OnlyFans in Texas: Creators, Spending, and Where the Scene Really Is

Written by the FanFind editorial team

Updated: June 9, 2026

Texas takes up a lot of room in the OnlyFans world, and not only because of its size. The state has produced some of the platform's most recognizable creators, and its scene is spread across border towns, military cities and college campuses that each feel like a different place. It also moves an enormous amount of money. The story behind that spending, and the creators on the other side of it, is more interesting than any single list of names.

Texas is the second largest OnlyFans market in America

Texas trails only California in money spent on OnlyFans. Residents put an estimated 248.4 million dollars into the platform in 2025, close to a tenth of all US spending, which reached 2.63 billion dollars that year. That figure alone makes Texas one of the most important regions on the platform.

The more revealing number is the gap underneath it. Texas creators earned an estimated 160.9 million dollars in the same year, which means the state spent about 87.5 million dollars more than its own creators brought in. Texans are paying enthusiastically, but a large share of that money flows out of state to creators living somewhere else. That single fact shapes almost everything about the Texas scene, from which cities punch above their weight to which niches are genuinely homegrown.

The biggest Texas OnlyFans creators

Ranked by social following, which is the most reliable public measure of reach, these are the most prominent creators who identify as Texas based. Following counts are approximate and shift constantly.

# Creator Based Known for Following
1Tayler HillsTexasAn all natural, girl next door brandAbout 6.1M
2MarlenyAleelaynHoustonA teacher themed personaAbout 4.2M
3Juliette MichelleTexasA playful, approachable brandAbout 3.5M
4Kassidie KosaTexasEgirl style, free pageAbout 2.7M
5GraceTexasCouples contentAbout 2.1M
6Laura LuxAustinA horror, motorsport and gaming personalityAbout 2.1M
7Mystic BeingTexasA plus size, science fiction alt personaAbout 1.5M
8Shyla JenningsTexasAn established adult industry nameAbout 940K
9Cayleigh CouchSan AntonioFitness and physiqueAbout 751K
10Paulette AlexanderTexasEbony creatorAbout 690K

A few of these are worth knowing beyond the ranking. MarlenyAleelayn out of Houston has built one of the largest paid followings in the state on a recognizable persona. Laura Lux represents the Austin habit of leaning into a specific personality rather than a generic look. Cayleigh Couch is the clearest example of the fitness lane that runs through the military cities.

Raw follower count is not the only kind of fame. Jailyne Ojeda Ochoa, based in El Paso, became a genuine social media celebrity before moving into paid content and remains one of the best known names to come out of the Texas border, even though her current page following sits outside this top ten.

Texas creators by niche

The Texas scene has a clear center of gravity. Among the state's most followed creators, Latina creators are the single largest identifiable group, well ahead of any other niche. That tracks with the demographics of the places that produce the most creators, from Houston to the border cities. If you are looking for the heart of what Texas does well, Latina creators is the most representative category by a wide margin.

After that the field spreads out. Fitness is a steady presence, anchored by the military city culture of San Antonio and a broader Texas outdoors identity, and maps cleanly to fitness creators. Austin contributes a distinct cosplay and gaming streak, with creators who cross over from Twitch and convention culture, the kind of work catalogued under cosplay creators. Beyond those, the data shows a real spread of couples, ebony, college, country and alt creators, plus a male and trans presence that is larger than most people expect, with roughly one in ten of the state's prominent creators being men.

The takeaway for anyone browsing is simple. Texas is not a single look. It is a Latina heartland with strong fitness, gaming and couples scenes layered on top.

What it costs to follow a Texas creator

Pricing among the state's prominent creators is approachable. The median subscription runs about 7 dollars a month, and roughly one in four of the most followed creators keep their main page free, earning instead from tips and pay per view content. Paid pages cluster between 3 and 10 dollars, with only a handful charging 15 dollars or more. For anyone exploring the Texas scene, the practical reality is that following several creators at once is inexpensive, and many of the biggest names cost nothing to subscribe to.

Texas city by city

The statewide numbers hide sharp differences between metros, and the deficit is really a story about a handful of cities. Some Texas metros produce more creator income than their residents spend, behaving like net exporters of content. Others spend heavily while producing very little of their own.

Metro Resident spending (2025) Creator balance
Houston31.99 millionSurplus of 7.9 million
Dallas26.17 millionSurplus of 4.6 million
Austin17.54 millionDeficit of 3.7 million
San Antonio17.4 millionDeficit of 11.6 million
Fort Worth10.24 millionDeficit of 7.7 million

Houston, the biggest market and an exporter

Houston spends more on OnlyFans than any other Texas city, nearly 32 million dollars in 2025, and unusually it earns even more than that back. Its creators out-produce local demand, which puts Houston in the rare company of large American cities that export more content than they consume. The roster fits the city, sprawling and diverse, with names like MarlenyAleelayn, who built one of the largest paid followings in the state, and the longtime Houston creator Dominique Chinn. There is no single Houston style, which is exactly what you would expect from the most diverse big city in Texas.

Dallas and Fort Worth, one metro and two different worlds

Dallas behaves like Houston, a heavy spender that still runs a creator surplus, and it posts the highest spending density of any large Texas city. Drive half an hour west to Fort Worth and the picture flips. Fort Worth spends heavily but produces little, leaving one of the worst deficits in the state, even though it shares a metro, an airport and a daily commuter base with Dallas. It is the clearest evidence in the Texas data that creator scenes grow from community and network rather than geography. The Dallas side carries a wide, spread-out roster, from the personal, story-driven approach of Rima Wise to a visible trans and queer creator community.

Austin, a creative city that consumes more than it makes

Austin has the reputation, the university crowd and the tech money, and it spends accordingly, but its creators do not keep pace. The city runs a deficit, which surprises people who assume Austin's creative energy converts straight into a creator base. What Austin does produce is distinctive rather than high volume. Zara Dar turned a STEM and former-PhD-student identity into national attention, Laura Lux leans on a horror and motorsport personality, and nearby Cedar Park is home to the cosplayer Quqco. Austin makes characters, not clones.

San Antonio, huge demand and thin supply

San Antonio has the largest gap in the state between what residents spend and what local creators earn. The widely reported explanation is the military. The metro's enormous service population drives heavy consumer spending without building a matching base of creators, so most of that money flows out to creators elsewhere. The local scene that does exist leans toward fitness and Latina creators, with Cayleigh Couch among the clearest examples of the physique-driven lane the military cities tend to produce.

El Paso and the border, small on the map and large on the platform

El Paso punches far above its population. Pressed against Ciudad Juarez, with Fort Bliss and a major university feeding a young bilingual community, it has produced some of the best known names on the Texas border, including the social media celebrity Jailyne Ojeda Ochoa and creators like Asaia Hernandez. The same energy runs down the Rio Grande through Laredo, McAllen and Brownsville. This is the Latina heart of the Texas scene, and the strongest argument against judging a creator market by city size alone.

The Gulf Coast

South along the water, Corpus Christi keeps a small scene of its own, anchored partly by its naval air station, and is the home base of Tiny Texie, one of the more recognizable performers to come out of South Texas. The coast is not a major market, but it is a real one.

Where to find creators in your part of Texas

The most useful thing a guide like this can do for a local search is point at real names. The creators below publicly identify with these cities, which makes them a genuine starting point if you are looking for someone from your area. They are public figures listed here for reference, not anyone FanFind hosts.

Area Creators who publicly identify with it
HoustonMarlenyAleelayn, Dominique Chinn, CodyAlan
Dallas and Fort WorthRima Wise, Kay Kookie, Andrea Natalie Silva, Henny
Austin and Cedar ParkLaura Lux, Zara Dar, Quqco
San AntonioCayleigh Couch, Jessica T
El PasoJailyne Ojeda Ochoa, Asaia Hernandez, Y. Garcia
Corpus ChristiTiny Texie

If your city is not on the list, a few reliable habits turn up local creators faster than scrolling at random.

  1. Read the bio. Creators routinely pin their location with a place tag, so a page that says Houston usually is in Houston, at least at the time it was written.
  2. Search where creators promote. Most funnel fans from Instagram, X, TikTok and Reddit, and city based tags on those platforms surface local creators who then link out to their page.
  3. Search by keyword and name. OnlyFans lets you search usernames and terms, and many creators fold a city or state straight into their display name or bio.
  4. Follow the local web. Creators in the same city tend to collaborate and shout each other out, so once you find one, the people they tag are often nearby.
  5. Treat location as a signal, not a guarantee. It is self reported and people move, so these cues point you in the right direction rather than certify an address.

Finding Texas creators, and how location really works on OnlyFans

There is no honest way to hand someone a verified list of creators living in one specific Texas town. OnlyFans does not publish reliable location data, creators move and travel, and the place tags in a bio are self reported and often out of date. Any tool that claims a precise local roster is guessing.

What actually works is searching by the qualities that matter to you and using the regional patterns above as context. If the Texas scene appeals to you because of its Latina heart, start there. If it is the fitness or gaming side, start there instead. The creators FanFind features are verified and organized by category rather than by claimed home town, so you always know what you are getting. For how Texas compares with the other states worth your attention, the guide to the strongest states for finding creators lays out the national picture.

Common questions

Houston, at almost 32 million dollars in 2025, followed by Dallas. Dallas has the highest spending density per resident of any large Texas city.

By social reach, several Texas based creators sit in the millions of followers. By name recognition beyond the platform, the El Paso born Jailyne Ojeda Ochoa is among the best known.

Yes, and the border is the clearest example. El Paso produces far more creator activity than its size suggests, and the Rio Grande Valley cities feed the same Latina dominated scene.

About 7 dollars a month is typical, many of the largest creators are free to subscribe to, and pages above 15 dollars are the exception rather than the rule.

Payments run through the platform rather than the creator, so a creator never sees your card details, and your real name is not shared as long as you keep it out of your display name and messages. The usual caution applies, keep personal information out of chats.

All USA Guides

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Guide Indiana OnlyFans Creators Indiana spent $56.6 million on OnlyFans in 2025. Its most-engaged creator lives in Fort Wayne, not Indianapolis. And more creators have turned the Indiana name into their OF brand than almost any other state. A complete guide.
Guide Northeast and Mid-Atlantic OnlyFans Creators Boston spends at 2.7 times the national average and has 8,500 creators. Maine leads the region in searches. Baltimore and Richmond bring entirely different scenes. How the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic compare.
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Guide Plains & Upper Midwest OnlyFans Creators Two cities here spend like the coasts while the creators stay small and local, and the emptiest states search hardest of all. How the Twin Cities, Kansas City and the Dakotas compare.
Guide Southern OnlyFans Creators Four of America's five least-spending states are here. The story in the South is not about money. It is about New Orleans, the SEC college belt, and what happens to a creator scene when the surrounding culture pushes against it.
Guide Tennessee OnlyFans Creators Nashville has 610 active creators and almost no local search demand. Chattanooga leads the state. Knoxville follows. Memphis has the 901. A complete guide to Tennessee's four main markets.
Guide Texas OnlyFans Creators Texas is the second biggest OnlyFans market in the country. Here are the top Texas creators, what the state spends, and how the scene breaks down by niche and city.
Guide Western US OnlyFans Creators Seven western states, seven different scenes. From Las Vegas creator gravity to Seattle's tech money and the Salt Lake City surprise, here is how the West compares.