While some big-name OnlyFans content creators rake in millions every year, Leonid Radvinsky makes more in little over a minute than what the average model does in a year on the adult app

American-Ukrainian businessman Leonid Radvinsky bought the company which owns OnlyFans in 2018
American-Ukrainian businessman Leonid Radvinsky bought the company which owns OnlyFans in 2018(Image: @Leo_Radvinsky1/Twitter)

The British company behind OnlyFans made record profits of £386million last year.

But the average earnings of the site’s almost five million models fell to less than £3 a day, we can reveal. Parent company Fenix International Limited is owned by Ukraine-born Leonid Radvinsky, who earned £368million in dividends last year.

Mr Radvinsky earns more in 100 seconds than what the average OnlyFans “creator” grosses in a year. Some porn stars – such as Brit Lily Phillips, 24, whose notoriety exploded when she slept with 100 men in a day for a stunt last year – boast huge paycheques from the site. But most earn pennies.

OnlyFans has over 305 million registered users and 4.11 million creators(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

READ MORE: Inside the grim reality of Lily Phillips’ world and how her parents REALLY feel about her workREAD MORE: Bonnie Blue hit with hundreds of Ofcom complaints as viewers slam ‘sick’ documentary

Fenix International’s annual accounts show that last year the site generated £4.9bn in payments from 4.1m creator accounts. Last year that rose to £5.4bn from 4.6m creators. But the average amount earned by each OnlyFans model fell from £1,193 in 2023 to £1,154 last year.

These earnings – barely £3 a day – are before OnyFans charges its 20% commission fees. Last year, these fees totalled more than £1bn. The best paid director of Fenix International earned £7.2m last year, more than double 2023.

It is not known whether this is Mr Radvinsky, 43, a US citizen who lives in Florida, or British co- director Lee Taylor, 37. Profits rose 7% to £386m for the year. The latest accounts were published after Mr Radvinsky transferred all of his one million shares into a trust called the LR Fenix Trust.

Lily Phillips is one of the platform’s big earners

It is not known where it is located, but offshore trusts are typically used to cut tax or for secrecy reasons. Prof Reuven Avi-Yonah, a tax specialist at the University of Michigan, said it could save hundreds of millions.

He said: “The trust could be liable for income tax on any dividends instead of a shareholder in the US and there could also be an estate tax benefit.”

Mike Lewis, director of the investigative think-tank TaxWatch said: “Trusts are the biggest blind spot in knowing who owns a UK company. The beneficiaries and the settlors who put assets into the trust, can remain secret.”

OnlyFans did not respond to a request for comment.

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