I keep seeing people ask where the real traffic comes from when you promote OnlyFans creators. Not fake clicks. Not empty views. I mean traffic that actually sticks around and sometimes converts. I asked myself the same thing when I first tried it, because on paper it all sounds simple. Get traffic, send it to a page, wait for signups. In reality, it feels a lot messier than that. The biggest problem I ran into early on was that not all traffic is equal. I wasted time and money on sources that looked good in stats but did nothing in real life. Lots of impressions, lots of clicks, zero fans. It makes you question whether the offer is bad or if you are doing something wrong. Most of the time, it was just the wrong traffic. At first, I tried going where everyone else goes. Social platforms felt like the obvious answer. Free traffic sounds great until you realize how fragile it is. Accounts get limited. Posts stop reaching people. One day things work, the next day they do not. I did get some results from social, but it was inconsistent and exhausting. You are always fighting rules, filters, and random changes. Then I tested forums and niche communities. This worked better than I expected, but only when I stopped being lazy about it. Dropping links never worked. Talking like a real person did. Sharing thoughts, answering questions, and slowly building trust made a difference. It is slow traffic, but the people who click are already curious. They are not random scrollers. They are looking for something specific. Adult friendly ad traffic was another thing I was skeptical about. I assumed it would be low quality. Some of it is, honestly. But I noticed that when the traffic comes from places where adult content is normal, people are way less hesitant. They do not panic and bounce. They already know what they are clicking on. That alone improved my results compared to mainstream traffic. What surprised me most was how much intent matters. Traffic that converts usually comes from people who are already in the right mindset. Late night browsing. Adult blogs. Discussion threads about creators or platforms. When you promote OnlyFans in places where the audience already expects adult content, the conversion path feels more natural. I also learned that sending traffic directly to a creator page is not always the best move. Cold traffic often needs context. When I started warming people up with a short page, post, or explanation, things improved. Even a simple intro that sets expectations helps. It answers the silent question of why they should click and what they will see. One thing I avoided at first was paid traffic because I thought it was too risky. After testing small amounts, I changed my mind. It is not about throwing money at ads. It is about testing patiently. Small budgets, simple creatives, and realistic expectations. Some traffic sources failed fast. Others slowly showed promise. When I wanted a clearer breakdown of approaches and traffic options, I found this guide on how to Promote OnlyFans pretty helpful as a reference point. Another thing worth mentioning is that conversion is not always instant. Some traffic converts days later. People click, leave, think about it, then come back. That made me stop judging traffic too quickly. If I saw zero results in one hour, I used to panic. Now I give things more time unless the bounce rate is obviously terrible. From my experience, the traffic sources that convert best share a few traits. They are adult friendly. They are intent driven. And they feel natural, not forced. The more the traffic feels like it belongs there, the better it performs. It sounds obvious, but it took me a while to really understand it. If you are struggling, I would suggest stopping the search for some secret traffic source. It usually is not one magic platform. It is matching the right audience with the right context. Talk like a human. Place links where they make sense. And test slowly instead of chasing quick wins. That mindset shift helped me more than any specific traffic trick.