There are now more AI tools promising to run your OnlyFans DMs than most creators have time to research. Supercreator, FlirtFlow, Infloww, ChatPersona, OnlyMonster, Olys: they all pitch some version of the same dream, an inbox that earns while you sleep.
They are not the same product. Under the marketing, these tools make wildly different design choices, and those choices carry wildly different levels of risk for your account, your data and your relationship with your fans.
Full disclosure before we start: we make Naughtii, so we are a competitor to every tool on this page. That is exactly why this comparison sticks to verifiable facts from each vendor's own public websites, pricing pages and policies (all checked on 14 July 2026), plus named press reporting. Where something is our judgement, we say so. Where we could not verify something, we say that too.
The three questions that actually matter
Ignore the feature lists for a moment. Three questions separate a tool you can trust from a tool you cannot.
1. How does it reach your OnlyFans account? A browser extension that works inside your own logged-in session is one thing. A cloud platform that asks you to hand over your OnlyFans login so its servers (and possibly its staff, or an agency's staff) can operate your account is a fundamentally different proposition.
2. Can it send messages without you? Suggestion tools draft text; you read, edit and send. Autonomous tools message your fans while you are not there. The second category is where fan trust, your voice and platform rules all come under pressure at once.
3. What happens to your data? These tools process the most intimate conversations in your business. If a vendor publishes no privacy policy, you have no idea what is stored, for how long, or who can read it.
Hold every tool, including ours, up against those three questions and the market gets much easier to read.
What OnlyFans' own rules say
You do not have to take our word for any of this. OnlyFans publishes its rules, and three parts are directly relevant to AI chat tools.
First, the Acceptable Use Policy tells users not to access OnlyFans with "any automated program, tool or process", listing bots and automated scripts as examples. Second, the same policy says accounts are for your own personal use and are not to be shared with or operated by anyone else. Third, the Terms of Use are explicit that if someone else helps run your account, the legal responsibility stays entirely with you. Enforcement ranges up to suspension or deletion of the account.
The terms also require AI generated content to be clearly labelled, and they define content to include text. How that applies to an AI assisted reply that you personally edit and send is genuinely untested, and we will not pretend to give you a legal ruling on it. Read the current terms yourself and make your own decision. They change, so check the live versions, not a blog post (including this one).
One more honest note: in our research we found no documented, citable case of any named tool causing an account ban. Anyone telling you "tool X gets you banned" is guessing. What you can evaluate is exposure: how much of your account, your data and your fan relationships a tool's design puts on the table if something goes wrong.
Supercreator: the popular one, with an autopilot tier
Supercreator is probably the biggest name in this space. Its site describes a toolkit for creators, assistants and agencies, and claims more than 25,000 creators. It began life as a Chrome extension over your own session; its download page now says extension support is ending in favour of desktop and mobile apps. Pricing runs from a free CRM tier and a $15 per month premium tier up to Super AI at $99 per account per month plus 5% of AI net sales.
The lower tiers are copilot style tools: drafts and shortcuts, with you sending. The risk picture changes at the top. Supercreator's marketing describes its AI chatter, Izzy, messaging fans in your voice and selling to them automatically, with reviewing conversations before they send presented as an option rather than a requirement. Its site says it stores no login credentials and describes its approach as simulating natural user actions, which is a curious phrase to sit alongside a policy that restricts automated tools. To its credit, Supercreator's own guide on bots acknowledges that OnlyFans is strict about chat automation.
Our read: as a suggestion tool it is capable, but the flagship tier is an unattended bot if you let it be, and the revenue share means the vendor earns more the more the bot sends. If you use it, keep a human on send. At that point you are paying autopilot prices for a copilot.
FlirtFlow: autonomous by design
FlirtFlow is the clearest example of the full automation philosophy. It is a cloud platform, you connect your OnlyFans account to its system, and its whole pitch is an AI that chats, flirts and sells around the clock without you. Reuters reported in its investigation of AI on OnlyFans that FlirtFlow's bot can compose and send messages without human help, while Fortune reported that some customers still keep a human pressing send. Pricing is $99 per month per creator plus 8% commission on AI generated sales.
Two things worry us more than the automation itself. How it connects to your account is not disclosed anywhere public. And as of mid July 2026 we could not find a privacy policy anywhere on its site, despite the product building a model of you from days of your chats. You are being asked to hand your account and your voice to a system that does not tell you how it holds either.
Infloww: an agency CRM that holds the login
Infloww is a different animal: a web based CRM built for agencies that manage creators across OnlyFans, Fansly and other platforms, priced from $40 per creator per month. Its AI Copilot is suggestion based, and its Smart Messages feature auto-sends triggered messages (for example when a subscription lapses).
The AI is not the main risk here. The model is. Creators are linked by entering their OnlyFans credentials into the platform, teams then work inside the account, and Infloww's own onboarding guide explains that assigning a unique proxy per creator means OnlyFans sees a single login even when several people are using the account. Set that against a policy that says accounts are personal and not to be shared, and a terms document that leaves all legal responsibility with you rather than the agency, and you can judge the exposure for yourself. Its privacy policy, meanwhile, is generic boilerplate that never specifically addresses fan messages or earnings data, even though the marketing promises per chatter logs of every message and dollar.
If you are an independent creator, this product is simply not built for you, and that is the kindest thing we can say about it.
ChatPersona: no privacy policy to read
ChatPersona is closer to the right shape: a Chrome extension that works in your own logged-in session, with press coverage (VICE, Fortune) describing it as suggestion first, humans pressing send. Plans run $15 to $99 per month. Rather than learning your voice, it offers a couple of dozen preset personas with adjustable traits.
Here is the problem. As of mid July 2026 we could not find a privacy policy or terms of service anywhere on its site; the standard URLs return errors, and the homepage links to neither. Its Chrome Web Store listing also shows the extension last updated in September 2024. A tool that reads your most intimate conversations, publishes no data policy at all and ships no updates for the best part of two years fails our checklist on transparency alone, whatever the workflow gets right.
The rest of the field: OnlyMonster, Olys, and what happened to Botly
OnlyMonster is an agency oriented desktop browser plus CRM, priced by your earnings from $30 to $250 per month. Its AI replies are one click suggestions, and it states plainly that it does not automate messaging. It also publishes the most explicit privacy policy in this whole comparison, which openly discloses storing all sent and received creator messages and transaction data. Credit where due for transparency. It remains a team access, session holding design whose fingerprint isolation exists so that several operators look like one login, and you should weigh that exactly as you weighed Infloww.
Olys markets a 24/7 autonomous chatbot inside its own CRM for solo creators up to fifty seat agencies. No public pricing, and as of mid July 2026 no privacy policy or terms we could find. There is very little independent information about it at all, and with an autonomous tool, that opacity is the finding.
Botly, a $15 per month one click reply extension that made press coverage in 2024, appears to be gone: its extension was removed from the Chrome Web Store in March 2025 according to chrome-stats.com, and its website currently serves an empty page. If you came here searching for a Botly alternative, the lesson worth keeping is the shape it had: AI drafts, human sends.
Where Naughtii stands
Now the same three questions, pointed at us. This is also the section to read if you arrived here looking for a Supercreator alternative built for independent creators.
Access. Naughtii's DM Assistant is a Chrome extension that works inside your own browser, on your own logged-in OnlyFans session. We never ask for your OnlyFans password. There is no Naughtii server logged into your account, no seat for a chatter, no proxy tricks. There is nothing to hand over, so nothing of your account access to leak, share or misuse.
Sending. The assistant reads the conversation you have open and drafts three replies in your persona: your tone, your boundaries, your price menu, steered by you in the moment. It has no send button of its own and no scheduler. Nothing reaches a fan unless you read it and send it yourself. This is not a limitation we grudgingly accept; it is the entire design, for reasons we set out in our guide to AI tools for creators.
Data. Drafts are generated through our own secured servers with per user limits, your assistant profile belongs to you, and our privacy policy is published where you would expect it to be. No fan ever talks to an unattended bot wearing your name.
We will not tell you Naughtii makes your account untouchable. No honest vendor can promise that, and you should be suspicious of any that do. What we can say is simpler: a tool that holds no credentials, sends nothing on its own and never operates your account while you are away has structurally less to go wrong.
Side by side
| Tool | How it connects | Can it message fans without you? | Needs your OnlyFans login? | Built for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Naughtii | Extension in your own browser | No. Drafts only, no send button | Never | Independent creators |
| Supercreator | Extension, moving to desktop apps | Yes on its top AI tier; review optional | Says it stores no credentials | Creators and agencies |
| FlirtFlow | Cloud platform | Yes, autonomous by design | Connection method undisclosed | Creators and agencies |
| Infloww | Cloud CRM with per creator proxies | Triggered auto messages; AI is suggestions | Yes, entered into the platform | Agencies |
| ChatPersona | Extension in your own browser | No, per press reports | No | Creators and agencies |
| OnlyMonster | Its own desktop browser | No, one click suggestions | Login inside its browser, shared team sessions | Agencies |
| Olys | Cloud CRM | Yes, 24/7 by its own description | Undisclosed | Agencies |
The bottom line
Four rules will keep you out of nearly all of the trouble in this market:
- Never hand your OnlyFans login to a cloud service. Your session should stay in your browser.
- Never let software message your fans unattended. AI drafts, you decide.
- Never trust a tool that publishes no privacy policy. You cannot evaluate what you cannot read.
- Prefer tools built for independent creators. Agency platforms solve an agency's problems: seats, shifts and surveillance of chatters. Those are not your problems.
We built Naughtii to pass that checklist by construction, and we would rather you apply it ruthlessly to us and everyone else than take any vendor's word, ours included.
Product details are taken from each vendor's public websites, pricing pages and policies as of 14 July 2026 and may have changed since. Naughtii is an independent product and is not affiliated with OnlyFans or with any company mentioned in this article.