Coomer - Remove Your Leaked OnlyFans & Fansly Content
Coomer (also known as Coomer Party) scrapes your entire OnlyFans or Fansly catalog the moment any paying subscriber leaks it. They don’t need your password. They extract a session key from their browser, paste it into Coomer’s importer, and the system automatically downloads every post, image, and video you’ve ever published.
That’s how 106 million posts from 220,000+ creators ended up on this site. If you’ve found your content here, a Coomer takedown request through the right channels is still worth attempting - but set realistic expectations.
How Coomer’s session key import works
Coomer is a public archiving site that scrapes and stores paid content from adult subscription platforms. Unlike sites where users manually upload stolen files, Coomer operates on an automated import system. This matters because it explains both why your content ends up there and why prevention is nearly impossible.
The session key problem
The site doesn’t hack into creator accounts or use stolen passwords. Instead, it relies on a crowdsourced “importer” tool that works like this:
- A legitimate subscriber pays for access to your OnlyFans, Fansly, or CandFans
- That subscriber extracts their session key - a temporary credential that identifies their active login session
- They submit this key to Coomer’s import system
- Coomer uses their legitimate access to automatically scrape every post, image, and video from your page
- All content is permanently archived on Coomer’s servers
The site claims that session keys are “immediately discarded” after import, but they also offer an “auto-import” feature where keys are stored long-term (encrypted with RSA 4096) to continuously check for new content. This means a single malicious subscriber can set up permanent, automated leaking of everything you post.
Why platforms can’t stop this
OnlyFans and Fansly have no way to detect that a subscriber is using their access for scraping. From the platform’s perspective, it looks like normal browsing activity. The session key holder has legitimate access - they paid for it. There’s no technical violation of the platform’s systems, just a violation of their terms of service that’s impossible to enforce.

The API problem
Coomer provides a public API that allows third-party sites to query their database. This means your leaked content doesn’t just live on Coomer - it can be aggregated by other leak sites, search engines, and archive services. A single import to Coomer potentially distributes your content across the entire leak ecosystem.
The scale of the problem
As of January 2026, Coomer hosts content from over 220,000 creators with more than 106 million individual posts. That’s significantly larger than its sister site Kemono (which focuses on Patreon and Pixiv content).


Most-targeted creators
The following table shows the most-leaked creators on Coomer as of January 2026, based on user “favorites” (how many registered Coomer users have bookmarked them). These numbers show the scale of engagement with stolen content:
| Platform | Creator | Favorites |
|---|---|---|
| OnlyFans | belledelphine | 81,117 |
| OnlyFans | bigtittygothegg | 71,230 |
| OnlyFans | sweetiefox_of | 66,529 |
| OnlyFans | hannahowo | 60,172 |
| OnlyFans | yourhotm.f | 43,951 |
| OnlyFans | imsadspice | 42,220 |
| OnlyFans | kittyxkum | 41,719 |
| Fansly | Morgpie | 40,132 |
| OnlyFans | lopesariana | 38,185 |
| Fansly | lilijunex | 37,918 |
Even mid-tier creators with a few thousand subscribers can find their entire catalogs leaked within days of gaining popularity.
The Kemono connection
Coomer and Kemono are operated by the same team and share identical infrastructure. The key difference:
- Coomer: OnlyFans, Fansly, CandFans (adult subscription platforms)
- Kemono: Patreon, Pixiv Fanbox, Discord, Fantia, Gumroad, SubscribeStar, DLsite
If you create content across multiple platforms, you may need to address both sites. The removal process is essentially identical for both.
The offshore domain strategy
If you’ve already sent a DMCA takedown notice and received no response, here’s why.
The .cr and .su Domain Shield
Coomer now operates under the .cr (Costa Rica) domain - the old .su domain redirects here. The site was originally known as Coomer Party when it ran on the .party TLD, and has also operated under .su (Soviet Union legacy) and .st. These offshore TLD choices are strategic:
- No ICANN oversight: Unlike .com or .net domains, .su is not governed by ICANN policies that require registrars to respond to copyright complaints
- No U.S. jurisdiction: The DMCA is U.S. law. Russian registries have no legal obligation to comply
- No registrar escalation: With .com domains, you can escalate to the registrar if a site ignores DMCA requests. No such path exists for offshore TLDs
DDoS-Guard
Coomer uses DDoS-Guard, a Russian infrastructure company. DDoS-Guard has been added to the European Commission’s “Counterfeit and Piracy Watch List” for consistently ignoring abuse reports. Sending DMCA notices to [email protected] typically results in silence.
The broken abuse page

Coomer’s official abuse reporting page has been non-functional. This isn’t accidental. It’s a deliberate wall blocking to removal requests. The only remaining contact channels are email addresses that may or may not be monitored.
Removal channels that actually exist
Here’s how to remove content from Coomer using the channels that still exist. Response rates are low, but some creators have gotten content removed.
Direct contact email

The primary contact method is [email protected]. When submitting a removal request:
Include in your email:
- Clear statement that you are the content owner
- Specific URLs of the pages containing your content
- Links to your official profiles proving ownership
- Government ID with sensitive information redacted (this is often required)
- Explicit statement that you are invoking your copyright and requesting removal
Email template:
Subject: Content Removal Request - [Your Creator Name]
To whom it may concern,
I am the owner and copyright holder of content currently hosted on your
platform without authorization. I am requesting immediate removal of the
following pages:
[List specific URLs]
Proof of ownership:
- My official OnlyFans: [URL]
- My official Fansly: [URL]
- Attached: Government-issued ID (sensitive info redacted)
This content was uploaded without my permission and I never authorized
reproduction or distribution on your platform. I am invoking my rights
under copyright law and requesting full removal.
[Your name]
[Contact email]
Legal Contact
Some sources suggest [email protected] as an alternative channel for formal DMCA notices. You can use our free DMCA takedown template as a starting point, but frame it more formally as a legal demand.
What to expect
Be prepared for:
- No response - The most common outcome
- Response asking for more documentation - Sometimes they request additional proof
- Removal without notification - Occasionally content is removed without acknowledgment
- Outright refusal - Less common but happens
If you receive no response within two weeks, the request was likely ignored. You can try again with different documentation, but don’t expect different results.
Google deindexing: the most reliable fallback
When direct removal fails, search engine deindexing becomes your best option. This doesn’t delete your content from Coomer, but it removes the URLs from search results - meaning people can’t find them through Google.
Filing a Google DMCA request
- Go to Google’s Legal Help
- Select “Google Web Search” and “Copyright infringement”
- Complete the form with:
- Your contact information
- URLs of the infringing Coomer pages
- URLs of your original content (your official profiles)
- A sworn statement that you are the copyright owner
What deindexing does
- Removed from search results: People searching your name or content won’t find the Coomer pages
- Reduced discoverability: Most leak site traffic comes from search engines
- Creates a record: Documented DMCA filings can support future legal action
What deindexing does not do
- Remove content from Coomer itself
- Prevent people who already know the URL from accessing it
- Stop the content from being accessible through the site’s internal search
Don’t forget Bing
Submit the same request to Bing’s Content Removal Tool. While Google dominates search, covering all search engines closes off every discovery channel.
Dealing With Multiple Leak Sites?
DIY vs professional service
| Aspect | DIY Approach | Professional Service |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free | From $59/mo |
| Time Investment | 5-15+ hours | Minimal |
| Direct Site Contact | You send emails, wait | Sent under business credentials |
| Search Deindexing | Google form (self-serve) | Automated, all engines |
| Kemono Coverage | Separate process | Included |
| Success Rate | Low (~20-30%) | Higher (~50-70%) |
| Privacy | Your identity revealed | Business files on your behalf |
| Re-upload Monitoring | Manual checking | 24/7 automated scanning |
When DIY makes sense
- Content is only on Coomer (hasn’t spread to other sites)
- You have time to dedicate to the process
- You’re comfortable with your identity being revealed to site operators
- Single occurrence, not an ongoing leak problem
When professional help makes sense
- Content has spread across multiple platforms (Coomer, Kemono, file hosts)
- Ongoing leaks from repeat offenders
- You want to maintain privacy throughout the process
- You need monitoring to catch re-uploads
- Time is more valuable than money
Realistic timeline
| Action | Expected Response Time | Likelihood of Success |
|---|---|---|
| Email to [email protected] | 0-14 days (often no response) | Low (10-20%) |
| Email to [email protected] | 0-14 days | Low (10-20%) |
| Google Deindexing | 7-14 days | High (90%+) |
| Bing Deindexing | 7-21 days | High (85%+) |
If every direct channel fails
- Focus on deindexing - Make the content unfindable even if you can’t delete it
- Monitor for re-uploads - Content removers sometimes repost
- Document everything - Keep records of all requests sent
- Consider ongoing protection - New content may be leaked by the same or different importers
Frequently asked questions
- Can I stop my subscriber from leaking to Coomer in the first place?
- Unfortunately, no. Session key extraction happens client-side in the subscriber's browser. OnlyFans and Fansly can't detect or prevent it. The only way to completely prevent leaks is to not publish content - which isn't practical. Watermarking can help identify leakers but won't prevent the initial leak.
- Why does Coomer use offshore domains like .st and .su?
- Both .st (SĂŁo TomĂ© and PrĂncipe) and .su (Soviet Union legacy) operate outside Western legal jurisdiction. The .su domain is administered by a Russian registry with no ICANN oversight. These TLDs are chosen specifically because they offer immunity from U.S. and EU copyright enforcement - there's no legal obligation to respond to DMCA notices.
- Is Coomer the same as Kemono?
- They're sister sites run by the same operators with identical infrastructure. Coomer focuses on OnlyFans, Fansly, and CandFans. Kemono focuses on Patreon, Pixiv Fanbox, Discord, Gumroad, and similar platforms. If you create on multiple platforms, you may need to address both.
- What happens if I successfully get content removed from Coomer?
- If removal is granted, the specific pages will no longer be accessible. But this doesn't prevent re-uploads. The same or different subscribers can import your content again. Ongoing monitoring is essential to catch new leaks.
- Will reporting to Coomer reveal my identity?
- Yes. Effective removal requests require proof of ownership, which typically means government ID (can be redacted) and links to your official accounts. The site operators will know who you are. Professional services can file on your behalf under business credentials for privacy.
- How does Coomer's auto-import feature work?
- Auto-import allows a subscriber to store their session key long-term so Coomer automatically checks for new content. Keys are encrypted with RSA 4096 and decrypted during import runs. This means a single malicious subscriber can set up permanent, automatic leaking of your future posts.
- Does Google deindexing actually help if the content is still on Coomer?
- Yes, quite a bit. Most people find leak content through search engines. Removing Coomer URLs from Google and Bing means your content won't appear when someone searches your name or content. The page still exists, but it's effectively hidden from casual discovery.
- What's the success rate for Coomer content removal?
- Direct removal through email has a low success rate (estimated 10-20%). Most requests receive no response. Google deindexing, however, has a very high success rate (90%+) because Google must comply with valid DMCA notices regardless of what Coomer does.