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OnlyFans Paydays Unpacked: Blac Chyna’s Real Number, Bhad Bhabie’s 57 Million Net, Lil Tay’s One Day Haul

OnlyFans Paydays Unpacked: Blac Chyna’s Real Number, Bhad Bhabie’s 57 Million Net, Lil Tay’s One Day Haul
  • PublishedAugust 31, 2025

OnlyFans earnings are hitting fresh highs on the timeline, with Bhad Bhabie sharing a statement that shows 57 million net, while Blac Chyna says her real total sits closer to 2 million over two years, not the viral 240 million rumor.

Hi, I am Riley Carter, your calmly caffeinated guide to internet money math. New day, new jaw-drop. Let us parse the receipts without pretending any of this is normal.

Here is the headline energy: Danielle Bregoli, better known as Bhad Bhabie, posted an OnlyFans earning statement in July 2024 that pegged her gross at 71 million and her net at 57 million after expenses. The reveal was amplified on Way Up with Angela Yee, and yes, the reaction was a collective wheeze. Love her or side-eye her, the numbers are documented and loud.

Now to Blac Chyna, who shut down the evergreen 240 million rumor. On The Jason Lee Show, she explained she quit the platform in March 2023 as part of a full-on life reset. Then she told Forbes that her actual haul was close to 2 million during a span that started in 2020, which tracks with the pandemic-era OnlyFans boom. She gave props to creators still on the grind, but added she is worth more to herself outside the app. Translation: secure the bag, but set your boundaries.

On the fast-and-furious side of the income spectrum, Lil Tay claimed she cleared more than 1 million in less than a day after joining the platform. That is her claim, and it lines up with a broader pattern we keep seeing: creators with built-in name recognition flip early hype into serious day-one cash. Is it sustainable long-term? Depends on content, marketing, and stamina.

Speaking of stamina, Australian adult entertainer Annie Knight sat down with E! News in June and framed OnlyFans as a real business. She said early days were 5,000 a month, then 30,000 after she went full-time, before crossing 100,000 per month by May 2023. She also told News.com.au in June 2025 that her intake later tripled to 600,000 monthly following a high-profile stunt, but she is just as quick to call out industry inflation. In an August TikTok, Knight said some performers exaggerate their numbers, stressing that income ebbs and flows and that it is genuinely hard to stand out in an oversaturated field. The tea plus the truth, all in one breath.

Reality TV alumnus Jenelle Evans offered a tidy snapshot of what a recognizable name can do on the platform. During an August 17 livestream with friend Tori Rhyne, Evans said she has made more than 1.5 million total. Rhyne’s reaction was basically you are a millionaire, which is both math and meme in one sentence.

Then there is the athlete lane. American tennis pro Sachia Vickery joined OnlyFans in January and later called it the easiest money she had ever made. She told followers in an August Instagram Q and A that the first two days left her overwhelmed by the earnings. The Daily Mail relayed her comments, and the mood was very much do not knock it until your bank app blinks back at you.

So where does that leave the rest of us, besides refreshing a calculator app we did not know we needed? The through line is simple and slightly chaotic. Preexisting fame can supercharge launch-day revenue. Consistency and audience engagement set the floor. Transparency remains optional, which is why corroborated statements and public interviews matter. Forbes, E! News, and broadcast clips offer the most solid receipts. Everything else lives on a sliding scale between major bag and marketing spin.

Also, timing is a factor. OnlyFans exploded during lockdowns, and creators who rode that first wave often secured top-tier subscriber bases early. As the platform matured, conversion got harder, which is exactly what Knight was getting at. The money is there. The moat is deeper.

If you are keeping score at home: Bhad Bhabie has paperwork for 57 million net. Blac Chyna says the real total was near 2 million before she exited in 2023. Lil Tay claims a seven-figure day-one sprint. Jenelle Evans put her lifetime take above 1.5 million. Sachia Vickery says the first 48 hours were a checkmate. Different lanes, different engines, same destination called revenue.

Watch this space for platform pivots, new celebrity recruits, and updated statements that either confirm the legend or rewrite the scoreboard. Anyway, that is the money mood. If this trends, do not say I did not warn you.

Sources: Celebrity Storm and E! News, Forbes, Way Up with Angela Yee, Daily Mail, The Jason Lee Show, News.com.au, TikTok, Instagram Live and Q and A

Written By
Riley Carter

Riley Carter is an up-and-coming journalist with a talent for weaving captivating stories from the fast-paced world of celebrity gossip. Known for their cool, laid-back style and a sharp wit, Riley has an uncanny ability to find the human side of even the most scandalous headlines. Their writing strikes the perfect balance between irreverence and insight, making them a favorite among readers who want the latest news with a dose of personality. Outside of work, Riley enjoys hiking, cooking up new recipes, and diving into pop culture history with an eye for the quirky and obscure.