How to leave an OnlyFans agency without the switch going badly
Updated 20 June 2026
Moving on from an agency — or moving to a new one — is common, and it doesn't have to be messy. It goes smoothest when it's handled deliberately rather than abruptly.
Start with your existing contract
Check any notice period, minimum term or exclusivity clause before telling anyone your plans. These terms are between you and your current agency, and they apply regardless of how the relationship has been going.
Work out what access needs to change hands
List everything the agency currently has access to — messaging, posting, analytics — and confirm in writing what will be revoked or handed back, and by when.
Protect continuity for your subscribers
A sudden gap in messaging or posting is often more damaging than the switch itself. Where possible, agree an overlap or handover window so engagement doesn't visibly drop while things transition.
Get your data and history
Ask for anything that's genuinely yours — performance history, content libraries you supplied, and any documented guidelines or playbooks built around your voice — so a new agency isn't starting from zero.
Confirm the relationship actually ends
Get written confirmation that access has been revoked and that the agency will stop using your account, content and data from the agreed end date. This protects both sides.
If you're moving to a new agency
Yes, creators do move between agencies regularly. Be upfront about your current contract terms during onboarding — a legitimate new agency will want that transition handled cleanly, not rushed.
For what to check in a new agreement before you sign it, see our OnlyFans agency contract checklist.
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