers and a free OF page with 10,500 likes and 101,300 Instagram followers. His bio lists "Athlete, Model, Reel Creator, Reseller, Actor, Designer, Stylist" alongside his clothing brand @anicloak.co. He is a multi-platform male creator with an OKC base and a TikTok audience that is proportionally larger than his OF engagement, suggesting discovery is happening through short-form video rather than on-platform.

Anna Faye opens her bio with "This marks my 8th account." She has survived Celiac disease, Crohn's disease and stomach cancer, and has been removed from or forced to rebuild on multiple platforms. She has 10,400 OF likes at $14.99 with 68,200 Instagram followers. Ryynagade's bio identifies her as "a little Okie from OKC"; "Okie" is Oklahoma-specific slang for an Oklahoman, a term with a complex history as both a dismissal and a reclamation.

Tulsa

Tulsa leads Oklahoma in OF searching despite having fewer confirmed creators and far lower combined creator engagement than OKC. Four confirmed Tulsa creators account for 20,000 combined OF likes; OKC's 14 confirmed creators account for nearly 1.8 million. The search pattern points toward the city because Tulsa creators and their subscribers both use the city name explicitly in a way OKC's market does not.

Byntlie Kate is confirmed Tulsa. Her bio reads "MAMA. CNA." and notes her partner, whose Instagram handle is @918_crookham, using the 918 Tulsa area code as a local identity marker. She has 9,200 OF likes at $10.

Paige Pitts has 3,100 OF likes at $15.99 and identifies herself as "Tulsa, Oklahomie." Oklahomie is a portmanteau of Oklahoma and homie, Tulsa's specific local slang. Her bio adds "Support live music," a signal of Tulsa's independent music scene, which is one of the most active in Oklahoma. Ronnie Fillingim's handle is @thetulsaredbear: the city name is in the handle itself. He is a ginger bear creator with 2,500 OF likes at $3.29. Rebelle is a SuicideGirls model and Twitch streamer confirmed Tulsa with 5,300 OF likes at $14.99.

Tulsa's OF searching intensity reflects a city that has invested heavily in its own cultural identity independent of OKC. The city has the Gathering Place, a nationally recognised public park, a significant live music and arts scene, and the Greenwood District, the historic Black Wall Street, destroyed in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and now a focus of significant civic investment. Subscribers searching "tulsa onlyfans" are looking for something specifically Tulsa, and the creators who are found that way present themselves as specifically Tulsa.

Norman, Fort Sill and the college markets

Norman is home to the University of Oklahoma and generates its own college market. Lacey Parvin is confirmed Norman with 6,800 OF likes at $15 and 42,100 Instagram followers. Her bio confirms Norman and identifies herself as a sober mother of two. The University of Oklahoma's enrollment of roughly 30,000 students creates a college-market subscriber base that cycles seasonally.

Lawton is home to Fort Sill, one of the US Army's largest artillery and air defense installations. With roughly 30,000 soldiers and family members stationed there, Lawton's OF market reflects the same dynamic found in military-heavy markets: a concentrated population with reliable income, limited local entertainment alternatives, and a subscriber demographic that is young, predominantly male and regularly paid. Lawton's 50 combined keyword searches underrepresent the actual platform engagement from a military post of that size.

Stillwater, home to Oklahoma State University, produces its own college-market activity distinct from Norman. The OU-OSU rivalry is one of college football's most intense regional rivalries and the two cities share an educational economy that produces comparable platform activity.

The Oklahoma creator identity

Oklahoma's creator market is defined more by individual identity than by state or city branding. Chantel Cook and her spouse built 752,000 OF likes on a couple format at $20. Yamilleth Fernandez built 705,500 on a free page with a three-word bio. These are different strategies producing comparable scale in the same city.

The professional credentials in the OKC creator pool run further than in most state capitals of comparable size: a DreamWorks Head of Story, a professional chemist and Army veteran, an interior designer with bear magazine credits, a multi-platform creator with 800,000 TikTok followers. These are not credentials people invent. Oklahoma City produces creator identities that draw on what Oklahoma actually is: oil-country directness, military discipline and professional range in an affordable major city, rather than what a coastal entertainment economy might produce.

The "Okie" identity, Ryynagade's "little Okie from OKC," and the "Oklahomie" identity, Paige Pitts, Tulsa, both reclaim demonyms that were historically used pejoratively. They work as creator brands for the same reason they work as civic identities: directness and a specific refusal to apologise for where you're from.

Common questions

Tulsa creators embed the city name in their handles and bios: @thetulsaredbear, "Tulsa, Oklahomie," partner handles with the 918 area code. OKC creators use "Okie," "OKC" or personal identity anchors rather than the full city name. Subscribers searching "Tulsa onlyfans" find creators who specifically identified as Tulsa. Subscribers searching "Oklahoma City onlyfans" find less because OKC creators don't present that way.

Heidi Jo Gilbert is the Head of Story at DreamWorks Animation, credited on The Wild Robot, 2024, and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, 2022. She is a CalArts alumna from 2007 and has an active OF page priced at $4.99, confirmed Oklahoma City. She is the most senior entertainment industry professional to appear in any US state's confirmed creator data.

Fort Sill is one of the US Army's largest bases, with roughly 30,000 soldiers and family members at any given time. Military populations generate above-average OF spending: regular pay, limited local entertainment options, and a concentrated demographic produce consistent platform engagement. Lawton's keyword demand at 50 combined searches for a city of 91,000 reflects this military subscriber base rather than a civilian entertainment culture.

Tulsa, OKC or state

Oklahoma City is the starting point for the largest creator range in the state and rewards both state-level and city-level searching. Tulsa specifically rewards city-name searching for creators who embed local identity in their work. Norman rewards city-specific searching for the OU college market. Lawton's military market responds better to state-level searching than to city-specific filters, since Fort Sill creators tend to identify by state rather than by city.

The creators FanFind features are verified and organised by category. The national USA finder covers Oklahoma alongside every other state.

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