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FeetFinder Fees Explained: Hidden Costs Creators Don't Know About

FeetFinder's marketing says you keep 90% of your earnings. But once you add subscription plans, payout charges, and slow months, the math tells a very different story. Here's the part most creators don't see until it's too late.

November 20, 20259 min readUpdated for 2025
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TL;DR

FeetFinder's "keep 90%" headline focuses on the 10% commission and quietly buries everything else. In reality, creators are dealing with recurring subscription fees, payout costs, and slow months where they pay even if they don't sell. Many creators only realize this after they've already paid for a few billing cycles.

Once you factor in all the costs, a lot of small and new creators aren't really keeping 90%—some barely break even. That's why more creators are moving to platforms that use a simple, commission-only model with no monthly fees.

This article isn't about drama—it's about doing the math. We'll break down every fee type and show what creators actually keep after everything is deducted.

The Marketing Line: "You Keep 90%"

If you've seen FeetFinder ads, you've probably seen some version of this line:

"Creators keep 90% of their earnings."

Technically, this refers to the 10% platform commission on sales. But it quietly leaves out the fact that creators are also paying recurring subscription fees just to stay active on the platform.

In other words, the 10% is only half the story. To understand your real payout, you have to zoom out and look at every cost that hits your balance over a full month—not just the commission on good days.

The Full Fee Stack: What FeetFinder Creators Actually Pay

Here's the fee structure most new creators don't fully factor in before they sign up.

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1. Mandatory Seller Subscription

FeetFinder requires creators to pay a recurring subscription fee (monthly or yearly) to list and sell content. Depending on the tier, this typically sits somewhere in the $4.99–$14.99/month range.

This is the fee almost everyone forgets to include when they do their mental math. It's a fixed cost, which means you pay it whether you're selling a lot or selling nothing.

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2. 10% Platform Commission on Sales

On top of the subscription, FeetFinder also takes 10% of your sales. So if a buyer spends $100 with you, you'll see $90 before any other costs.

On its own, 10% actually looks decent compared to some platforms that take 20% or more. But again, the commission only tells the story for creators who are already selling well—subscription fees hit everybody.

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3. Payout Thresholds & Transfer Friction

Like most platforms, there are minimum payout thresholds and sometimes transaction frictions (e.g. waiting to hit a certain amount, or using specific payout methods).

This doesn't always appear as a "fee" in your statement, but it acts like one: your money can be trapped until you cross a limit, which hurts smaller creators who only make occasional sales.

4. The "Slow Month" Penalty

Even if you don't make a single sale in a given month, your subscription can still renew. That means:

  • • You can pay out of pocket for zero income
  • • Taking a break still costs you money
  • • Testing the platform becomes financially risky

The Hidden Reality: Your "90%" Shrinks Fast

Let's stop talking in theory and walk through actual scenarios. Here's what FeetFinder income often looks like when you zoom out to a full month and include the subscription.

Scenario 1: New Creator, $60 in Sales

ItemAmount
Gross sales$60
FeetFinder commission (10%)- $6
Subscription fee (example: $9.99/month)- $9.99
Net to creator≈ $44.01

On paper you're "keeping 90%", but after your subscription, you're really keeping about 73% of what buyers paid.

Scenario 2: $200 in Sales in a Month

ItemAmount
Gross sales$200
FeetFinder commission (10%)- $20
Subscription fee (example: $14.99/month)- $14.99
Net to creator≈ $165.01

Now your effective cut is closer to 82–83%. Better—but still not the clean "90%" picture you were sold.

Scenario 3: The Nightmare Month

You're busy. Life happens. You don't promote much. You upload once or twice and barely log in.

ItemAmount
Gross sales$0
FeetFinder commission (10%)- $0
Subscription fee (e.g. $9.99–$14.99/month)- $9.99 to - $14.99

You didn't just "keep less"—you lost money. That's the part of the fee structure almost nobody talks about in promo content.

Key insight: A recurring seller subscription silently turns your FeetFinder account into a small monthly bill. If your sales are inconsistent or you're just starting, that bill can eat the majority of your profit—or all of it.

Why a Commission-Only Model Is Safer for Creators

Platforms that skip subscription fees and stick to a single, transparent commission percentage are usually far easier to plan around. You know exactly what you'll keep from every sale, and you don't have to worry about "rent" on your profile.

That's the approach Footly takes: no subscription fees, just a flat 20% commission when you actually sell something.

PlatformSubscriptionCommissionIf You Sell $100If You Sell $0
FeetFinder$4.99–$14.99/month10%≈ $75–$80 after subscription & commission- $4.99 to - $14.99
Footly$0 / month20%$80 net (no extra fees)$0

With a commission-only model, the worst-case scenario is simple: if you sell nothing, you pay nothing. There's no "surprise" renewal eating into your bank account during slow months.

Red Flags to Watch for on Any Platform

This isn't just about FeetFinder. Any platform in this space can structure fees in ways that look creator-friendly at first but hit you later.

Fee Red Flags Checklist

  • ⚠️Recurring seller subscriptions: You pay even if you don't sell. Great for the platform, brutal for new creators.
  • ⚠️"Keep X%" without mentioning fixed costs: If they brag about commissions but won't talk about other fees, be suspicious.
  • ⚠️Confusing payout rules or thresholds: The more hoops you have to jump through to withdraw, the easier it is for small balances to get stuck.
  • ⚠️No clear "effective rate" examples: If they never show real-world scenarios ($50 sales, $100 sales, etc.), it's on purpose.

Final Verdict: Are FeetFinder Fees "Worth It"?

If you're an established creator with consistent traffic and a solid monthly sales baseline, FeetFinder's fee structure might be tolerable. Once you're regularly making $300–$500+/month, the subscription stings less.

But for new creators, casual creators, or anyone still figuring out marketing, the combination of fixed subscription + commission is a harsh deal. You're taking all the risk up front, and the platform gets paid either way.

Bottom line: FeetFinder's "keep 90%" tagline is technically true at the commission level, but practically misleading once you factor in subscriptions and slow months. If you don't want to pay to test a platform—or pay during bad months—a commission-only model like Footly's is simply safer and more creator-friendly.

Stop Paying Just to Be Listed

Footly was built so creators don't get taxed by slow months. No subscription fees, transparent 20% commission, and a modern feed that actually helps new profiles get seen.

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