OnlyFans star Sophie Rain dreams of homesteading
Interview with OnlyFans sensation Sophie Rain, who claims she's made $100 million from the platform.

OnlyFans star Sophie Rain is often seen lounging in a bikini on Instagram, TikTok, and X for her combined 27 million followers, but on the day of her interview with Mashable, she was experiencing something much less sexy: busted water pipes.
"I've been dealing with no water all morning, and that's how my day has been going," she said. Rain, who has farm animals like cows and goats, had to give them water bottles earlier in the day because her hoses weren't working. Usually, Rain's morning routine includes checking on her animals and making sure predators haven't gotten to them. "That's my biggest fear, waking up one morning and seeing a coyote," she said.
SEE ALSO: OnlyFans 'managers' take advantage of creators, BBC findsBut Rain's claim to fame has nothing to do with farmlife. She became well-known in 2024 as an OnlyFans star and creator of the content mansion, the Bop House. ("Bop" stands for "baddie on point," and is often used to refer to women who make sexy content online.)
Rain has since left Bop House but still sometimes creates social media content with other OnlyFans creators — including the controversial Piper Rockelle, the child YouTube star who started an OnlyFans account when she turned 18.
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Rain is controversial, which isn't surprising in our increasingly non-anonymous, anti-porn internet. Age-verification laws, which are mandates in many U.S. states, the UK, and elsewhere, require proof of age like submitting one's government ID or a facial scan in order to access explicit content — or even content that's not explicit but the state deems restricted to adults, like certain Reddit threads.
But Rain actually doesn't film porn and, in fact, she says she's never had sex. That's why GQ proclaimed her the "clean queen of the dirty internet" in early 2026. That could also contribute to her roaring success. The 20-something (while her profiles say she's 21, she told GQ she doesn't disclose her real age for privacy reasons) claims she's made $100 million on the platform — more on that below. And despite her lewd-seeming career, she's saving up to something more wholesome one day: homestead.
The making of a $100 million OnlyFans star
In a 2024 interview with People, Rain said she grew up poor, and her family was on food stamps. She worked as a food server when she started her OnlyFans account in 2023, and while she said she was fired for her account, it quickly turned into a lucrative business.
Rain started Bop House at the end of 2024, but left months later in July 2025. It hasn't stopped her success, though. The creator claims to have made over $100 million from the platform, though she had trouble providing a screenshot to Mashable when asked, and her team didn't respond to a screenshot request. She said her WiFi was acting up, though the video call with Mashable had clear service. In Nov. 2024, though, she posted a screenshot on X showing an OnlyFans income of over $43 million from one year on the platform.
"I still have my boundaries, I don't do certain things on the site that I'm not comfortable with."$100 million or not, Rain is making bank on scantily clad and nude images of herself, if her lifestyle is any indication. She was most recently in Paris for its Fashion Week, making headlines for hanging out with looksmaxxer Clavicular. The latest TMZ headline: "More Than Friends-Maxxing ... V-Card in Danger?!?"
Rain told Mashable she'll never film herself having sex (when she eventually does have it). "I still have my boundaries, I don't do certain things on the site that I'm not comfortable with," she said.
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The virgin label coincides with Rain's Christian values; she's not the only OnlyFans creator to profit from that seeming contradiction: Anya Lacey, a MAGA-loving Christian conservative, also posts nudes on OnlyFans. Both Rain and Lacey are Floridians and have spoken out against Republican gubernatorial candidate James Fishback, whose platform includes a "50 percent sin tax" on OnlyFans creators.
"Who are you to judge sin?" Rain said about the proposed tax in a CNN interview. "God is the only one who can judge sin."
"I think that it's great," she said of OnlyFans to the news outlet. "It just has created so many opportunities for me, and I'm so thankful to even be here."
Rain reiterated the same sentiment to Mashable: "I'm literally just gonna keep going. I love doing what I do. I have fun. Really, it gives me a great opportunity, because I've made money online, so I can continue chasing and doing bigger things that I want to do."
Featured Video For You My awkward first date with an AI companionAnd despite Project 2025 (the far-right blueprint for Donald Trump's second presidential term) outlining an outright porn ban and imprisoning its creators, Rain told Mashable she doesn't believe such a ban would ever pass. (Bans have been proposed in Michigan and elsewhere, but those bills haven't progressed to becoming laws, perhaps because it'd be a big First Amendment hurdle.)
"I believe that we have freedom of speech, freedom to do what we want, because we live in a free country," she told Mashable. "I don't think that we should be segregated essentially just because of what we do online."
"A lot of people think if you're on OnlyFans, you're immediately a porn star, and you're a slut, and all this," she said, pointing out that OnlyFans started as an "SFW" platform, meaning safe for work. The explicit side really took off after the majority of OnlyFans' parent company was sold to the founder of the porn site MyFreeCams, Leonid Radvinsky, who died earlier this year. That and the COVID lockdowns catapulted OnlyFans to being a household name, with the connotation being that it's pornographic.
Sophie Rain's advice for OnlyFans creators
But Rain reassures women that they don't have to make porn to make money on OnlyFans. "I met someone who just sells her recipes," she said. Earlier this year, Mashable interviewed a similar creator, Sophie Annaston, who makes six figures posting suggestive, non-nude content.
"You have full autonomy over anything. You can do whatever you want," Rain said.
Her advice to budding OnlyFans creators? "Do what makes you happy. Do what makes you comfortable, putting the content out that you enjoy. You're not going to get tired of it," she said.
"Do what makes you happy. Do what makes you comfortable, putting the content out that you enjoy. You're not going to get tired of it."While she's set to continue posting content to her millions of followers, Rain's also pursuing her goal of being a homesteader. As she told GQ, she owns 20 acres of farm land and dreams of raising cattle and becoming a local butcher.
"I really just want to carry on doing what my grandpa did, and taking care of farm animals, because I grew up doing that…I love doing it," she told Mashable.
For now, though, Rain continues to create content and take care of her farm animals. She hasn't ventured into homestead content yet, but on her burner TikTok account ("where I can just absolutely brain rot," she said), Rain's FYP is all farm animals.