CreatorHero Pricing in 2026: Per-Creator Fees and the Revenue Cap Explained

CreatorHero Pricing in 2026: Per-Creator Fees and the Revenue Cap Explained

CreatorHero pricing starts at $39.99 per month per creator account, plus a revenue-based fee that CreatorHero says is capped at $260 per month per account. That is the whole model CreatorHero publishes directly. The named tiers you will find quoted around the web, Basic at $95, Advanced at $200, and Professional at $242, come from a third-party aggregator, not CreatorHero's own pricing page, which lists no dollar figures at all. If you want an exact number for your accounts, the honest answer is that you have to run the 7-day free trial or contact sales. Below is exactly what is published, what isn't, and a worked example so you can bracket your real cost.

Want the broader picture first? Our full CreatorHero review covers features and who should switch, and the CreatorHero alternatives page ranks CRMs that publish their prices outright.

The Core Model: Per Creator Account, Not Per Subscriber

The first thing to understand about CreatorHero pricing is what the meter runs on. You are billed per connected creator account, sometimes described as per model, not per subscriber. CreatorHero's pricing article is explicit that adding managed accounts is what raises your cost, while a single account's subscriber growth does not.

That distinction matters more than it sounds. Some CRMs price by a creator's monthly earnings, so every time a model has a good month, your tooling bill goes up with her. CreatorHero's per-account model decouples the two: sign a creator, pay for that account, and her growth is yours to keep rather than something you get taxed on. For an agency that adds creators steadily and wants predictable per-model economics, that is the more forecastable shape.

The flip side is simple arithmetic. Cost scales with the number of accounts you connect. Ten creators cost roughly ten times one creator, before the revenue fee enters the picture.

The Two Numbers CreatorHero Actually Publishes

CreatorHero publishes exactly two dollar figures on its own site, and it is worth separating them from everything else you will read.

A base subscription from $39.99 per month per account. This is the stated starting price per creator account. The word "from" is doing work in that sentence, because the base is described as a starting point rather than a fixed number.

A revenue-based fee, capped at $260 per month per account. On top of the base sits a fee tied to the account's revenue, and CreatorHero states it is capped at $260 per month per account. That makes the model a hybrid: a flat base plus a revenue share with a ceiling.

Here is the honest gap. CreatorHero does not publish the percentage of that revenue fee. You know it exists and you know where it stops ($260), but you cannot calculate it in advance because the rate is not stated. The practical takeaway: for an account sitting at the $39.99 starting base, the CreatorHero-stated model tops out at $299.99 per month ($39.99 base plus the $260 fee cap). Your real number lands between the $39.99 floor and that ceiling, and because the percentage isn't published, CreatorHero doesn't give you the input to place it exactly. An account priced above the starting base would top out higher still.

The Tier Prices You'll See Quoted, and Why to Treat Them Carefully

Search for CreatorHero pricing and you will quickly hit three named tiers:

  • Basic, listed at $95 per month, for roughly 200 to 500 subscribers per account
  • Advanced, listed at $200 per month, for roughly 500 to 2,000 subscribers
  • Professional, listed at $242 per month, for 2,000 or more subscribers

Two things to keep straight. First, these dollar figures do not come from CreatorHero. They come from a third-party aggregator (SoftwareSuggest). CreatorHero's own pricing article describes these same tiers only by subscriber band and publishes no dollar amounts to confirm them. Second, the bands are selected by subscriber volume, not purely by feature set, which lines up with the per-account logic: bigger accounts sit in higher bands.

Because CreatorHero doesn't publish figures to check the aggregator against, treat $95, $200, and $242 as a third-party snapshot, not a confirmed price sheet. It is also unclear how those flat tier numbers relate to the homepage's "base from $39.99 plus a capped revenue fee" framing, and CreatorHero doesn't publish enough to reconcile the two. That is not a knock on the aggregator. It is a reason to verify inside the trial before you commit real accounts.

A Worked Example: Bracketing Your Real Bill

Say you run three OnlyFans creator accounts. Here is how to bracket the cost using only what CreatorHero states directly.

Floor. Three accounts at the $39.99 starting base is $119.97 per month, before any revenue fee. That is the least you could pay on the stated model.

Ceiling. Each account's revenue fee is capped at $260, so at the starting base each account tops out at $299.99. Three accounts at that ceiling is $899.97 per month. That is the most the CreatorHero-stated model reaches for three accounts held at the starting base.

So your real bill for three accounts lands somewhere between $119.97 and $899.97 per month. Where exactly depends on the revenue-fee percentage, which isn't published, and on how much each account earns. You cannot narrow it further from the outside, which is precisely why the 7-day trial exists and why buyers end up contacting sales.

Scale that to a ten-account book and the same logic holds, just with a wider band. The floor is ten times $39.99, or $399.90 per month before any revenue fee. The ceiling, with every account at the $39.99 base and the fee at its $260 cap, is ten times $299.99, or $2,999.90 per month. Your planning range for a mid-sized book spans roughly $400 to $3,000 a month until the trial narrows it, and it widens with every account you add. That gap is the practical cost of pricing you can't see in advance: you are budgeting against a range, not a number.

If you prefer the aggregator's flat framing instead, three accounts in the Basic band would be around $285 per month (three times $95), rising as accounts move into the Advanced or Professional bands. But remember that figure is third-party and unconfirmed by CreatorHero, and the official page gives you nothing to check it against.

How That Compares to CRMs That Publish Their Prices

The reason CreatorHero pricing generates so many searches is that the alternatives make it look opaque by comparison. Infloww publishes a flat $40 per month per OnlyFans or Fansly profile (with MYM and Fanvue at $50), so you can budget ten accounts without a sales call. OnlyMonster starts at $30 per account. Both let you do the math up front instead of trialing to find out.

We put the numbers side by side on our CreatorHero alternatives page, and the closest head-to-head, CreatorHero vs Infloww, works the pricing example both ways. If published, predictable pricing is the main reason you are researching this, those are the two pages to read next. None of this makes CreatorHero a bad tool. Per-account billing is a legitimate model. It just means you trade some price transparency to get it.

Recruiting Sits Outside Every Pricing Table

Worth saying plainly, because it trips up newer agency owners: no CRM price, CreatorHero's or anyone else's, includes finding the creators. A CRM bills you to manage and monetize the accounts you have already signed. Filling the pipeline with new creators is a separate line item you handle yourself. Outseeker is that separate layer, not a CRM and not a CreatorHero competitor. We find good OnlyFans creators, message them, and pass you the ones who reply interested, so the accounts you are paying a CRM to manage are actually there. If you are modeling chatting economics, our academy chapter on chatting and monetization covers where the revenue actually gets made once an account is signed.

FAQ

How much does CreatorHero cost? CreatorHero starts at $39.99 per month per creator account, plus a revenue-based fee capped at $260 per month per account. Those are the only two dollar figures CreatorHero publishes directly. Because the revenue-fee percentage isn't stated, the exact cost per account sits between the $39.99 base and a ceiling of $299.99 (base plus the $260 cap) for an account at the starting base. The 7-day free trial is how most buyers learn their real number.

Does CreatorHero charge per subscriber or per model? Per model, meaning per connected creator account. CreatorHero's pricing article is explicit that adding managed accounts raises your cost, while a single account's subscriber growth does not. Your bill scales with the number of accounts you connect, not with how many subscribers each one has.

What is the CreatorHero revenue fee? It is a fee added on top of the base subscription, tied to an account's revenue and capped at $260 per month per account. CreatorHero states that the fee exists and where it stops but does not publish the percentage, so you cannot calculate it in advance. At the $39.99 base, the cap puts the per-account maximum at $299.99 per month.

Are the $95, $200, and $242 CreatorHero prices official? No. Those Basic, Advanced, and Professional figures come from a third-party aggregator (SoftwareSuggest), not CreatorHero. The official pricing article describes those tiers only by subscriber band (roughly 200 to 500, 500 to 2,000, and 2,000 or more) and lists no dollar amounts, so treat the quoted numbers as an unconfirmed third-party snapshot.

Is there a CreatorHero free trial? Yes. CreatorHero offers a 7-day free trial to test all features before committing, stated on both the homepage and the pricing article. Given that exact per-account pricing isn't published, the trial is effectively the way to learn what your accounts will cost before you commit.