So you’ve got great feet, a growing fanbase, and now you’re ready to start making money selling foot content. But how much should you charge? What’s too low—or too high? And how do you balance value, time, and effort?
In this complete guide, we’ll break down smart pricing strategies for selling foot pics, video clips, and custom content. Whether you’re new to the game or looking to refine your pricing model, this blog will give you clarity and confidence.
Step 1: Know Your Value (and Your Niche)
Before you set any prices, ask yourself:
- What makes your feet or content unique?
- Are you in a popular niche (clean soles, nylon feet, tickling, domination)?
- Are you offering a basic product, or are you selling a full experience?
The more specific and polished your content is, the more you can charge.
If you’re active on FeetShows.com, Reddit, Twitter, or OnlyFans, you’ll already know what’s in demand. Use that to position yourself. High arches? Dirty sole queen? Sock removal master? Define your niche and lean into it.
Step 2: Understand the Standard Price Ranges
While there’s no fixed pricing system in the foot world, here’s a general guideline (in USD):
🦶 Foot Pics:
- Basic solo photo (no face): $5–$15
- Photo set (5–10 pics): $20–$50
- With props, socks, or shoes: Add $5–10
- With face or full body: Add $10–20
🎥 Video Clips:
- Short clip (1–3 minutes): $10–30
- Standard (3–5 minutes): $20–50
- High quality with script or editing: $40–100+
- Niche content (crushing, POV, JOI): Add $10–30
💌 Custom Requests:
- Custom photo set: $30–80 depending on props, length, and theme
- Custom video (3–10 mins): $60–150+ based on detail
- Live cam session or exclusive rights: Often starts at $100+
Don’t undersell yourself—but also don’t price yourself out of your audience’s reach. Start at mid-tier and adjust as your fanbase grows.
Step 3: Factor in Time, Energy, and Equipment
Think beyond the content itself. Consider:
- How long it takes to prepare (makeup, lighting, setup)
- Time spent shooting and editing
- Wear-and-tear on shoes, socks, lotion, etc.
- Emotional energy (especially in customs)
You’re not just selling a photo—you’re selling access, experience, and effort.
If a custom video takes 45 minutes to film and edit, pricing it at $25 won’t be worth your time. Know your limits. Respect your time.
Step 4: Offer Tiered Options
Some buyers want a quick fix. Others want a full fantasy. Offering different tiers helps you serve both.
Example Tiers:
- $10: One barefoot selfie with light toe flexing
- $25: Five angles with sock removal + lotion
- $60: Custom 3-min POV clip with name use and dirty talk
This keeps impulse buyers happy while giving high-spenders room to indulge.
Step 5: Use Bundles to Increase Value
Bundles increase your average sale. Try offering:
- Weekly photo sets (10 pics for $40)
- “Buy 2 videos, get 1 free” specials
- Subscription-style content: $100/month for 4 custom videos
- Add-on options: toe rings, shoes, face reveal, name mention
Bundling also helps you move old content without lowering prices.
Step 6: Create a Premium Option
Every foot seller should have a high-end offering.
Example:
- $150: 10-minute high-definition custom clip with outfit change, storyline, dirty talk, and specific poses
- $300: Exclusive custom (you don’t resell it)
Some fans want to spoil you. Make it easy for them to do so.
Step 7: Communicate Clearly
Be direct about what your prices include:
- Will it include your face?
- How long is the delivery time?
- Can they choose socks or shoes?
- Do they get resell rights?
Use a clear menu or price list, and never be afraid to say: “That’s a premium request, it starts at $__.”
Step 8: Accept Tips and Donations
Some viewers just want to show appreciation without buying a product. Always have a tip or tribute option:
- “$5 to make me smile. $10 for a thank-you toe pic. $50+ to get my attention.”
Use platforms like Fansly, ManyVids, or custom tip pages. Mention it during your streams or bio on FeetShows.com.
Step 9: Test and Adjust
Pricing isn’t set in stone. Try:
- Raising prices when demand is high
- Offering discounts during slow periods
- Running polls to ask what fans want most
- Watching what successful foot sellers are doing (but don’t copy blindly)
If you’re constantly booked out—raise your prices. If sales slow down, maybe it’s time for a promo.
Step 10: Respect Yourself First
You are the brand. Your feet, your time, your energy—it all matters.
Don’t feel pressured to lower your prices for pushy buyers. Don’t rush customs just to meet demand. Be firm, kind, and professional.
High-value clients will always pay for what they love—especially if you deliver it with care and class.
Final Thoughts
Selling foot content is a real business. Treat it like one. Your pricing reflects your confidence, your quality, and your boundaries.
Start smart, grow your catalog, engage with fans—and price based on effort, not insecurity.
Want to get more visibility for your feet and your content? Make sure your profile is listed on FeetShows—the world’s #1 cam and content aggregator for foot fetish lovers.
Whether you’re selling a toe tease or a custom trampling video, price it like it’s worth something. Because it is. And so are you.