Historical Caveats: Why Exact Numbers Can Differ by Source
OnlyFans historical numbers sometimes differ across articles because sources may use different fiscal
years, calendar years, definitions, and estimation methods. Official filings from Fenix International
are the strongest source for company financials, but those filings may not answer every user-behavior
question. Traffic tools can estimate visits or geography, but they are not the same as internal
platform analytics. Creator census studies can be useful, but they often rely on sampling, modeling,
and classification methods.
For that reason, the safest approach is to treat historical figures as a structured evidence map rather
than a perfect ledger. When two credible sources disagree slightly, the direction and definition often
matter more than the final decimal. If both show explosive early growth and slower later growth, the
strategic conclusion is stable. If one uses registered accounts while another uses monthly active
users, the figures should not be compared directly.
The strongest historical analysis states the unit of measurement, the period, and the likely source
type. That is why this page uses language such as “gross payments,” “registered fan accounts,” and
“creator accounts” rather than treating every platform metric as generic “revenue” or “users.”