This paper analyses the operational economics of OnlyFans talent agencies at the 5-25 creator scale, drawing on publicly cited industry sources (Vice, Rappler, OFM-Tools, Aruna Talent, and competitor pricing pages). We model three operating archetypes chatter-only, AI-assisted with reduced chatter headcount, and fully autonomous AI and derive a total cost of ownership (TCO) framework parameterised by creator count, average revenue per creator, chatter wages, and revenue leakage. Across realistic 2026 parameter ranges, the autonomous-vs-assisted TCO crossover sits at approximately 20, 000 monthly revenue per creator (range 11K–22K depending on chatter wage). Direction: autonomous AI charges a percentage of revenue (20% list) while assisted-AI charges mostly fixed costs, so autonomous AI has lower TCO when per-creator revenue is below the crossover and assisted-AI has lower TCO above it. Creator count cancels from the per-creator comparison; 7 creators is the realistic minimum agency scale at which autonomous AI's operational advantages (no chatter recruitment, no shift management, no attrition tax) become material regardless of TCO. We document the seven currently competitive commercial offerings in this category (Infloww, Supercreator, Substy AI, FlirtFlow, Creator Hero, OnlyMonster, Fans-CRM, and Anlora) with sourced public pricing, and note structural patterns in how each maps to the operating archetypes. This is a vendor neutral framework intended for agency operators, industry analysts, and AI tooling researchers. Conflict-of-interest disclosed: Anlora is a commercial autonomous-AI provider in the category this paper analyses; the TCO framework is structural and does not depend on Anlora-specific claims.
Anlora (Fri,) studied this question.