The subscription-based platform known for its adult content said it could “no longer properly serve our Russian creator community” in a statement to Motherboard on Thursday.
The platform said it had to “temporarily pause accounts where payments are received in Russia” because of ongoing restrictions to and from Russia.
“Over the past few months, we have explored several options to continue providing our services to creators impacted by the Russia/Ukraine war,” the statement to Motherboard said.
“However, due to a further tightening of payment restrictions to and from Russia, OnlyFans can no longer properly serve our Russian creator community.”
When Russia began its invasion of Ukraine on February 24, OnlyFans temporarily blocked Russian creators’ accounts, citing “worldwide financial restrictions.”
Also Read: World Bank, IMF to expedite execution of G20 debt relief for Nigeria
However, days later, the platform said it had reinstated the accounts of Russian creators.
The pause to accounts caused panic among Russian creators who said they relied on the platform for their livelihood and felt they were being unfairly punished for their governments’ actions.
“I have been working as a content creator on OnlyFans for more than two years and have never been involved in politics,” one Russian creator wrote in an email to Insider during the first account pause.
“I am an ordinary girl who has family and bills to pay! With all the situation in the world, I could not even think that the OnlyFans, whom I trusted, who received a commission from my earnings (20%), will betray me just because I am Russian!”
At the time, an OnlyFans spokesperson told Insider’s Madeline Berg that the accounts were paused because the company was afraid creators would not be able to access their earnings.
“Things are paused because we don’t want them to amass money,” an OnlyFans spokesperson told Insider during the hold. “We are afraid they won’t be able to get it out.”
The company, which Ukrainian-American businessman Leonid Radvinsky owns, has donated over $5 million to Ukraine relief efforts, according to CoinDesk.