Estefania Palomeras, a 27-year-old CEO and co-founder of a modeling agency, launched on OnlyFans in December 2022 and earned £112,000 (around €130,000) in her very first month. Within two months, her adult content earnings had already surpassed her entire annual salary as a chief executive.
The story sounds like a headline designed to provoke. But the numbers are real, and the woman behind them is methodical, business-minded, and very much still running her agency.
Based in Miami, Palomeras co-founded Indure Management in 2020, a modeling agency where she oversees model careers and supervises client assignments. She gave an interview to the Daily Star that laid out, in frank detail, how she manages both worlds simultaneously — and what the financial leap actually looks like in practice.
OnlyFans revenue that outpaced a CEO salary in weeks
The first month figure alone is striking. £112,000 (approximately €130,000) in adult content earnings, from a standing start, with no prior presence on the platform. The second month brought in around £70,000 (roughly €80,000), still a number that would represent a strong annual income for most professionals.
Résultat: in just two months, Palomeras had earned more from OnlyFans than she made in an entire year as a CEO. That's not a gradual transition. That's a financial discontinuity.
earned in her very first month on OnlyFans — more than most CEOs make in a year
A six-figure debut on the adult content platform
Palomeras didn't stumble onto OnlyFans by accident. She has 131,000 followers on Instagram, which she uses as a visibility engine. That existing audience gave her a launchpad that most new creators simply don't have. The platform rewards reach, consistency, and personal brand — and she already had all three.
Her approach to content creation is deliberately scheduled. Adult content is produced early in the morning or late at night, outside of her core working hours. The rest of the day, from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m., is dedicated to running Indure Management: reviewing performance metrics, holding team meetings, and managing the agency's strategic direction in the afternoon.
The dual career model and its real cost
Managing two demanding professional identities at once has a price. Palomeras works from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, a schedule that leaves little room for anything outside of work. She checks her numbers and social media performance every day, treating both revenue streams with the same analytical rigor.
This isn't passive income. It's a second job layered on top of a CEO role, executed with the discipline of someone who built a company from scratch. The workload is significant, and she doesn't appear to minimize that.
What the money is actually being spent on
The financial windfall hasn't gone into abstract investments. Palomeras is using her OnlyFans income to fund concrete, tangible projects — starting with her home.
A kitchen renovation has already been completed, at a cost of £53,000 (around €61,000). The full home renovation is estimated at £225,000 (approximately €256,000), and work is ongoing. For context, that's a construction budget that most people would spend years saving toward. She's financing it through content she creates before the rest of the world wakes up.
The total home renovation budget of £225,000 (~€256,000) is being funded directly through Palomeras’s OnlyFans earnings — a figure she reached within the first two months of launching on the platform.
A three-month road trip through the American West
Beyond renovation, Palomeras has planned a three-month road trip across the western United States. The logistics of maintaining an OnlyFans presence while traveling for months at a time are non-trivial, but her content schedule — built around early mornings and late evenings — is designed to be location-independent.
It's a lifestyle that her previous CEO salary almost certainly couldn't have supported at this pace. The agency work continues regardless. Indure Management, which she co-founded in 2020, remains active, and she continues to manage model careers and oversee assignments from wherever she is.
The broader picture of creator economy earnings
Palomeras's case is extreme, but it reflects a wider pattern. OnlyFans has produced a small number of creators with genuinely exceptional monthly revenues, and those stories tend to circulate because they challenge conventional assumptions about income, work, and professional identity.
What makes her situation distinct is the combination: she isn't a full-time creator who left the corporate world. She's a sitting CEO who added a second revenue stream that promptly dwarfed the first. The agency didn't shrink. The OnlyFans income grew on top of it.
- Existing Instagram audience of 131,000 provided immediate reach
- Strict scheduling separates agency work from content creation
- Revenue diversification reduces dependence on a single income source
- Business discipline from running an agency transfers directly to platform management
- Working hours stretch from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily
- Content must be created at the margins of the day — early morning or late night
- Sustaining two demanding professional identities simultaneously is not scalable for everyone
The creator economy conversation often focuses on young people with no prior professional track record who build income from scratch on platforms like OnlyFans or YouTube. Palomeras represents a different profile: an entrepreneur with a structured business background who applied that same rigor to content monetization. The result, at least in financial terms, speaks for itself.
Whether the pace she maintains is sustainable over the long term is a separate question. But in the short term, the numbers are hard to argue with. £112,000 in month one. A kitchen renovation worth £53,000. A road trip across the American West. And an agency she still runs, every day, in between.










