PPV (pay-per-view) creators release exclusive, premium content sold individually beyond the base subscription fee. FaceDigger's PPV filter helps you discover creators known for quality special releases and reasonable pricing.
The PPV model lets creators earn from high-value content without requiring subscribers to maintain multiple tier levels. Popular PPV accounts combine regular subscription content with strategically released exclusive videos, photosets, and custom content that command premium prices.
Subscriptions give you unlimited access to a creator's regular feed for a monthly fee ($5–$50). PPV content is sold individually on top of your subscription—each video, photoset, or custom request is a separate purchase. This lets creators monetize special releases without requiring new subscriber tiers.
PPV prices typically range from $5–$80+ per item depending on length, exclusivity, and creator demand. A 10-minute video might cost $15–$40, while longer exclusive scenes or custom requests can reach $50–$100. Popular creators often price premium content higher.
Most creators post preview clips or screenshots to their feed or stories to showcase PPV quality before you purchase. Smart creators understand that low-quality previews hurt sales, so top accounts offer sufficient previews to justify the purchase price.
The best PPV accounts maintain consistent release schedules—sometimes weekly or bi-weekly drops—which trains their audience to expect and budget for PPV. Sporadic releases hurt subscriber engagement and predictable income, so serious PPV creators treat it as part of their business calendar.
It depends on the creator's subscription fee and PPV pricing. Some creators offer affordable subscriptions ($10/month) with infrequent, reasonably-priced PPV drops ($10–$25). Others charge high subscription fees expecting subscribers to skip PPV. Check the creator's content frequency and pricing before committing.
FaceDigger's ranking algorithm analyzes real data — not paid placements. Every creator on this list earned their position. Here's what goes into the score:
Rankings update every 24 hours. No creator can pay to appear higher — the only way up is real performance.
Every creator gets a composite score visible on their card. It combines all ranking signals into a single number so you can compare at a glance.