How to Price Your Feet Pics: The Complete Pricing Guide for 2026
Pricing is where most new sellers get it wrong. Charge too little and you burn out creating content for pennies. Charge too much and buyers scroll right past you. The sweet spot? It depends on what you're selling, where you're selling it, and how you position yourself.
This guide gives you exact price ranges based on real market data from FeetFinder, OnlyFans, and independent sellers in 2026.
The Golden Rule of Feet Pic Pricing
Never compete on price. Compete on quality and experience.
There will always be someone willing to sell for $3. You don't want those buyers. You want the buyers who pay $15-50+ per purchase because they value quality, consistency, and a seller who treats them well.
Raise your prices, improve your content quality, and you'll make more money with fewer sales. That's the formula.
Pricing Tier 1: Single Photos
The most common format. One photo, one price.
- Beginner (first 1-2 months): $5 – $10 per photo
- Intermediate (3-6 months, established profile): $10 – $20 per photo
- Premium (6+ months, strong following): $20 – $50+ per photo
When to use beginner pricing: Only when you have zero reviews and zero following. As soon as you have 5+ positive reviews, raise your prices. Seriously — don't wait.
Pricing Tier 2: Photo Bundles
Bundles are where the real money is. You batch photos from one session and sell them as a set.
- 3-photo bundle: $15 – $30 (save buyers ~20% vs individual)
- 5-photo bundle: $25 – $50
- 10-photo bundle: $40 – $80
- Premium themed bundle (15-20 photos): $60 – $150
Why bundles work: Higher average order value for you, perceived savings for the buyer. Everyone wins. Bundles should be your default offer.
Pro tip: Name your bundles. "The Beach Day Collection" sells better than "10 photos bundle." Themes create desire.
Pricing Tier 3: Custom Content
Custom content = a buyer requests specific poses, nail colors, settings, or scenarios. This is the highest-margin work you can do.
- Custom photo set (5-10 photos): $30 – $75
- Custom photo set with specific props/setup: $50 – $120
- Custom video (1-3 minutes): $25 – $75
- Custom video (5-10 minutes): $50 – $200
- Rush delivery (within 24 hours): Add 50% surcharge
Key rule: Always charge at least 2x your standard rate for custom work. The buyer is paying for your time, creativity, and exclusivity — not just the photos.
Important: Set clear boundaries upfront. Define what you will and won't do before agreeing to any custom request. This protects both you and the buyer.
Pricing Tier 4: Subscriptions
Monthly subscriptions work on platforms like OnlyFans and Fansly. Subscribers pay a recurring fee for regular content.
- Starter tier: $5 – $10/month (3-4 posts per week)
- Standard tier: $10 – $20/month (daily posts)
- Premium tier: $20 – $35/month (daily posts + exclusive content)
- VIP tier: $35 – $50/month (everything above + priority customs + DM access)
The subscription math: 50 subscribers at $15/month = $750/month recurring revenue. That's $9,000/year from a single income stream. And unlike single sales, subscriptions compound — next month you keep those 50 and add more.
Pricing Tier 5: Premium Niches (Where the Real Money Is)
Certain niches command significantly higher prices because the demand outweighs the supply of quality content:
- Shoe/heel content: 1.5x – 2x standard rates
- Sock content: 1.5x standard rates
- Crush content: 2x – 4x standard rates
- Seasonal/holiday themed: 1.5x – 2x standard rates
- ASMR foot content (audio/video): 2x – 3x standard rates
- Worn items (socks, shoes): $20 – $80 per item + shipping
You don't have to specialize in these niches, but offering them as add-ons can significantly boost your average revenue per buyer.
5 Pricing Mistakes That Cost You Money
1. Starting Too Low and Never Raising Prices
Many sellers start at $3-5 to "attract buyers" and then feel trapped at that price forever. Start at $5-10 minimum and plan to raise prices every 4-6 weeks as your profile grows.
2. Not Offering Bundles
If you only sell individual photos, your revenue is capped. Bundles increase your average order value by 200-300%. Every seller should offer at least 2-3 bundle options.
3. Giving Away Content for "Exposure"
Free content is for your public profile/portfolio — that's your marketing. But never send free content to a potential buyer who asks for a "sample." They're not going to buy. Ever.
4. Charging the Same for Custom and Standard
Custom work takes more time, effort, and creative energy. If a buyer wants specific content made just for them, they should pay for that exclusivity. 2x minimum.
5. Ignoring Platform Fees
FeetFinder takes 20%, OnlyFans takes 20%. Factor this into your pricing. If you want to earn $10 per photo, you need to list it at $12.50 on these platforms. Price accordingly.
The Price-Raising Playbook
Here's exactly when and how to raise your prices:
- Month 1-2: Start at beginner rates. Focus on getting reviews and building your portfolio.
- Month 3: Raise prices 25-50% once you have 10+ positive reviews. Add bundle offers.
- Month 4-6: Raise another 20-30%. Introduce custom content pricing. Launch a subscription option.
- Month 6+: Adjust every quarter based on demand. If you're selling out, you're priced too low. If sales drop, adjust content quality before lowering prices.
The test: Raise your prices 20%. If you lose fewer than 20% of sales, you make more money. It works almost every time.
How to Present Your Pricing
Don't just list prices. Frame them:
- Use anchoring: List your premium option first, standard second. The premium makes the standard feel like a bargain.
- Create a menu: Organize your pricing into a clean, simple menu (Standard / Premium / Custom). Buyers want clarity.
- Highlight value: "10-photo Beach Collection" sounds worth more than "10 photos." Names, themes, and stories add perceived value.
- Show savings: "Bundle saves you 30% vs individual" — this pushes buyers toward higher-value purchases.
The Bottom Line
Your content is worth more than you think. Start at reasonable rates, raise them consistently, and always offer bundles and custom options at premium prices. The sellers making $2,000+/month aren't taking better photos — they're pricing smarter.
Want to see what top sellers actually earn? Check our complete earnings breakdown with real numbers from every experience level.
Written by Olivia Baker
Olivia is a faceless content creator who built a five-figure monthly income selling feet pics and digital content online — completely anonymously. She now helps other women do the same through her guides, courses, and community.
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