Career guide (18+)
A concise reference for women evaluating professional on-camera adult work—money, safety, ethics on set, and what “normal” looks like with reputable partners.
Use this guide alongside the FAQ and apply form on this site. Written answers beat rushed phone pressure every time.
How you can earn on this platform
Use this overview before the rates and safety sections below. If a path is marked “not a wage,” it will not replace a formal gig offer.
- Main path
Gig & casting income
Browse castings, jobs, events, or shows with compensation notes. Apply free. If you are selected, the producer sends scope, rates, and travel in writing before you say yes.
- Creator desk
Creator gifts & tips
Register a creator desk, share your public wishlist, and receive gifts or tips from fans. Your net balance can be requested for manual payout—separate from casting wages.
- Not a wage
Referral credit
Introduce colleagues you have worked with (with their permission). We do not pay cash affiliate commissions—we credit your introduction when we book someone you named.
- Not a wage
Shop & wardrobe
The curated shop helps you buy tools and wardrobe—it is not a salary. Some creators link a wishlist so fans can send gifts instead of you paying out of pocket.
- For producers
Post castings & jobs
Producers and studios hire talent—they do not earn from applicants. Submit a structured opportunity for our team to review and publish when it fits.
- For producers
Feature a listing
After a casting or job is published, producers can pay to boost visibility for a fixed period—optional paid reach, not performer income.
Read pay & fees FAQ — See FAQ answers on pay, referrals, and creator gifts.
Rates and paperwork
Legitimate productions document compensation, scene scope, ID/2257 or local equivalents as required, and cancellation terms. If someone refuses a short written summary of the offer, pause.
Scams and pressure tactics
Walk away from upfront “roster” fees, instant decisions on cold calls, demands for explicit media before any professional introduction, or vague company names with no verifiable address.
Boundaries and consent
Hard limits are standard. Ethical production means negotiated scope and the freedom to decline a specific partner or scene type without retaliation.
Travel and logistics
Flights, hotels, and per diem belong in the written offer. You should not pre-pay travel to “hold a date”—that pattern is a common scam.
On set: crew, glam, and communication
Expect call sheets, ID checks where the law requires, and professional hair/makeup on studio days. You should be able to ask what will be shot and who is in the room.
Questions to ask any producer (before you say yes)
Save this list. Serious partners answer in writing without getting defensive.
- What exactly is in scope for this day—including partners, locations, and any optional add-ons?
- What is the compensation structure, cancellation policy, and when is payment triggered?
- Who is on set (crew list) and how are IDs / age checks handled where the law requires it?
- How are hard limits recorded, and what happens if something needs to stop mid-shoot?
- If travel is involved, who books flights, hotels, and ground transport—and who pays up front?
- How will blocking and shot intent be explained before cameras roll?
- What insurance or safety protocols exist for this production?
- Who is my single point of contact if something feels off on the day?
Ready when you are
When you feel informed, the application is the fastest route; you can also email casting with context if you are not ready to complete every optional field.