Ever notice that some months your earnings dip — even though you’ve been posting nonstop? That’s your churn rate quietly eating away at your growth.
What’s a Churn Rate?
Your churn rate is the percentage of fans who stop subscribing over a certain period — usually a month. Let’s say you start October with 500 subscribers and end with 450. You lost 50 fans, so your churn rate is 10%. Some fans leave because their cards expire, others cancel after a promo, and a few just drift away. But those little losses add up — fast.
If you’re not tracking churn, you’re flying blind. High churn means you’re working hard just to stay in place. Low churn means your fans are happy, loyal, and coming back for more.
When you know your churn rate, you can:
- Predict your income more accurately
- Spot when fan satisfaction drops
- Find out which months or content types cause cancellations
- Focus your energy on what actually keeps fans subscribed
Even reducing churn by 5% can increase your income without gaining a single new fan.
A Quick Story
When a creator with whom I work (Ava) finally sat down to review her numbers, she discovered that almost 30% of her fans were leaving every month. She continued to push for new subs to run promos and do collaborations, but her income still fluctuated like a rollercoaster.
Digging deeper, she spotted a pattern: fans who never got a DM, didn’t see a teaser, or had no clue what was coming next were the ones canceling first.
So she made a few smart tweaks:
Renewal nudges (rebill prompts).
A few days before renewal, she sent short, friendly DMs: “Hey love, your sub renews soon — new photo set drops Friday ?.” That tiny message cut down on accidental drop-offs from expired cards or forgetful fans.
Most fans don’t cancel because they’re unhappy, they forget to renew, or their card fails without them noticing. A friendly renewal nudge (also known as a rebill prompt) reminds them that their subscription is about to renew and provides a reason to stay excited about what’s coming next. It keeps you on their radar, prevents accidental churn, and shows fans that you care about their experience, not just their payment. A simple message can make all the difference between a one-month subscription and a loyal, long-term supporter.
Monthly bundles.
Instead of random posts, she packaged content into monthly themes: “Summer Heat,” “Cosplay Week,” “Birthday Month.”
Fans began to think in months, not days, and wanted to see what came next. And what helps is that she also promoted what was coming next month in advance. She wanted her subscribers to know that it was worth staying around because next month, something fabulous is coming.
Behind-the-scenes teasers.
She started dropping previews, polls (“pick the next outfit!”), and countdowns. It built anticipation and gave fans a reason to stay subscribed past renewal day.
Gratitude and recognition.
Ava began thanking renewals publicly and privately, sending small bonuses to day-ones, and reminding them they mattered. That personal touch turned casual fans into loyal regulars.
Within two months, her churn rate dropped from 30% to 10%, and her income stabilized.
She didn’t post more — she just got intentional about keeping the fans she already had.
How to Track It
You don’t need fancy tools — just consistency. Go to your OnlyFans statistics. Change the date to custom and enter the specific month you want to track. ie: August 1-August 31.
You want to track two things: both your reach and your fans. Reach tracks your profile visitors, while Fans tracks your actual subscriber count.
Let me just show you how I track mine. You’ll notice that at the very bottom, I add everything up and divide by 12 so I can get the average for the year.
| New Subs | Renew | Total | Profile Visits | Churn Rate | |
| January | 1036 | 1154 | 2190 | 25,145 | 47.31% |
| February | 888 | 1124 | 2012 | 17,088 | 44.14% |
| March | 901 | 1205 | 2106 | 19,872 | 42.78% |
| April | 827 | 1162 | 1989 | 16,554 | 41.58% |
| May | 840 | 1114 | 1954 | 17,058 | 42.99% |
| June | 816 | 1092 | 1908 | 16,619 | 42.77% |
| July | 953 | 1034 | 1987 | 20,151 | 47.96% |
| August | 5352 | 978 | 6330 | 31,320 | 84.55% |
| September | 6175 | 943 | 7118 | 26,788 | 86.75% |
| October | 5585 | 924 | 6509 | 29,465 | 85.80% |
| November | 4144 | 942 | 5086 | 26,348 | 81.48% |
| December | 2129 | 1015 | 3144 | 24,390 | 67.72% |
| 2470.5 | 1057.25 | 3527.75 | 22566.5 | 59.65% |
Now, if one month I notice a drop in new subscribers or renewals, I’m like, hmm, something is off, let me see why. Keeping this data month to month allows me to see patterns.
But sometimes just knowing the numbers doesn’t tell you the problem. Like, check out August. I had a huge ass churn that month. Why?
What did I do differently, and most importantly, what can I do to improve this number?
How to Reduce Churn
If your churn feels high, don’t panic — it’s fixable. Try a few of these:
? Build connection
Your fans don’t just subscribe for content — they subscribe for connection. The more personal and genuine you are, the longer they’ll stay.
Start by welcoming every new sub with a short, friendly DM. It doesn’t have to be long or salesy — just something that feels human and real. A simple:
“Hey babe, thanks for joining ? Can’t wait for you to see what I’m posting this week.”
Once they’re in, keep the relationship alive. Ask fans what they want more of — polls, questions, or casual chats all make them feel seen. And don’t forget the non-sales messages. Look back at your DMs from last month: if every message is promoting a new post or bundle, that’s a red flag.
Make time for messages that exist just to connect. Even a short note with a flirty selfie —
“Happy Monday ? Just wanted to say hi and remind you I’m thinking of you.”
— can keep a fan feeling appreciated.
Remember: people stay subscribed when they feel like you notice them.
Your fans want to feel like part of your world, not just your customer list. Share little glimpses of your day, behind-the-scenes moments, or personal wins. Those details create emotional stickiness — the kind that keeps renewals coming long after the initial hype fades.
? Reward loyalty
- Offer renewal discounts or bundles
- Shout out to returning subscribers
- Share exclusive previews for renewals
? Keep them looking forward
- Tease next month’s content
- Run limited series (“Part 1 drops today, Part 2 next week”)
- Announce milestones or community goals
The goal is simple: give fans a reason to stay.
The Takeaway
Tracking your churn rate isn’t just a “business thing.” It’s a way to understand your fans — what they love, what they skip, and what keeps them coming back.
When you treat your page like a business, you stop guessing and start growing. Because the secret to making more isn’t always getting new fans… It’s keeping the ones you already have. ❤️
